Dr. Kim Ji-yoon, the Obama interviewer, appears on "From One to Ten" to ignite an intellectual back-and-forth with Jang Sung-kyu and Kang Ji-young.

On the Monday the 13th at 8 p.m., Tcast E Channel's "From One to Ten" will present an intellectual and exciting talk that crosses food and history under the theme "the great foods that shook world history." That episode features Dr. Kim Ji-yoon, a "world-class political scientist" who interviewed former U.S. President Obama, as a special guest. At Kim Ji-yoon's appearance, Jang Sung-kyu shows his fandom, saying "she's my role model and my wannabe." He then provokes laughter with his trademark wit, saying, "I heard you interviewed former President Obama. My English name is 'Obama.' Don't Obama me..."

On that broadcast, Jang Sung-kyu, Kang Ji-young and Kim Ji-yoon engage in a fierce ranking debate over the foods that took first and second place in changing history. In particular, an incident is revealed in which the British government during World War II officially announced that "the hero who thwarted the German nighttime air raids 'the Blitz' was 'this'," shocking everyone. Jang Sung-kyu cannot contain his doubt, saying, "'This' doesn't even fire a gun; how could it be a hero?" It turns out that this was a 'fake news' deliberately leaked by the British government. In the end, thanks to 'this,' Germany failed in its air raids on Britain, and the Nazis entered the path to defeat, a twist that stirs the studio.

The opposing food is said to have been introduced to medieval Europe by Muslim merchants but was hated as the "devil's drink boiled in hell." Yet Europeans fell for its tempting aroma and taste, and its influence eventually spread to the French Revolution and American independence. Kang Ji-young expresses astonishment, saying, "If this drink hadn't existed, half of what we learn in history books might have been different." The heated debate between the three explodes over the two foods that shook human history: the drink that led to America's independence and the food that brought about the Nazis' downfall.

Meanwhile, the broadcast also reveals a special food called "the beginning of American history." Jang Sung-kyu elicits laughter with a cheeky line, saying, "If this food hadn't existed, Kang Ji-young might not have been able to study in the U.S." In addition, the show will nonstop present stories where history and gastronomy meet exquisitely, including the favorite menus of rulers continued for 1,000 years, soul food that Americans spread by Jewish people, and the culprit in a series of noble murders in medieval Europe. Tcast E Channel's "From One to Ten" airs Monday, Oct. 13, at 8 p.m.<

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