SBS' Whenever Possible reveals the naive true colors(?) of 'villain-specialist duo' Park Hae-soo and Lee Heejun.

The SBS variety show Whenever Possible (directed by Choi Bo-pil/writer Chae Jin-ah) is a 'gap attack' variety that gifts luck in the brief pockets of time encountered in daily life. As of the last broadcast it recorded a peak rating of 4.9% and 1.3% in the 20-49 demographic, ranking first in its time slot for all episodes of season 4 and first overall among Tuesday-broadcast variety shows and dramas for 12 consecutive weeks (Nielsen Korea, metropolitan area). The broadcast on Tuesday the 31st will feature actors Park Hae-soo and Lee Heejun as "gap friends" alongside 2MCs Yu Jae-seok and Yoo Yeon-seok, delivering healing chat chemistry in Ssangmun-dong.

Meanwhile, Lee Heejun draws attention by confessing the hardships of being a villain-specialist actor. Lee Heejun previously left a strong impression with realistic villain performances in dramas such as "살인자ㅇ난감" and "악연."

Yu Jae-seok said, "Heejun's recent work had an incredible impact," raising his voice, "He was a filth!" In response Lee Heejun confessed with vivid humanity, "There is a scene in which the character uses his father's condolence money as he pleases, and my hand trembled without me realizing it. Even though it was acting, it gave me goosebumps," which made Yu Jae-seok burst out laughing.

By contrast, Park Hae-soo, whose looks explode with 'Tetonam' charm, added interest by revealing that he ended his living alone after a year because of loneliness.

On the day Park Hae-soo recalled memories of Ssangmun-dong, the location of today's gap, saying, "Before marriage I lived alone in Ssangmun-dong for about a year." When Lee Heejun interjected, "Originally three men lived in the rooftop room and then left," Park Hae-soo confessed, "After coming out and living alone, I felt so lonely that I developed shingles," turning the set into a sea of laughter. Park Hae-soo reminisced about the rooftop room days full of romance, saying, "When I lived with friends we always talked about acting, and as a show-off I put acting books in the fridge," after which Yu Jae-seok and Yoo Yeon-seok said, "That's totally a guys' dream," and finally understood the reason he stopped living alone, according to reports.

Viewers' curiosity about what kind of unexpected naivety the 'villain-specialist duo' Park Hae-soo and Lee Heejun will display on Whenever Possible is soaring ahead of the broadcast.

Meanwhile, the Tuesday healing variety Whenever Possible, which promises even stronger everyday-close laughter bombardment, airs every Tuesday at 9 p.m.

[Photo] SBS variety Whenever Possible

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