This is a review article written after watching the broadcast.
Comedian Yang Sang-guk confessed that he once had "Seoul disease" ("Gangnam disease").
On the 13th, the SBS entertainment program "A-ni geunde jinjja" (abbreviated as "Ageunjin") featured a new-concept talk show, "Bad guys," with Kim Sung-kyun and Yang Sang-guk appearing as guests to show off their wit.
That day Yang Sang-guk said, "I'm from Jinyoung-eup, which is even more rural than Gimhae," and said, "How rural was it? I was born at home. A midwife grandmother came and delivered me," surprising the audience.
Afterwards, Yang Sang-guk recounted the story of taking an interview for a comedian audition. He said he used to not know Seoul's geography at all and said, "I thought it would take an hour by taxi to go anywhere."
The interview assembly time was 9 a.m. in Yeouido. Yang Sang-guk woke up at 5:30 a.m., finished preparing, and took a taxi at 7 a.m., but he arrived in front of the broadcasting station in five minutes.
Life in Seoul that followed was not easy. Yang Sang-guk lived in a semi-basement and explained, "There were two rooms, but the house was small. But the number of people living together kept increasing."
As hometown juniors started relying on a senior who had settled in Seoul, seven people ended up living together. Yang Sang-guk continued, "Having lived in the countryside, I thought from a young age that riding in an imported car meant success."
He added, "If an imported car passed through the neighborhood, everyone stared. So I would drive an imported car back to my hometown and deliberately make the exhaust sound loud while driving a lap," which drew laughter.
Meanwhile, Yang Sang-guk said, "Coming up from the countryside, living in Gangnam was a dream. I lived in a Gangnam officetel paying monthly rent for 10 years. I never missed a payment," and joked, "When I park in Dogok-dong and go to the tennis court, I think, 'Ah, I've succeeded,'" provoking peals of laughter. <
[Photo] "A-ni geunde jinjja" broadcast
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