Chef Jeong Ji-seon got very angry at her son's sense of economics.
On the 26th episode of KBS2 'The boss's ears are donkey ears', the appearance of Chef Jeong Ji-seon coming down to Pohang with her son who wants to become a businessman was depicted.
Jeong Ji-seon came down to Pohang. Iyoo was to develop a seafood menu, which needed to be available on a regular basis because it had to be sold every day, and unit prices also had to be stable. Keeping this in mind, by Jeong Ji-seon's side in Pohang was a dignified Namsung.
The Namsung turned out to be Jeong Ji-seon's son, Woo-hyung. Now 13 years old, Woo-hyung drew attention with a height of 173 cm and a shoe size of 300 mm. Woo-hyung, who had previously surprised viewers with his taller-than-peers height and extraordinary appetite in earlier grants, surprised everyone once again with his rapid growth on this long-awaited appearance.
Only son of the Chinese restaurant, Woo-hyung's dream was to become a businessman. Compared with his earlier grants when he said he had no dream and caused Jeong Ji-seon to grab the back of her neck, it was a surprising reversal. Therefore, Jeong Ji-seon decided to accompany him to Pohang to support her son so he could further develop his dream.
Jeong Ji-seon's popularity at the Pohang market soared. Merchants everywhere requested photos and autographs. Woo-hyung, who had stepped back to watch his mother surrounded by the crowd, smiled with satisfaction and said, "It seems people are taking more pictures because mom has become famous."
After finishing market research by tasting boiled octopus and other dishes, Woo-hyung moved with his mother to a popular restaurant he had discovered on SNS. Woo-hyung ordered without hesitation and devoured the food in a frantic food broadcast, making his mother beam. It is known that he has recently been trading stocks as well.
Woo-hyung said, "My dad gave me 5,000 won so I started (stocks), and I bought Hyundai Motor as my first stock. But it fell so much I sold it and then made 20,000 won profit. After that I bought Hanwha Ocean and made 150,000 won profit, and now I've invested in Samsung Heavy Industries. Stocks are fun so I keep doing them."
But his sense of economics was terrible. Although his monthly allowance is 50,000 won, Woo-hyung said he spends nearly 300,000 won a month and "fills the gap with money saved since he was young and stock revenue." In particular, Woo-hyung repeatedly talked back to his mother's criticisms, proving with his whole body that puberty had arrived. In the end, when Jeong Ji-seon said she would increase his after-school academies so he would have no time to spend money, he backed down.
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