Tag Archives: corruption

Stranger (K-Drama Review)  

Trigger Warning: This show contains graphic violence, blood, torture, suicide, and mature themes involving corruption and murder.

I love my K-Dramas, but I need more romance than this detective thriller gave me. And I’m used to the pace of Law & Order or other procedurals that solve entire cases in one episode. This one took 2 seasons to uncover corruption that was obviously present in episode 1. I was also very thrown by the depth of respect required by the patriarchy in this show. Some of the most awkward scenes were entirely preventable if anyone was simply willing to stand up to an elder or a corrupt boss.

I love aspects of South Korean culture that demand care for others, but that obviously does not solve the problems of crimes against women, the underprivileged, and anyone not in the top 1%, just like in the U.S. Their legal system seems just as messed up as ours (at least based on these shows), except for the fact that they have done away with the death penalty in their country. I also struggle with the norm of suicide as an honorable path forward for taking accountability. I know they are trying to change that in Korean culture, but it is still very present in their shows.

The main character Si-mok is a prosecuting attorney tasked with uncovering all the corruption, and the general gist of the hook is that he is more capable of doing so than most because he has had a partial lobotomy. Some in the show suggest that his intense sense of justice and inability to be swayed by bribes is an aspect of his altered brain. I think it is just who he is and the brain stuff just helps him look neutral in crises. His more emotional counterpart is a female detective Yeo-jin, who is equally righteous and is perfectly capable of showing her emotions. She’s my favorite character in the whole show because she stands for honor and integrity in a sea of wavering men. I’m glad I watched it, though it did feel a bit like I was reading through case files in real time with these crime solvers and would have preferred a bit faster pace.

Ahn, Gil-ho; Yoo, Je-won; Park, Hyun-suk. Stranger (also known as Forest of Secrets), Cho, Seung-woo; Bae, Doona. Signal Entertainment Group; IOK Media; Ace Factory. June 10, 2017 – October 4, 2020.

Hafiz – Poem 16

Iimages created by Rebekah Marshall’s prompts using AI on Gencraft.com website.

I am reading Hafiz’s Little Book of Life, poetry by Hafiz-e Shirazi. He is challenging me to become more comfortable with ambiguity. I will share his poem and some of my thoughts on his poem (sometimes with the help of experts when the concepts are too hard for me), followed by a poem and some art inspired by his poem.

Hafiz’s Poem 16:

Those preachers
Who appear glorious
In pulpits & on altars
Yet in private
Act totally the opposite

Some thoughts:

When I was growing up, televangelists were all the rage. It was the era of Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart. Televised preachers could paint a picture of righteousness and convince millions of people to send them money. Their private lives were not so righteous. The reality was filled with scandal, corruption, and behaviors that were quite the opposite of the messages they were preaching.

I guess the platform was a newly designed sort of soap box, but the concept was nothing new. There have always been those who will profit off a public perception of holiness, but it is merely a performance. Perhaps humanity should learn not to put others on soap boxes and accept that everyone is human, faulty, and corruptible.

Jimmy Swaggart from YouTube video (link below.)

My Poem 16:

“Those that climb to the highest heights spiritually can fall to the lowest depths.”

In a baby blue 3-piece suit.
Pacing back and forth,
then planting himself in a wide
spread-eagle stance like
he’s doing the most powerful
power pose he can think of.

“As faulty worship caused death then, it can cause death now.”

In a sing-song, monotone,
ever-crescendoing
preacher cadence.

“You are obligated before God to walk holy and to walk righteous before an adulterous and wicked generation that’s dying and going to hell.”

The audience breaks out in applause.
Why are we clapping?
Because people are going to hell?
Because we are being obliged
to be better than them?
I’m confused.

“We just started a ball team, and I told them, I said, If girls show up on that ball diamond with shorts on, I will appreciate you and do everything I can to help you in Jesus, but I’ll send you home to get some clothes on.”

Even bigger round of applause.
Again, what are we clapping for?
Jimmy Swaggart’s admission
that he will lust after young girls
if they are wearing shorts?
What in the hell?

He speaks of himself in the 3rd person.

“Jimmy Swaggart, you’re preaching that in California? Are you out of your mind?”

He holds a Bible aloft to demonstrate
that “this doesn’t change” even if things
have changed in the rest of the world.

“You may look at me like a calf lookin’ at a new gate and preachers may get off behind my back and snicker, but I’m going to preach what this word says.”

He won’t kick you out of the church.
He’ll pray for you, sit with your sick,
wipe your brow, cry and weep for you,
but he will tell you what “thus sayeth the Lord.”

I guess the Lord says
He doesn’t like girls
on ball diamonds
wearing shorts.

“Faulty Fire, Faulty workship Jimmy Swaggart preaching on Holiness”, mdministries, YouTube, posted Jun 24, 2013, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCKrCtdC2oA&list=PLrkXHJifFX4dMJIZt_26b3bwgib_EPwiD

Hafiz. Hafiz’s Little Book of Life. Translated by Erfan Mojib and Gary Gach, Hampton Roads Publishing, 2023.