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TV Show Drives Oriental Medicine Tours

December 28, 2005

Ten Japanese visited Korea to participate in an oriental medicine health tour for foreigners offered by the Kyung Hee Medical Center.

They started their schedule in Korea with watching a 30-minute video on Sasang Compositional Medicine at 8:30 a.m. After that, they filled in a survey on physical composition, saw how herbal medicine was compounded, were diagnosed, told about their physical composition, and consulted a doctor.

By noon, they were served with foods that were good for their individual physical composition. When a nurse and a chef explained about each food, they took photos of their lunch table or wrote down what they heard.

Maki Hasegawa (32, female) said, “They advised me to keep my stomach warm because I have the Soeum constitution. As a Soeum type of person has weak digestive organs, I was served with digestible and soft foods like bulgogi (pan-grilled sliced beef with rice wine, soy sauce and vegetables) and radish shreds.

The Japanese tourists, ranging from those in their 30s to those in their 60s are all fans of the Korean drama “Dae Jang Geum.” They talked about “Jang Geum” all the time over the course of the program.

Kazko Watarino (61, female) said, “I joined this program because I became interested in herbal medicine after watching what Jang Geum did with herbs in the drama. I was surprised to see how clean and large oriental medicine hospitals in Korea were, compared to those in Japan.”

The Kyung Hee Medical Center set up a medical office for foreigners after Dae Jang Geum started airing on a satellite TV channel in Japan in March this year. The medical program offered by the medical center has drawn as many as 340 foreigners in only 8 months. The medical center provides the program two or three times a month with foreigners on group “Dae Jang Geum tours” in partnership with a travel agency.

The Oriental Medicine Hospital of Woo-suk University has opened an oriental medicine culture center in the city of Jeonju , Jeonbuk Province, located in the southern part of the country, in October and provides an oriental medicine program. The program includes a composition test, a foot spa, making oriental ointments and soap. About 20 to 30 foreign tourists a month come not only from Japan, but also from China, and southeast nations.

Professor Lee Su-kyung at the Sasang Composition division of the Oriental Medicine hospital of Kyung Hee Medical Center said, “As Dae Jang Geum enjoys great popularity across Asia, many people who developed interest in oriental medicine visit Korea to join our program. In some cases, people feel it worked for them and came back with their friends.”

Source: Donga 30 Nov 2005

Actress Gains Popularity in Asia

December 27, 2005

Lee Young Ae
What do President of China Hu Jintao and Hong Kong movie stars Chow Yun Fat and Andy Lau have in common?
They have all admitted in the past year to being fans of the South Korean drama “Jewel in the Palace,'’ which finished its run in China on Oct. 16 as the number one watched show.

Earlier in May it went down in Hong Kong TV history as the most-watched television show, with the last episode recording viewer ratings surpassing the 40 percent mark.

And standing in the middle of the period piece, which tells the story of clever court maid who later becomes the royal physician, and the whole craze that has spread all across Asia, is its heroine Jang-gum played by Lee Young-ae.

The popularity of the drama and the actress had her traveling all over North and Southeast Asia promoting the show. But even before all the excitement surrounding it had seemed to settle down, the 34-year-old actress was ready to excite fans with something entirely new.

In late July Lee made a stunning comeback onto to the silver screen as Kum-ja, a woman thirsty for revenge after serving a sentence for a murder she was falsely accused of committing.

For “Sympathy for Lady Vengeance’’ she teamed up with “Old Boy’’ director Park Chan-wook. The piece also happened to be the Cannes Film Festival grand prize winner’s much anticipated third and final installment of his revenge-themed series

The movie took her to Venice this year and although the film didn’t garner any awards in competitive categories, Lee still attracted a lot of attention from critics and the media.

Back home she won the best actress award at the 26th Blue Dragon Awards, which was held in Seoul last month.

Source: The Korea Times 21 Dec 2005

Lee Young Ae and Leo Ku in China

December 26, 2005

Leo Ku and Lee Young Ae
Leo Ku dedicates his performance of ‘Really Want’ to Korean star, Lee Young Ah because he likes watching the television drama, Jewel in the Palace.

Leo Ku met with Lee Young Ae during a charity dinner in China last Wednesday. They met again during a promotional activity in Hong Kong last Friday. Lee Young Ae invites him to visit her in Korea one day.

Source: CRI 23 Dec 2005

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