(ENG) Knowing Brother (2024) Ep 444 EngSub

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(ENG) Knowing Brother (2024) Ep 444 EngSub
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00:00:00I
00:00:30Know
00:00:44We
00:01:00Don't even turn on a phone call with Min Kyung-hoon, so I've never called him when I was so nervous.
00:01:05At first.
00:01:06I was looking at my cell phone for a long time, and I couldn't get a call.
00:01:12He thought it was voice phishing.
00:01:14Everyone would have been surprised.
00:01:16Maybe I came down to the car after the recording, but I got two calls, not one.
00:01:22So I said I was getting married.
00:01:25Really?
00:01:27Because he's the one who's going to call me.
00:01:34You must have done that to someone twice in the past.
00:01:40Now that the wedding announcement has been made, there are so many questions from the viewers.
00:01:44Let's ask instead.
00:01:46Let's ask.
00:01:48Let's start the press conference for the wedding announcement.
00:01:53First of all, I'm most curious.
00:01:55When did you meet?
00:01:59It's been a while since I've known you.
00:02:02It's been a while.
00:02:03It's been a few years since I've known you.
00:02:05You didn't say anything in front of me.
00:02:07And we've been dating since the end of last year.
00:02:12I read an article that you're a broadcaster.
00:02:15You have to be on a show to do this.
00:02:17That's all there is.
00:02:19You can't do it here in Korea.
00:02:21I even quit my job in Korea.
00:02:25Wait a minute.
00:02:28Are you here?
00:02:30Here?
00:02:36Then come inside here for a second.
00:02:39Really?
00:02:40Can I do that?
00:02:42Come here for a second.
00:02:45Are you really coming?
00:02:46I'm doing this for nothing.
00:02:48Come in. It's okay.
00:02:49Come in. It's okay.
00:02:51Come in. It's okay.
00:02:54Come in. It's okay.
00:02:58Don't do that.
00:03:03Don't do that.
00:03:04It's not me.
00:03:05Don't do that.
00:03:06It's not me.
00:03:07What is it?
00:03:12Why are you trying to get up?
00:03:15I was surprised.
00:03:16Why are you trying to get up?
00:03:18I thought you were Hwang.
00:03:21Why are you trying to get up?
00:03:24I was surprised.
00:03:26Are you a KTBC reporter?
00:03:28Really?
00:03:29Yes.
00:03:31I'm a producer.
00:03:33I've seen all of my friends.
00:03:36A few years.
00:03:37Really?
00:03:38I've seen them for a few years.
00:03:39Be honest with me.
00:03:40Did you have a crush on us
00:03:42when we were working together?
00:03:44No, it's not like that.
00:03:45Because we have similar hobbies.
00:03:47Camping?
00:03:48We like camping.
00:03:49We like to look at each other.
00:03:51We like to look at each other.
00:03:53Look at his face.
00:03:54You had a crush on him at the campsite.
00:03:58He doesn't look at people like this.
00:04:00He looks at them like this.
00:04:03Who asked you out first?
00:04:05Asked you out?
00:04:06Propose.
00:04:07Asking you out is...
00:04:08At the same time?
00:04:09At the same time?
00:04:10One, two, three.
00:04:11Let's go out.
00:04:14I'm nervous.
00:04:17I was on my way to pick him up.
00:04:20Did he ask you out for ramen?
00:04:22No, not like that.
00:04:23At my girlfriend's house.
00:04:25You drove him home?
00:04:26Yes, I drove him home.
00:04:28You don't drive.
00:04:29What?
00:04:30You only drive with that.
00:04:32You only drive a camping car.
00:04:34You drove him home with that.
00:04:35Before I sent him home,
00:04:39my stomach was already full.
00:04:41No wonder he suddenly announced it.
00:04:44Really?
00:04:45My stomach was full?
00:04:46After eating,
00:04:47he went home.
00:04:48Because he ate a lot?
00:04:49Yes, because he ate a lot.
00:04:50You should've said that.
00:04:52Because he ate too much.
00:04:53So?
00:04:54So I gave him a delivery.
00:04:55It was winter.
00:04:56Last year.
00:04:57It was cold.
00:04:58I didn't want to send him home right away.
00:05:00So I went to a small pub in front of his house.
00:05:03We had a simple fish cake soup
00:05:05and a glass of beer.
00:05:07I think that's when we felt each other more.
00:05:10I'm so jealous.
00:05:11You should've done it with us.
00:05:14We didn't even talk on the phone!
00:05:15Food?
00:05:16Fish cake soup?
00:05:18You have to use Korean when you're drunk!
00:05:21You can't drink in public!
00:05:23You can't drink in public!
00:05:24Apologize to him.
00:05:26He didn't even drink!
00:05:28I understand.
00:05:29I really understand.
00:05:30From our perspective,
00:05:33it's because you're not used to it.
00:05:35Because he didn't do anything.
00:05:38He said he was sad.
00:05:39And
00:05:40he was upset too.
00:05:41Originally,
00:05:42When we went to Saipan last time, I was going to tell you this.
00:05:45To us?
00:05:46When we went to Saipan, we spent more than an hour with Ho-dong.
00:05:51That's right.
00:05:51We had a lot of conversations at the airport.
00:05:54Kyung-hoon is like this all of a sudden.
00:05:58No, Kyung-hoon is like this all of a sudden.
00:06:00That's right.
00:06:01I was going to tell you this when we got here,
00:06:04but I held it in.
00:06:06To focus on the shoot.
00:06:08What are you talking about?
00:06:10Since when have you been focused on the shoot?
00:06:12No, I'm afraid he'll get sick.
00:06:14What are you so concentrated on?
00:06:16We all sat down at night and talked over a beer.
00:06:21We had a company dinner.
00:06:23You said you wouldn't come there even if you died.
00:06:25What are you talking about?
00:06:27We had a company dinner.
00:06:28What do you think of Lee Sang-min, the leader of the Society?
00:06:30I don't know who the leader of the Society is.
00:06:32I only have a song to sing.
00:06:34Go, go, go, go, go.
00:06:36Go far away.
00:06:39Don't make me laugh.
00:06:41I'm ready to play.
00:06:43Are you going on a honeymoon?
00:06:45Did you get a job at Saipan?
00:06:47Hey!
00:06:49I'm going to do a show.
00:06:51I'm going to play a game called Jungle Tour.
00:06:53You did the show with your heart.
00:06:55No, go to Saipan.
00:06:57It's perfect for a honeymoon.
00:06:59No, I mean,
00:07:01I went to Managasom and did this and that.
00:07:03I think you did a good job of understanding the situation.
00:07:05Jenny!
00:07:07Jenny!
00:07:09We're having a party together.
00:07:11Yeah, let's dance together.
00:07:13Mosquito dance.
00:07:15Mosquito dance.
00:07:19It's a beautiful day.
00:07:21We're looking for something.
00:07:23Let's live a good life.
00:07:29Tell the fans and the viewers that
00:07:31you're getting married.
00:07:34Actually,
00:07:36I'm sure the fans were surprised, too.
00:07:38But I hope
00:07:40you'll be warmly encouraged
00:07:42and blessed.
00:07:44Actually,
00:07:46I felt a lot of pressure
00:07:48to reveal it like this.
00:07:50Maybe all of this
00:07:52is because of A-young.
00:07:54I'm going to be able to talk
00:07:56naturally in here.
00:07:58A-young's family,
00:08:00friends, and viewers.
00:08:03Thank you.
00:08:09A-young even got Min-kyung married.
00:08:11That's right.
00:08:13A-young is a good program.
00:08:15That's a great A-young.
00:08:17A-young's family
00:08:19is getting married to A-young's PD.
00:08:21Before you blow it,
00:08:23make a wish.
00:08:25I got 1,500 won from the members.
00:08:29Sang-min will pay 500 won later.
00:08:33You paid 2,000 won.
00:08:35I made a wish.
00:08:37Congratulations.
00:08:39Congratulations.
00:08:41I heard that dry firewood burns quickly.
00:08:45Don't you think it's too cold?
00:08:47Everyone, there's something to celebrate.
00:08:49Today's recording
00:08:51is the 444th episode
00:08:53of Knowing Bros.
00:08:55Isn't it special?
00:08:57So today,
00:08:59I brought the smart students
00:09:01with me.
00:09:03Come on in, students.
00:09:19Hi, guys.
00:09:21We are
00:09:23Fried squid is delicious.
00:09:25If it's delicious, I'll eat it again.
00:09:27If I eat it again, I'll have a stomachache.
00:09:30Dr. Jung-chak
00:09:32Please get it right.
00:09:34I'm a YouTuber
00:09:36studying international affairs.
00:09:38I'm Dr. Jung-chak, Kim Ji-hoon.
00:09:40Liberalism is interpreted
00:09:42in many different ways.
00:09:44Basic rights are challenged.
00:09:46ASEAN has diversity.
00:09:48Politicians should not stay neutral.
00:09:50I think ASEAN can do something.
00:09:52What do you think?
00:09:54I have a lot of questions
00:09:56and a lot of things I want to do.
00:09:59That's great.
00:10:01There are many definitions
00:10:03of intelligence.
00:10:05It's related to our desires.
00:10:07You can understand
00:10:09people who are addicted to running.
00:10:11I'm a professor at the Department of Environmental Stabilization
00:10:13at Seungsil Cyber University.
00:10:15I'm Dr. Kwak Jae-sik.
00:10:17There's a virus that lived with dinosaurs
00:10:19in the dinosaur era.
00:10:21There are more than 30 books.
00:10:23H2O
00:10:25Because of climate change,
00:10:27I'm worried that H2O
00:10:29may come back in a few decades.
00:10:33What's going on?
00:10:35Are you really doctors?
00:10:37I think comedians came
00:10:39with a concept.
00:10:41Hello, Hodong.
00:10:43Hello, Jang-hoon.
00:10:45Hello, Young-chul.
00:10:47Long time no see.
00:10:49Do you know me?
00:10:53Why did you come here?
00:10:56I thought there would be a lot of questions.
00:10:58There's a program where
00:11:00three of us appear.
00:11:02It ended in four episodes.
00:11:04But we've been here
00:11:06for 444 episodes.
00:11:08That's right.
00:11:10I think I can learn.
00:11:12We all have a relationship.
00:11:14Ji-hoon, you don't know anyone, do you?
00:11:16I've seen Jang-hoon before.
00:11:20Why are you laughing?
00:11:22I'm a professor at the Department of Environmental Stabilization.
00:11:24It's a little hurtful.
00:11:28It's a program that doesn't hurt.
00:11:30The two of us came out together.
00:11:32It's called the shoulder of a giant.
00:11:34That's what we're going to do.
00:11:36Oh, you're going to be a giant.
00:11:38You're really good at using it.
00:11:42Jang-hoon was hosting the show.
00:11:44I'm out now.
00:11:46I heard it's a fixed program.
00:11:48I'm giving a lecture and talking.
00:11:50Jang-hoon's face was so scary.
00:11:53And he didn't even laugh at me.
00:11:55He didn't talk to me.
00:11:57But the second time,
00:11:59Dong-sun came out.
00:12:01I did a show with Dong-sun before that.
00:12:03It was so much fun.
00:12:05He's a great guy.
00:12:07The flowers were falling out of his eyes.
00:12:11And then I got fired.
00:12:13What?
00:12:17I told you not to do that.
00:12:20I'm sorry.
00:12:22Hey, that's Ji-hoon's.
00:12:24It's all his fault.
00:12:26It's all wrong.
00:12:28What if you hurt Ji-hoon's feelings?
00:12:30The problem is that Ji-hoon really misunderstood.
00:12:32Why are you doing that to Dong-sun?
00:12:34Why are you doing that to Dong-sun?
00:12:36I'm not asking you to do that.
00:12:38I was worried.
00:12:40Because I've seen Dong-sun in another program.
00:12:42I've seen Dong-sun in another program.
00:12:44Oh, really.
00:12:46I can't stop you.
00:12:50Is it too much?
00:12:52I was so angry at other scientists.
00:12:54I was so angry at other scientists.
00:12:56Why are you lying behind me?
00:12:58Why are you lying behind me?
00:13:00So I thought I'd stop him.
00:13:02So I thought I'd stop him.
00:13:04So I thought I'd stop him.
00:13:06I didn't mean Ji-hoon.
00:13:08Ji-hoon doesn't always smile.
00:13:10Ji-hoon doesn't always smile.
00:13:12He's a smart and famous guy.
00:13:14He's a smart and famous guy.
00:13:16He says he'll get in trouble if he says nonsense.
00:13:18I was like, I'm going to get in trouble, so I did that a little bit.
00:13:21You were making that face because you were humiliated.
00:13:24No, and there...
00:13:25Jang Hoon, don't say anything that makes your image worse.
00:13:30It's accurate.
00:13:32If you can't stop it here, it'll be edited out in the end.
00:13:34No, I'm going to talk about what I've been thinking.
00:13:37I heard you talk a lot, but how much do you talk a lot?
00:13:42No, my brother-in-law is like this.
00:13:45There's a radio show with Ji Sang-ryeol, so there's a corner.
00:13:48Two days later, I went there to record, and we were recording together.
00:13:52I went back and forth talking about the window.
00:13:54He was really good at talking.
00:13:56And then, during the break, Ji Sang-ryeol suddenly looked at me.
00:14:00Writer Kwak, I'll give you a funny gag.
00:14:03Writer Kwak, take this and use it.
00:14:04I'll give you the right to own it.
00:14:06When I saw someone who talked so well,
00:14:09Oh, my mouth is watering.
00:14:11He told me to do this.
00:14:13Oh, my mouth is watering.
00:14:15He told me to do this.
00:14:16What did you think?
00:14:18Jang Dong-sun's influence is buried here, so you came to me like this.
00:14:20Did you think about it?
00:14:21Hey, what are you trying to say?
00:14:23What are you talking about?
00:14:26Honestly, I really didn't understand 100%.
00:14:29I really didn't understand 100%.
00:14:32You don't know Ji Sang-ryeol because you don't like the radio show?
00:14:37Oh, my mouth is watering.
00:14:39That's how much it's flowing.
00:14:41It's like a river.
00:14:42It's not Ambansu, it's Arisu.
00:14:45Actually, I gave up on the airtime today.
00:14:48Oh, both sides are so...
00:14:49I heard that they're coming out on both sides.
00:14:51I gave up on the airtime today.
00:14:53I came out to see Jang Hoon.
00:14:55Are you satisfied with the episode of Ji Sang-ryeol?
00:14:58I'm satisfied.
00:14:59Isn't this enough?
00:15:03If that was a strong heart in the past,
00:15:06If you talk about that episode,
00:15:08Ho-dong was like this.
00:15:10If you talk about that episode,
00:15:12I'm sorry.
00:15:14I'm sorry.
00:15:15What about Kim Soo-jin?
00:15:16Hey, Jae-sik, stop talking.
00:15:18Hey, stop talking.
00:15:20Why?
00:15:21Why are you talking so much when you didn't even enter?
00:15:23Hey, wait a minute.
00:15:25Stop talking.
00:15:26Exactly.
00:15:27Stop talking.
00:15:28Why?
00:15:29Hey, there's a procedure here.
00:15:31There's a procedure.
00:15:32Whether you can enter here.
00:15:34Through the application form.
00:15:36If you have a complaint, we won't accept it.
00:15:38That's right.
00:15:39That's what you decided?
00:15:40That's right.
00:15:41You're not just going to give it to me, are you?
00:15:43There is.
00:15:44I'm Kwak Jae-sik.
00:15:45I'm Kwak Jae-sik.
00:15:46I'm Kwak Jae-sik.
00:15:47Rhythm.
00:15:49So that the battery disappears.
00:15:51Rhythm.
00:15:53So that the battery disappears.
00:15:55The song I used to listen to on the street.
00:15:59A transparent heart like a glass.
00:16:05Now it's a transfer application form.
00:16:12Is he a professor?
00:16:14Is he a professor?
00:16:17He's a professor, right?
00:16:18That's right.
00:16:19He's a professor.
00:16:20The students will love it.
00:16:21What song is this?
00:16:22This song is a self-composed song.
00:16:23Really?
00:16:24It's a song to memorize the periodic table.
00:16:25There's a periodic table.
00:16:26Look at it.
00:16:27There's hydrogen, helium, and lithium.
00:16:29I made it into a song.
00:16:31How to memorize.
00:16:32As much hydrogen as there is in the world.
00:16:37I love you.
00:16:41Like a helium balloon that I missed once.
00:16:46You're not coming back.
00:16:51I'm saying this out of spite.
00:16:53Don't say useless things.
00:16:55It's something we understand.
00:16:58It's a difficult story.
00:17:01If I translate it, it's a difficult story.
00:17:04It's not something you can't understand.
00:17:06It's the best thing to do with the earth.
00:17:08Isn't it the best?
00:17:11It's like a water.
00:17:13People who speak well are called Cheongsan Yusu.
00:17:16That's like water.
00:17:17But what's familiar to us in the water?
00:17:20It's not Han River.
00:17:21Han River is Ari Lake.
00:17:23Why are you doing this again?
00:17:24This is why Ari Lake is famous.
00:17:27But you understood, right?
00:17:28I understood.
00:17:30I don't think that's what I meant.
00:17:32I'm sorry.
00:17:33It's okay.
00:17:35But I...
00:17:36Like a transfer student.
00:17:40It's fun.
00:17:42Like a transfer student.
00:17:45It was a good timing.
00:17:47It was a good timing.
00:17:48Three transfer students came to our school today.
00:17:51Ji-yoon is a YouTuber with 950,000 subscribers.
00:17:57And Jang Dong-sun.
00:17:59Dong-sun has 400,000 subscribers.
00:18:04Kwak Jae-sik.
00:18:05How many subscribers does Jae-sik have?
00:18:06How many?
00:18:07I don't think Jae-sik has started YouTube yet.
00:18:09I don't have that.
00:18:10He's an engineering doctor.
00:18:11No, I don't want to talk about it.
00:18:13You can talk about it.
00:18:14Why?
00:18:15There's a YouTuber I'm in.
00:18:18I got 80,000 and 90,000 subscribers.
00:18:20But it didn't reach 100,000.
00:18:22If I hit 100,000, I'll give you a silver button.
00:18:24So I made it into a song.
00:18:26Silver, silver, silver, silver.
00:18:29I was waiting for the silver button.
00:18:33I'm going to Silver Town.
00:18:36You're good.
00:18:38You're good.
00:18:39Jae-sik is good.
00:18:41Jae-sik is good.
00:18:43Jae-sik is good.
00:18:44Jae-sik is good.
00:18:45Jae-sik is good.
00:18:46Jae-sik is good.
00:18:47Why did you use all the existing songs?
00:18:49No, I didn't.
00:18:50Young-bae, Young-bae.
00:18:51Young-bae, Young-bae.
00:18:52Young-bae, Young-bae.
00:18:53There's a bit of lyrics.
00:18:55You can't do that.
00:18:57I wrote down the educational background of the three transfer students.
00:19:01I just wrote the doctor's education.
00:19:04I'm just a doctor.
00:19:06Then, since you were young,
00:19:08Did you hear a lot of noise to become a doctor?
00:19:11Did you study hard among the students?
00:19:13How good are you?
00:19:15Did you have a sense of smell since you were young?
00:19:19I think I've been 6.5kg since I was born.
00:19:22What are you talking about?
00:19:24I was 6.5kg when I was born.
00:19:27I ate rice as a soup when I was young.
00:19:30Ji-yoon wasn't easy when she was young, was she?
00:19:32How many kilos?
00:19:33No, not the weight, but the intelligence.
00:19:36I was just one of the smart kids.
00:19:40I don't know.
00:19:41I don't think I've ever heard such a thing.
00:19:44Where did Ji-yoon get her doctorate?
00:19:46I got it from MIT.
00:19:48MIT.
00:19:52The doctorate was a big success.
00:19:54She became a doctor and became a doctor.
00:19:57Jae-sik, what did you do when you were young?
00:19:59What I did was,
00:20:01It's not fun.
00:20:03It's not fun enough.
00:20:05It's not fun enough.
00:20:07Except for the seat, it's so good now.
00:20:11Except for the seat, it's so good now.
00:20:12Okay.
00:20:13When I was in 6th grade,
00:20:15Do you know what I can do?
00:20:17There was something that I wanted to do.
00:20:19I wanted to play a play with my kids.
00:20:23I do that when I'm in elementary school.
00:20:25I met a kid at home.
00:20:27I remember his name.
00:20:28It was Hwang Min-young.
00:20:30We all met at a house called Hwang Min-young.
00:20:31Then I'll write a script.
00:20:33I said, let's do that.
00:20:34I thought about it and wrote the script.
00:20:36I'm working hard on the script.
00:20:38Hwang Min-young came to me with ramen.
00:20:41I told her to have lunch.
00:20:43I said, writer, have lunch.
00:20:45I gave her ramen.
00:20:47That's when it changed in my head.
00:20:49As a writer,
00:20:51As a person who publishes a book,
00:20:52I think I have a talent.
00:20:54I think I'm different from others.
00:20:56I thought like that.
00:20:59Just tell me where you go to school.
00:21:04Please do it again.
00:21:06Please do it again.
00:21:08I'll do it again.
00:21:10Ari Arisu
00:21:12Ari Arisu
00:21:14I'll do it again.
00:21:16Please do it again.
00:21:18I'll do it again.
00:21:20Just tell me where you go to school.
00:21:22I graduated from KAIST.
00:21:24I graduated from Yonsei University.
00:21:26I'll do it again.
00:21:28Ari Arisu
00:21:30Ari Arisu
00:21:32Ari Arisu
00:21:34Ari Arisu
00:21:36Ari Arisu
00:21:38Ari Arisu
00:21:40Ari Arisu
00:21:42Ari Arisu
00:21:44Ari Arisu
00:21:45I think it's really good.
00:21:47When students ask me a question,
00:21:49When students ask me a question,
00:21:51I'm going to do it alone.
00:21:53I'm going to dance.
00:21:55The school I work at is a cyber university.
00:21:57I'm going to do it by myself.
00:21:59I'm going to do it by myself.
00:22:01So I can do it well.
00:22:03So I can do it well.
00:22:05I've seen it at the bowling alley.
00:22:07Tell me about bowling.
00:22:09This is a really fun story.
00:22:11This is a really fun story.
00:22:13Tell me about bowling.
00:22:15This is a really fun story.
00:22:17Kyung-hoon, we've seen this before.
00:22:19This is a really fun story.
00:22:21I've heard a lot about ancient monsters.
00:22:23I've heard a lot about ancient monsters.
00:22:25I prepared a story that Kyung-hoon would like.
00:22:27I prepared a story that Kyung-hoon would like.
00:22:29If you tell me that it's really fun,
00:22:31It's weak, it's really fun.
00:22:33It's weak.
00:22:35You can roll it.
00:22:37I don't get hit by a car like this.
00:22:39I don't get hit by a car like this.
00:22:41It was when I was in graduate school.
00:22:43What did I do for fun back then?
00:22:45I did bowling for fun.
00:22:47And there was a guy named Dr. Cho Hong-il
00:22:49who did bowling for fun.
00:22:51He also became a doctor.
00:22:53That's a life-threatening story.
00:22:55One day, Dr. Cho
00:22:57wanted to make a bet with me.
00:22:59That day,
00:23:01I kept winning.
00:23:03I kept winning.
00:23:05I couldn't bet anymore.
00:23:07Everything was mine.
00:23:09He asked me to do it one last time.
00:23:11I had nothing to bet on.
00:23:13What would I bet on?
00:23:15Dr. Cho said,
00:23:17he would bet his soul.
00:23:19I won again.
00:23:21So I still have
00:23:23Dr. Cho's soul.
00:23:25I don't know
00:23:27how I can use his soul.
00:23:29Even after 20 years,
00:23:31I still have his soul.
00:23:33I have to say this.
00:23:35I have to say this.
00:23:37Dr. Cho's soul
00:23:39hasn't been proven yet.
00:23:41I still have his soul.
00:23:43I don't know
00:23:45if his soul is in my brain.
00:23:47So when did you tell us
00:23:49a funny story?
00:23:51It was funny back then.
00:23:53Kyung-hoon is laughing.
00:23:55Have you ever seen Kyung-hoon
00:23:57laughing like that?
00:23:59Is this a funny story
00:24:01among doctors?
00:24:03No.
00:24:05People would think
00:24:07this is a funny story.
00:24:09When I came here today,
00:24:11Daesik and Dong-seok
00:24:13talked a lot.
00:24:15I was worried
00:24:17they might not like me.
00:24:19I think they like me the most.
00:24:21Ji-yoon is waiting for her turn.
00:24:23Please save me.
00:24:25How hard is it to study abroad?
00:24:27In my case,
00:24:29I got married and had a baby.
00:24:31At the end,
00:24:33I had to submit a paper
00:24:35in front of the professor.
00:24:37I was 8 months pregnant.
00:24:41So you decided to leave school.
00:24:43Yes.
00:24:45When I submitted the paper,
00:24:47I put the baby
00:24:49in the cradle
00:24:51and shook the baby with my feet.
00:24:53It was hard physically
00:24:55and mentally.
00:24:57It was stressful.
00:24:59But as I got older,
00:25:01there's nothing I can't do.
00:25:03I have a lot of energy.
00:25:05I agree with you.
00:25:07When I was a doctor,
00:25:09I didn't make a lot of money.
00:25:11When I got married and had a baby,
00:25:13I made about 1.2 million won.
00:25:15My family had to make a living.
00:25:17So I couldn't buy
00:25:194,000 won worth of milk.
00:25:21I had to buy
00:25:236,000 won worth of milk in Germany.
00:25:25That's when I started
00:25:27talking about science.
00:25:29If you talk about science,
00:25:31you can earn 200,000 won or 300,000 won.
00:25:33Did you talk a lot?
00:25:35No.
00:25:37It's a 10-minute competition.
00:25:39You have to talk about science
00:25:41in 10 minutes
00:25:43so that the winner
00:25:45gets the prize money.
00:25:47It's a good thing that Germany
00:25:49doesn't have a sense of humor.
00:25:51If it was Korea,
00:25:53I wouldn't have been able to make money.
00:25:55If you go to Germany,
00:25:57I started making money
00:25:59by winning
00:26:01the first prize
00:26:03in a science talk competition.
00:26:05But I was afraid of being greedy.
00:26:07I won the first prize in a science talk competition,
00:26:09so the publisher suggested
00:26:11me to publish a book.
00:26:13The book was worth tens of millions of won.
00:26:15Then my life would be solved.
00:26:17So I decided to do it.
00:26:19As you know,
00:26:21it's hard to write a doctoral thesis.
00:26:23How can I write a book?
00:26:25So I decided to publish a book
00:26:27within six months of my doctoral thesis.
00:26:29Then I got the first prize.
00:26:31But I was confused.
00:26:33Just before I had to publish a doctoral thesis,
00:26:35I heard from the professor
00:26:37that I couldn't do it.
00:26:39The deadline to publish a book
00:26:41was almost two weeks
00:26:43from the deadline to publish a doctoral thesis.
00:26:45No matter how I look at it,
00:26:47I failed to publish a doctoral thesis.
00:26:49I couldn't even publish a book,
00:26:51and I was in debt of tens of millions of won.
00:26:53At that time, I didn't have a religion,
00:26:55but I sat at the back of the church
00:26:57and cried.
00:26:59Didn't you say you didn't have a soul?
00:27:01I didn't have a soul,
00:27:03but I felt comfortable
00:27:05if there was a church or a cathedral behind me.
00:27:07In the end, I almost failed,
00:27:09but I was comforted
00:27:11by a piece of paper,
00:27:13and I did it.
00:27:15So I got a doctorate and published a book.
00:27:17That's how it happened.
00:27:19You said you were born abroad.
00:27:21I was born in Heidelberg, Germany.
00:27:23I lived there until I was six years old,
00:27:25and then I came back to Korea.
00:27:27You must be good at German, too.
00:27:29Isn't Dong-sun a German doctor?
00:27:31Yes, he's a German doctor.
00:27:37I love you, too.
00:27:39It takes an hour to give birth to a German baby.
00:27:43Let's go to Germany.
00:27:45What did you do as a doctor?
00:27:47I went to an exchange student
00:27:49and studied brain science there.
00:27:51It was so much fun.
00:27:53That's when I started studying brain science.
00:27:57Let's look at our friends' faces
00:27:59when we talk about ourselves.
00:28:01Ji-hoon is angry.
00:28:03Ji-hoon was in the order,
00:28:05but no one asked a question.
00:28:07When I was here,
00:28:09this is how it started.
00:28:11Ji-hoon said this,
00:28:13and then he came out and took it.
00:28:15It's okay. I'm used to it.
00:28:17It's okay.
00:28:19If you agree, let's go to the second period.
00:28:25How was it today?
00:28:31I'm out!
00:28:33It was so much fun.
00:28:37Don't ask questions to three people.
00:28:39If you ask Ji-hoon,
00:28:41the two of you can answer.
00:28:43I'm going to ask my friends.
00:28:45Just ask one question.
00:28:47Ji-hoon is a doctor.
00:28:49He seems to know everything.
00:28:51He's called Dr. Cheokcheok.
00:28:53There are a lot of questions
00:28:55that are the most absurd.
00:28:57Jang-hoon said I looked scary.
00:28:59He doesn't ask me that.
00:29:01Please, please, please.
00:29:03Ji-hoon told me.
00:29:05Ji-hoon, save me.
00:29:07The most asked question is election.
00:29:09Is it an adult or a child?
00:29:11Who do you think it will be?
00:29:13Don't do it.
00:29:15I always ask that.
00:29:17Actually, politics is just...
00:29:19I think about what's going on.
00:29:21It's not about guessing.
00:29:23I'm always wrong.
00:29:25I can't talk.
00:29:27Is this the end?
00:29:29You have to give up!
00:29:31You do a lot of political content.
00:29:33I've seen all the programs
00:29:35of Dr. Kim Ji-hoon.
00:29:37Really?
00:29:39I don't understand.
00:29:41I'm just watching.
00:29:43Various contents.
00:29:45When you sleep,
00:29:47you sleep with your clothes on.
00:29:49Various contents.
00:29:51Automatic ASMR.
00:29:53History class.
00:29:55There's a content about whiskey.
00:29:57I've seen whiskey content.
00:29:59I've seen it.
00:30:01Whiskey content?
00:30:03That's right.
00:30:05Drinking is very political.
00:30:07Always through the history of mankind.
00:30:09Dr. Kim Ji-hoon.
00:30:11Every time Ji-hoon came out on TV,
00:30:13I think I was talking about Biden and Trump.
00:30:15I've actually been on a show with Jessica.
00:30:17With Hodong.
00:30:19He's our national representative.
00:30:21The three of us did it before.
00:30:23Yeah, the three of us did it.
00:30:25Yeah, Dong-sun did it together.
00:30:27But honestly, I...
00:30:29I was scolded by Hodong once while sleeping.
00:30:31I'm sorry.
00:30:33I'm sorry.
00:30:35It's good to close your eyes, but don't look at your nose.
00:30:37It's a political difference.
00:30:39It's a political difference.
00:30:41I think I'll ask Jessica a lot.
00:30:43Don't you ask a lot of questions?
00:30:45But Jessica is not difficult.
00:30:47Even if you ask me something useless.
00:30:49It's all possible.
00:30:51One of Jessica's stories.
00:30:53It was so much fun to talk about the goblin.
00:30:55But Jessica
00:30:57You look up a lot of ancient documents.
00:30:59Do you remember the reason you didn't have a goblin?
00:31:01I slept.
00:31:05Then I'm curious.
00:31:07It's a goblin or a ghost.
00:31:09Then do you think there's a ghost?
00:31:11I don't think so.
00:31:13I don't think so.
00:31:15Then what's the goblin?
00:31:17Let's think about it.
00:31:19If you say a ghost in Korea,
00:31:21What comes to mind is...
00:31:23I think I saw a ghost.
00:31:25A woman with long hair.
00:31:27She's wearing red.
00:31:29Think about it again.
00:31:31But in Canada and the United States,
00:31:33What comes to mind when you think of a ghost?
00:31:35It looks like a tablecloth.
00:31:37It's a sunset.
00:31:39There are two holes in it.
00:31:41But if someone in Korea
00:31:43Put an American or Canadian ghost.
00:31:45The tablecloth is white.
00:31:47If someone shows you two holes in it,
00:31:49Who would think it's a ghost?
00:31:51Who put that tablecloth?
00:31:53Why did you put it there?
00:31:55You'll know if you do this.
00:31:57What does that mean?
00:31:59A ghost is a cultural object.
00:32:01It's in a person's head.
00:32:03It's a cultural object!
00:32:05It's a cultural object!
00:32:09It's a cultural object.
00:32:11It's a cultural object.
00:32:13There's a scientist among my friends.
00:32:15There's a scientist.
00:32:17Scientists don't believe in ghosts at all.
00:32:19Scientists don't believe in ghosts at all.
00:32:21The brain science issue was
00:32:23If you stimulate a part of the brain,
00:32:25I can see God.
00:32:27I can feel God.
00:32:29It wasn't reproduced later.
00:32:31The interesting thing is that
00:32:33People who believe in Buddhism feel Buddha.
00:32:35People who believe in Allah feel their God.
00:32:37People who believe in Christianity see Jesus.
00:32:39People who believe in Christianity see Jesus.
00:32:41It's the same area, but depending on what faith
00:32:43It's the same area, but depending on what faith
00:32:45The brain interprets it differently.
00:32:47What about soap?
00:32:49It's also very interesting to say soap.
00:32:51In a certain situation,
00:32:53You believe someone else has come to you.
00:32:55You believe someone else has come to you.
00:32:57Someone in that situation
00:32:59Someone in that situation
00:33:01In this person's story
00:33:03In this person's story
00:33:05People can see a similar reaction.
00:33:07People can see a similar reaction.
00:33:09I don't think Soo-geun will agree.
00:33:11I don't think Soo-geun will agree.
00:33:13I think my mom is acting.
00:33:17I think it's a habit to get a lot of moxibustion.
00:33:21That's a good excuse.
00:33:23You guys are making excuses for the situation.
00:33:25That's right.
00:33:27I was just trying to make you laugh.
00:33:29Your mother's job.
00:33:31He's on TV.
00:33:33Your mom's job.
00:33:35I heard you guys don't watch TV at your mom's house.
00:33:39Next is the major field.
00:33:41This is the major field of all the students.
00:33:45Since we're on the subject, let's start with Dr. T.M.T.
00:33:51T.M.T.
00:33:52Too Much Talker.
00:33:54I didn't do a good job today.
00:33:57What?
00:33:58No, you're doing a good job.
00:33:59You're doing a great job.
00:34:00You're doing a great job.
00:34:01I think today was the best day since I met Dr. T.M.T.
00:34:04I think today was the best day since I met Dr. T.M.T.
00:34:08Are you doing a good job?
00:34:09What kind of research do you do?
00:34:11Are you looking at the MRI?
00:34:13Are you opening your brain?
00:34:15Brain science is a very broad field.
00:34:17So medicine, psychology, computer engineering, all of these fields are included in brain science.
00:34:21But basically, the question that brain science is most curious about is
00:34:25when people see, judge, and feel something,
00:34:29why does our brain feel that way?
00:34:31Why am I so anxious?
00:34:33No matter how much I think about it, there's no answer.
00:34:35But what kind of neural circuit in the brain makes me anxious?
00:34:39If you explain these things in brain science,
00:34:41it helps you find your own cause and change yourself.
00:34:44So brain science is a field that explores what kind of person I am and what kind of human being I am.
00:34:51So when we look at it like this,
00:34:53do the eyes see first or do I recognize it first?
00:34:56The light signal from the eyes goes to the brain.
00:34:59What's really amazing is that you can't see what you've never experienced.
00:35:03You can't hear what you've never heard.
00:35:06For example, the brain distinguishes what you've experienced.
00:35:10So if your eyes are connected like a camera,
00:35:14if you connect the wires of someone who can't see,
00:35:17you think you can make them see again.
00:35:20You can't do that yourself.
00:35:22Because for the first two years of your life,
00:35:25your brain has to learn what it sees,
00:35:28but you have the ability to interpret things like this is a face, this is a movement.
00:35:32In fact, if you cover your eyes for a cat and don't let it see until it's a certain age,
00:35:37when you take it off, the signal comes in.
00:35:39But you can't interpret what that means,
00:35:42so your brain just loses the ability to see like a gray circle.
00:35:47Then we're going to...
00:35:49Be careful with your questions.
00:35:51Because if you ask the wrong question...
00:35:53Sangmin, this is...
00:35:54I'm not curious.
00:35:55Very important question.
00:35:57Okay, go ahead.
00:35:58Right now, the brain is...
00:36:00We're relying on some kind of device.
00:36:02It's going to be even worse.
00:36:04Then the science of the brain itself...
00:36:06In the future...
00:36:08Isn't it an unnecessary field?
00:36:10No, it's not.
00:36:11It's actually more necessary.
00:36:13Because artificial intelligence does what humans can't do.
00:36:16But to make this really convenient for us,
00:36:20you have to know how the brain works.
00:36:22You can use that technology well.
00:36:24Because you have to match people's concerns.
00:36:26If you use artificial intelligence, your mental health can get worse.
00:36:28You can get more depressed and worse.
00:36:31But I think the internet we use now is a little bit like that.
00:36:35These days, teenagers only communicate on Instagram or SNS.
00:36:39It's hard to actually meet people and communicate.
00:36:42Then one by one...
00:36:44It's a little hard.
00:36:45I'm nervous.
00:36:46There's a lot of symptoms like this.
00:36:48So if you understand why the brain is like that,
00:36:50Even if we use technology,
00:36:52People don't get more lonely and sick.
00:36:55It's possible to make it a technology that can make people happier.
00:36:59That's right.
00:37:00But let me ask you one thing.
00:37:01You know the inside of the brain.
00:37:03Humans can only use 10% of the brain.
00:37:07This is the most well-known brain science superstition.
00:37:10Einstein used 20% of his brain.
00:37:13If you look at the OECD website,
00:37:15There's a superstition that people are wrong about brain science.
00:37:19The first one is that we only use 10% of our brains.
00:37:22Why is this wrong?
00:37:24The brain is the most expensive organ that uses the most energy in our body.
00:37:28It doesn't make sense if you only use 10%.
00:37:30That's right.
00:37:31So, in fact, we're using all of our brains.
00:37:34If you only use 10%, you can't measure it and you're wrong.
00:37:39And you know what?
00:37:40It's a question we like.
00:37:42They say that if you have a lot of wrinkles in your brain, you're smart.
00:37:45I've heard that before. Is that right?
00:37:47The wrinkles in the brain are not different for each person.
00:37:50It's different for each species.
00:37:52What would happen if you put as much brain as possible in the same skull?
00:37:57You have to bend it, so you get wrinkles.
00:37:59So, in order to increase the capacity in the brain, the brain has wrinkles in the process of evolution.
00:38:04The reason why I had to put in so much brain was because I didn't need it to live alone.
00:38:10Even reptiles' brains are smooth.
00:38:12So reptiles, like sea turtles,
00:38:15As soon as they are born, there is no one to help them because they can't get out of the egg.
00:38:19But humans, mice, chimpanzees, and cats all feel the pain of other beings.
00:38:25If other beings go to eat something delicious, I go to eat it, too.
00:38:28They have the ability to read other beings.
00:38:30But this is intelligence, and it's more likely to survive if it's developed.
00:38:35To do this, you need a lot of brain capacity.
00:38:38Then tell me one thing.
00:38:40What is the representative food that is good for the brain?
00:38:45In fact, it's best for modern people to eat less.
00:38:50Then what about Hodong?
00:38:57Eat less. Eat less.
00:38:58Yeah, you should eat less.
00:39:00It's good to eat less.
00:39:01Speaking of snacks, Jaesik is still.
00:39:04What do I have to say?
00:39:08Speaking of snacks, Jaesik, what do you have to say?
00:39:11Ji-hoon wrote it beautifully.
00:39:14This word always makes my heart flutter.
00:39:16He is a world-class political scientist.
00:39:22I've done a lot of interviews with famous people.
00:39:26What kind of famous people?
00:39:28I was in a conversation with Obama.
00:39:30Really?
00:39:31You also had a 100-minute debate in Korea.
00:39:37Michael Sandel.
00:39:38I was in a conversation with Michael Sandel.
00:39:40And I was in a conversation with Tony Blinken.
00:39:44Ji-hoon, I'm so jealous of you.
00:39:46In fact, you can study English.
00:39:49But isn't interviewing another skill?
00:39:52It's different from English.
00:39:53Is he better at English than an American?
00:39:55No, it's not that.
00:39:56It's not that he's fluent.
00:39:57There's a way to lead a conversation.
00:40:00I didn't live in the United States when I was young.
00:40:02I graduated from college and studied in the United States.
00:40:07Where did you graduate from?
00:40:10Y University.
00:40:11Oh, I see.
00:40:14Isn't this a script?
00:40:16It's a script.
00:40:18I don't think it's necessary.
00:40:21I'm sure you've been doing it for a long time.
00:40:24All the great people are like this.
00:40:28How do you cast great people?
00:40:33There are times when I do it myself.
00:40:36There are times when I say I'll do it there.
00:40:38But there are more cases where I say I'll do it there.
00:40:42Especially politicians.
00:40:45It's hard.
00:40:47I want to be more human and get closer.
00:40:50I need to express this.
00:40:52But in order to do that,
00:40:54It's a YouTube channel that can interview you for 20 minutes.
00:40:59It's popular these days.
00:41:01This is a kind of diplomacy.
00:41:04Those people prefer that kind of thing.
00:41:06But if you do it with them, it's too hard.
00:41:09Why?
00:41:10First of all, it takes a short time.
00:41:13It's a short time.
00:41:14In the case of former President Obama, he only gave me 30 minutes.
00:41:17How did you feel at that moment?
00:41:19You have to put your natural interests before your moral standards.
00:41:24I think it's a great question.
00:41:27I was able to serve for 8 years as President of the United States.
00:41:31And always felt as if I was able to maintain my own personal integrity and moral standards.
00:41:38But the program that goes out is originally a running time of 50 minutes.
00:41:42So you have to go in for 30 minutes without editing at all.
00:41:45How do you do 20 minutes?
00:41:47We'll just talk to each other for 20 minutes.
00:41:49Or you'll feel that kind of reaction, right?
00:41:52And if you ask them to edit it, they'll ask you not to ask questions like this.
00:41:58Actually, I adjust the questions in advance.
00:42:01But when I do it, I throw other questions a little bit.
00:42:05Then they'll answer me.
00:42:07So after you record it...
00:42:10Obama is active.
00:42:12There's something like that.
00:42:14Take that out.
00:42:15Eddie, Eddie, Eddie.
00:42:18You're making a big deal out of it.
00:42:21No, it's not like that.
00:42:24Seo Jang-hoon is amazing, too.
00:42:26Ji-yoon, have you ever felt humane towards Sarkozy or Obama?
00:42:31President Sarkozy?
00:42:32That's right.
00:42:33When we hear people like the president or the prime minister talk,
00:42:37they talk in a very formal way.
00:42:40There used to be a summit where a lot of normal people gathered.
00:42:43The Israeli Prime Minister, Netanyahu, kept walking like this.
00:42:45So President Sarkozy talks to President Obama.
00:42:48He doesn't know the microphone is on.
00:42:50He's so rude and annoying.
00:42:53He doesn't know English.
00:42:54Then President Obama said,
00:42:56Hey, I have to talk to him every day.
00:42:59If you look at it from the outside, they shake hands and hug each other.
00:43:03They're all people, so they talk behind each other's backs.
00:43:06That's right. It's fun.
00:43:08That's why he's so humorous.
00:43:09Then who was the hardest person to interview?
00:43:12It's hard. It's hard.
00:43:14Professor Michael Sandel.
00:43:15Oh, really?
00:43:16I think the professor will talk well.
00:43:17Is he talkative?
00:43:18The professor talks like a poem.
00:43:22It's like he's writing a book in his head.
00:43:24Oh, he's the type to talk for a long time.
00:43:26That's right.
00:43:27Oh, but Michael Sandel, Mr. Seo Sandel, Mr. Jo Sandel.
00:43:30Mr. Seo Sandel.
00:43:32There's Mr. Seo Sandel.
00:43:35That's right. It's very long.
00:43:37It's like he's writing something in his head and talking.
00:43:41If you listen to it, you'll be attracted to it.
00:43:43Suddenly, he says,
00:43:45So, what do you think, Ji-yoon?
00:43:48Ji-yoon, what do you think?
00:43:50Does that make it clear enough, do you think?
00:43:52Yeah, it is clear to me.
00:43:54Because I read the book.
00:43:56Right.
00:43:57And which can be called, I understood, as a civil republicanism.
00:44:02Yes.
00:44:03He's asking the wrong question.
00:44:05He has to pay a lot of attention.
00:44:07Professor Sandel is actually much more picky.
00:44:10But if you study political science, run a political program, and make content,
00:44:14In the end, your dream is to enter the political scene, right?
00:44:18No, because he must have received a lot of offers.
00:44:20I think so.
00:44:21I think he must have received a lot of offers.
00:44:22He's a political scholar.
00:44:23Tell me everything here.
00:44:24Tell me if it's a scolding or a praise.
00:44:27I don't ask anything else.
00:44:28The first person to be born as a politician from Ahyung.
00:44:31No, I really don't have any thoughts.
00:44:33And my child hates it.
00:44:35Honestly, there are a lot of people who don't accept it, right?
00:44:37Well, no comment.
00:44:40No comment.
00:44:41Then, Professor Park, do you always have to be neutral in politics?
00:44:45That's actually different for each person.
00:44:48I try to talk in the middle as much as possible.
00:44:52I'm a little curious.
00:44:53Then what is political science?
00:44:55In fact, it's a little difficult for us to feel politics.
00:44:58But I'm curious about what exactly political science is.
00:45:01Political science is ultimately a study of humans.
00:45:04I think the ultimate desire and goal of humans is power.
00:45:09How will I get this power?
00:45:12How have humans lived for it?
00:45:15It's political science to study that.
00:45:17There must be politics in the classroom of Knowing Bros.
00:45:20Of course. There's politics everywhere.
00:45:22Who do you think has the most power and who is the most violent?
00:45:26I think Hee-chul has the most power.
00:45:29Exactly.
00:45:30This is exactly right.
00:45:33Unbelievable.
00:45:34I'm a political scientist.
00:45:36What are you looking at?
00:45:38I'm 100% sure that he's the one who did it.
00:45:45The most important thing is that one person can't decide who to elect or who to make president.
00:45:52But the biggest power is the power to send someone away.
00:45:56That's a fake progress.
00:45:58It doesn't fit these days.
00:45:59Round progress.
00:46:01If you want to make a solo album, contact me.
00:46:03Do you have any experience of being a solo artist?
00:46:05Yes.
00:46:08She's attacking him.
00:46:10Who can I send away?
00:46:11I can send Ho-dong or Young-chul away.
00:46:15This is the real power.
00:46:16I've done a lot of variety shows.
00:46:18It's hard for me to run to you.
00:46:20But I do what I enjoy.
00:46:22I've been trying for 8 years to send Young-chul away from Knowing Bros.
00:46:28He's still doing it.
00:46:29I'm a failure.
00:46:31He's doing it until the end.
00:46:34We're talking about major fields today.
00:46:36It's time to focus on it.
00:46:38Jaesik's major field is engineering.
00:46:43He knows everything.
00:46:45I'm not an engineer.
00:46:47I'm a professor at school.
00:46:50I'm a writer.
00:46:53I'm going to do two things.
00:46:54The reason why I started this is because
00:46:56At first, I just wrote a short novel like a hobby.
00:47:00I just posted it on the Internet.
00:47:01But there's a place that's going to pay for this.
00:47:04Where do you think was the first place that offered to pay for your novel?
00:47:09Publishing company?
00:47:10It's not even a publishing company.
00:47:11Son Young-suk, the producer of MBC Television, contacted me.
00:47:15I'm a drama producer.
00:47:16No, the real name...
00:47:17From Hwang Mi-young.
00:47:22Because there's an important moment in my life.
00:47:24I don't remember the name at all.
00:47:25The producer called me.
00:47:26The producer called me.
00:47:27At that time, there was a short film series called MBC Best Screenplay.
00:47:30I remember the episode now.
00:47:31They're going to make it into a 635-episode episode and broadcast it.
00:47:35What's the title of the drama?
00:47:36It's called Rabbit Aria.
00:47:38MBC Best Screenplay
00:47:39It's Aria again.
00:47:40It's Aria again.
00:47:41That's when I got inspired.
00:47:43When I was young, I had Hwang Mi-young.
00:47:46I just wrote a short novel.
00:47:49It's amazing that a video request came in from the first broadcast station.
00:47:53That's right.
00:47:54That's amazing.
00:47:55If you work a little harder and write a book, you'll be a bestseller.
00:47:58Since 2006, I've been writing, writing books, and writing novels.
00:48:03Didn't you write about 20 to 30 books?
00:48:05I've written a lot of books.
00:48:07The number of books isn't important.
00:48:08You have to be a bestseller.
00:48:10That's what I'm saying.
00:48:11But in the publishing industry...
00:48:12That's why I'm doing a few genres.
00:48:14That's right.
00:48:16It's a legend in the publishing industry.
00:48:18There's a saying in the publishing industry that says,
00:48:20There's a saying in the publishing industry that says,
00:48:22Usually, people who have knowledge take a long time to write a book.
00:48:27I've cut it all down.
00:48:29How can there be so many books in a year?
00:48:32Does AI write it for you?
00:48:33That's why no one can beat Kwak Jae-sik's speed.
00:48:36It's like a legend.
00:48:37It's not just writing.
00:48:39I didn't fix it as I thought.
00:48:41It's a legend.
00:48:43It's a legend.
00:48:44I'm sorry.
00:48:45It's a legend.
00:48:48There was no such thing as a legend.
00:48:50When I was in middle and high school, I was in the first place in my class.
00:48:55I was in the first place in my class.
00:48:57I majored in technology policy cooperation at Yonsei University.
00:49:00That's a good thing.
00:49:02But Professor Jido majored in environmental science.
00:49:05I majored in chemistry.
00:49:07I majored in environmental science.
00:49:08What exactly is environmental engineering?
00:49:13What is environmental engineering?
00:49:14Environmental engineering is really fun.
00:49:15Think about it.
00:49:16We get envious when we wash the dishes.
00:49:19But usually, when dirty water flows into the sewer hole, no one thinks about it after that.
00:49:25Someone gets all the dirty water, cleans it, and sends it to the Han River.
00:49:31That's why our Han River is being maintained.
00:49:34Because we keep running that factory, all the cities in Korea can be maintained.
00:49:39That's why we're doing it.
00:49:41It's really fun.
00:49:43You're doing a great job in nature.
00:49:48It's very important.
00:49:50What's really interesting is...
00:49:52Jessi told me on the radio a long time ago.
00:49:54You almost became a junior comedian.
00:49:56Did you take a comedian exam?
00:49:58I didn't take the exam.
00:49:59I kept exaggerating.
00:50:00I didn't take the exam.
00:50:01I applied.
00:50:02No way.
00:50:03I applied.
00:50:04There were 10 million people.
00:50:05I applied to take the exam.
00:50:07If you have good grades, you can pass the exam.
00:50:09Why did you apply?
00:50:11I've been thinking that being a comedian is a good job since I was a kid.
00:50:16Why didn't you take the exam when you passed the exam?
00:50:18The exam date overlapped when I was in graduate school.
00:50:22Don't lie. You didn't have confidence.
00:50:25What was the comedian you prepared?
00:50:27I.R.E.
00:50:28I.R.E.
00:50:32Was there a comedian you prepared?
00:50:33I can't remember.
00:50:35I thought of Hwang Diyoung in episode 635.
00:50:39It's not fake.
00:50:42You were interested in being a comedian.
00:50:44I was interested when I was young.
00:50:45He has a cheerful personality.
00:50:48It's easy to make people laugh.
00:50:51It's a philosophical story.
00:50:52Think about it.
00:50:53Sit down. It's hard to edit.
00:50:58Don't sit down.
00:51:02It's okay.
00:51:03It's okay.
00:51:04It's okay.
00:51:05It's okay.
00:51:06I thought about it while writing a novel.
00:51:09It's easy for a person's life to be unhappy.
00:51:14But you need a lot of conditions to be happy.
00:51:18If you make a big mistake, you'll be unhappy.
00:51:21It's not easy to make people laugh.
00:51:24Thank you.
00:51:26Did you get to know the students well?
00:51:29It was a good time.
00:51:30I think you've learned a lot.
00:51:31Let's start the class to make the students' major.
00:51:36It's a perfect class to pretend to know.
00:51:39Let's focus and listen.
00:51:41Focus!
00:51:44Jae-sik prepared the first presentation.
00:51:48The other students can sit down.
00:51:51Thank you.
00:51:54Shouldn't you bring a sandglass?
00:51:57You're just going to let it go?
00:51:58Should I set the timer?
00:52:00Let's listen to it first.
00:52:04The topic is climate change.
00:52:09Can't you tell me about your first love?
00:52:12My first love is climate change.
00:52:14The man who fell in love with climate change.
00:52:16Are you Chinese?
00:52:19It's a little bit like this.
00:52:28I'm going to emphasize two things while talking about climate change.
00:52:31I'm going to explain it with only two points.
00:52:33First!
00:52:35Let's do it. It's fun.
00:52:37You're excited to do it now, aren't you?
00:52:40Climate change is...
00:52:43Please write it quickly.
00:52:44Quickly!
00:52:46First!
00:52:47Climate change is an economic problem.
00:52:50Shall we try it?
00:52:51One, two, three!
00:52:52Climate change is an economic problem.
00:52:55People say that climate change is the end of the world.
00:52:58We need to think about such a far-reaching problem like the end of the world.
00:53:02Climate change is an economic problem right in front of us.
00:53:06The problem of pressuring companies is so big.
00:53:09There's a new system that started in Europe these days.
00:53:12It's called CBAM.
00:53:17I think it's an expression you use when you're in a bad mood.
00:53:19Isn't it something like clean?
00:53:23Carbon!
00:53:24Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism
00:53:27It's called the Carbon Border Adjustment System.
00:53:30It's hard.
00:53:31It's hard to say.
00:53:32What I mean is...
00:53:33To sell something in Europe,
00:53:36It's about how much carbon dioxide you've emitted.
00:53:39If it's more than a certain line,
00:53:41Sell it to Europe after you pay the price.
00:53:44Because the more carbon dioxide is emitted,
00:53:46It causes a lot of warming.
00:53:48It makes climate change more serious.
00:53:50Then, in Europe,
00:53:52Why did they start this system first in the world?
00:53:57When Europeans talk to themselves,
00:53:59How do you talk a lot?
00:54:00Because Europe is an advancing country.
00:54:02To lead the earth to protect it.
00:54:04We're going to implement this system.
00:54:06Of course, we can talk about it that way.
00:54:08But if you think about it,
00:54:10There's no reason to be nicer than Europeans.
00:54:13If you look at what was announced a while ago,
00:54:16Korea is the best country in the world for recycling.
00:54:20But why do you think Europe implemented this system first?
00:54:24To beat the water bomb!
00:54:26Oh!
00:54:27Fresh idea!
00:54:28Water bomb goddess!
00:54:30They use electricity to make products.
00:54:33If you use electricity like solar or wind power,
00:54:37If you make it without emitting carbon dioxide,
00:54:40Wouldn't it be advantageous under the C-Bomb system?
00:54:43In Korea, more than 90% is a traditional method.
00:54:47Only 78% of the regenerative energy is emitted by carbon dioxide.
00:54:50It's made of electricity by minimizing it.
00:54:52But in the case of last year,
00:54:55Britain boasted that more than half of its electricity was made of renewable energy such as solar wind power.
00:55:03Germany also boasted that it had exceeded half last year.
00:55:07In a country like Norway, more than 90% and almost 100% are all renewable energy.
00:55:12Norway has a lot of mountains and water, so it's a good source of power.
00:55:17What are you talking about?
00:55:18If a system like the C-Bomb is implemented,
00:55:20Is it advantageous for European companies or Korean companies?
00:55:22European companies!
00:55:23European companies have no choice but to be advantageous.
00:55:25Korea is good at making steel products.
00:55:27There's a big one in Jecheolso, Pohang, and Gwangyang.
00:55:30They make a lot of good steel products.
00:55:32Originally, this kind of recycling technology started in Europe.
00:55:35But these days, those countries have all caught up with technology in countries like China, India, and Korea.
00:55:39It's hard to compete with technology.
00:55:41It's harder to compete with the unit price.
00:55:43So the Europeans were thinking about it a lot.
00:55:45They come to Europe and sell so much steel.
00:55:47How can we protect our industry and continue to make money for Europeans?
00:55:52Oh, Europe has been focusing on environmental issues for a long time.
00:55:55We've invested a lot in renewable energy.
00:55:57We're going to protect the earth and protect climate change.
00:56:01I think they spent a lot of electricity to make steel.
00:56:04Shouldn't we pay for the cost of using a lot of electricity?
00:56:07Because of the C-Bomb system, we have to pay for it.
00:56:10That's the structure we're going with.
00:56:12If you look at it, it's really obvious.
00:56:15Why did Norway become a rich country?
00:56:17Why did Norway become rich because it sold oil?
00:56:19Why did Norway become rich because it sold mackerel?
00:56:22That's right.
00:56:24Norway is the largest exporter of oil.
00:56:26As expected, the key is genetics.
00:56:28There's a lot of oil in the sea in front of Norway.
00:56:31If you look at the amount of oil exported to Norway,
00:56:33Norway sells more oil than most Middle Eastern countries.
00:56:39More than the Middle East?
00:56:41Norway has more oil than Algeria.
00:56:43Norway has a lot of oil.
00:56:45Why didn't you tell us?
00:56:47We don't know.
00:56:49We didn't know.
00:56:51We didn't know.
00:56:52Those countries have invested in renewable energy, solar power, and wind power with that money.
00:56:57This is what the world's powerful and advanced countries are doing.
00:57:01There's a company that makes the best electric cars in the world.
00:57:05There's a company that comes to mind.
00:57:07If you compare it to the C-Bomb,
00:57:09it's about 20 times the size of the largest car company in Korea.
00:57:11It's a huge company.
00:57:13As much as their country's electric car industry is developed,
00:57:15they think it's a problem of climate change.
00:57:17They all have to ride an electric car.
00:57:19It's a position that foreigners have no choice but to do.
00:57:21Where is the best solar industry in the world?
00:57:23Yangchuan?
00:57:25China?
00:57:27China is the best.
00:57:29China has the cheapest price and the highest quality.
00:57:31It's the largest on both sides.
00:57:33If you pick the best solar company in the world,
00:57:35it's always China.
00:57:37If you pick the second best company,
00:57:39it's usually a Chinese company.
00:57:41China is holding the solar market tight.
00:57:43The world's advanced and powerful countries have invested a lot in this situation.
00:57:45China is leading the world in this direction.
00:57:47It's changing the world.
00:57:49If we don't respond well to climate change,
00:57:51the world will be torn apart
00:57:53because of climate change.
00:57:55The world is being reorganized
00:57:57into a situation where we have to move on
00:57:59to live.
00:58:01Climate change is an economic problem.
00:58:03Sir,
00:58:05I heard something.
00:58:07If a cow in the world
00:58:09farts at once,
00:58:11the evidence will be destroyed.
00:58:13Is that true?
00:58:15What are you doing now?
00:58:17The gas is released.
00:58:19This is a shocking story.
00:58:21This is a shocking story.
00:58:23Because if you fart,
00:58:25there's a substance called methane gas.
00:58:27You've heard of it a lot.
00:58:29It's called methane.
00:58:31This substance is much more than carbon dioxide.
00:58:33It's much more than that.
00:58:35It's much more than that.
00:58:37One cow is roughly
00:58:39similar to one car.
00:58:41Where did you hear this story?
00:58:43Did you hear it from the bride-to-be?
00:58:45I heard it from the bride-to-be.
00:58:47I heard it from the bride-to-be.
00:58:49I heard it from the bride-to-be.
00:58:51It's a different topic.
00:58:53It's interesting.
00:58:55You're suddenly interested in science.
00:58:57You're suddenly interested in science.
00:58:59People fart,
00:59:01but methane gas comes out.
00:59:03Soo-geun should fart, too.
00:59:05He farts every day.
00:59:07That's why the house is warm in winter.
00:59:09It's the best.
00:59:11It's the best.
00:59:13Do cows and sheep
00:59:15fart a lot?
00:59:17Why does it come out so much?
00:59:19Is it because you eat a lot?
00:59:21You should've been a scientist.
00:59:23You should've been a scientist.
00:59:25That's a great question.
00:59:27That's a great question.
00:59:29It's the first time I'm excited.
00:59:31There must be a reason.
00:59:33It's a good question.
00:59:35It's a good question.
00:59:37We ate it together!
00:59:38You can be curious!
00:59:39You can be curious!
00:59:40You can be curious!
00:59:41It's a cow and a lamb!
00:59:42I think it's because they eat a lot of cows.
00:59:45But Jang-hoon has a really good sense.
00:59:48He's famous.
00:59:49It's connected to that.
00:59:50He has a really good sense.
00:59:51It's like a medicine.
00:59:52It's real.
00:59:53Look.
00:59:54People say that if you only eat salad, you won't gain weight.
00:59:56Because there are very few ingredients in fiber that can be decomposed and absorbed as nutrients.
01:00:01But in the case of cows, they gain weight just by eating grass.
01:00:04Yes.
01:00:05What kind of special talent do they have?
01:00:08That's right, too.
01:00:10Why do you have such a good sense?
01:00:11Because there are four cows.
01:00:12That's right.
01:00:13Do you know because you eat a lot of tripe?
01:00:15Really.
01:00:16If you know that, you won't gain weight.
01:00:18That's not it.
01:00:19No, really.
01:00:20Really.
01:00:21Really.
01:00:22Cows grow microorganisms like bacteria that decompose fiber in their stomachs.
01:00:27But what's the problem?
01:00:29In the process of fermentation, microorganisms such as bacteria and bacteria emit methane gas.
01:00:35The cow itself emits methane gas.
01:00:37Tell me a good story.
01:00:38I have a question.
01:00:39What we've been feeling lately is that there are bugs that we don't know about in Korea.
01:00:44Isn't it because of the climate change, such as love bugs or tinkerbells last year?
01:00:50It's hard to say it's all, but I'm not good at insects, so it's hard to say it's all.
01:00:55There's one thing I can say for sure.
01:00:58There's a disease called malaria, which is a highly infectious insect-borne disease in the world.
01:01:03That's right.
01:01:04What moves malaria?
01:01:05Mosquitoes.
01:01:06Mosquitoes move.
01:01:07But there was a malaria warning in an unexpected area.
01:01:10Where do you think it is?
01:01:11France?
01:01:12Isn't it our country?
01:01:13It's our country.
01:01:14Ganghwa-do?
01:01:15Ganghwa-do?
01:01:16Ganghwa-do?
01:01:17Ganghwa-do has a lot of malaria warnings.
01:01:18You're good.
01:01:19But this time, it was fermented in an unexpected area.
01:01:21Where do you think it is?
01:01:22Seoul?
01:01:23It's Seoul.
01:01:24A malaria patient was found in Yangcheon-gu, Seoul, and it was fermented.
01:01:26Because of high fever.
01:01:27That's right.
01:01:28There are a lot of people who think that there will be no malaria in Korea, but there are a lot of malaria in Korea.
01:01:31What should we do?
01:01:32Korea has the most malaria among developed countries in the world.
01:01:35There are a lot of mosquitoes in the tropical region of Mexico.
01:01:39There are times when there are more malaria in Korea than in Mexico.
01:01:41The more mosquitoes spread, the more malaria spreads.
01:01:45But what season is the mosquito active?
01:01:47Summer.
01:01:48It's summer.
01:01:49If the climate change is serious, Korea is saying that the summer will be longer.
01:01:55That's why malaria damage will increase.
01:01:58It's a problem that everyone is worried about.
01:01:59The second point is that climate change is a problem of community.
01:02:04Climate change can occur in a short time.
01:02:06There may be more droughts.
01:02:09But most people who live well don't have much damage.
01:02:12You can feel it in the countryside.
01:02:14But that's right.
01:02:15It's not just people who live in cities and middle-class people who live well in Korea.
01:02:18People who plant crops can sit in the rain if they have droughts.
01:02:22If this continues, society will crack and the world will become more and more difficult.
01:02:26So climate change is a problem of community.
01:02:29We need to pay attention to climate change to prevent our neighbors from suffering.
01:02:44Next, Ji-yoon will prepare.
01:02:50It's going to be fun.
01:02:52There was no one who came in after erasing it, right?
01:02:55Why isn't this erasing?
01:02:57Why isn't this erasing?
01:02:59I don't know.
01:03:00I don't know.
01:03:01What happened?
01:03:03There was nothing.
01:03:04I once said this on a program.
01:03:08Korea is a powerful country.
01:03:10I said that, and the comments came up.
01:03:13What kind of comment do you think it was?
01:03:15I'm number one.
01:03:16There was that, too.
01:03:18But what kind of powerful country is Korea?
01:03:21There are a lot of things like that.
01:03:24So today, I'm going to talk about the powerful country.
01:03:28Isn't it the powerful country that is respected for its various opinions?
01:03:31That's right.
01:03:32I respect all these thoughts.
01:03:34That's right.
01:03:35I'm focusing on Kang's story.
01:03:37It's about Kang's family.
01:03:40Uncle Kang Dae-guk.
01:03:42Uncle Kang Dae-guk.
01:03:43Uncle Kang Dae-guk.
01:03:44The world is different.
01:03:46That's right.
01:03:47It's a very important point.
01:03:49What are the conditions of a powerful country?
01:03:51I think there are some things you need to have to be a powerful country.
01:03:54military
01:03:55military
01:03:56military
01:03:57OECD
01:03:58OECD
01:03:59OECD
01:04:00FIFA ranking?
01:04:03FIFA ranking is quite low.
01:04:05Because there are a lot of European countries.
01:04:07First of all, I'm going to talk about some of the conditions that I think and many scholars have thought about so far.
01:04:14The first thing I'm talking about is the geographical point.
01:04:18geographical
01:04:19There is a geographical point.
01:04:20Which country is the best powerful country in the world?
01:04:23America
01:04:24We call it America.
01:04:25America is like this.
01:04:26And another powerful country.
01:04:28Where is the country chasing?
01:04:29Japan
01:04:30Germany
01:04:31China
01:04:32Russia
01:04:33China is chasing.
01:04:34If you look here, there is a feature that the United States has.
01:04:37What kind of sea is there this way?
01:04:39Atlantic Ocean
01:04:40There's the Atlantic Ocean.
01:04:41This way?
01:04:42Pacific Ocean
01:04:43You can go both ways.
01:04:46Why is this important?
01:04:47Geographically
01:04:48More than 80% of global trade is done by sea.
01:04:52There are planes and everything, but they still go by ship.
01:04:56So, in order to exchange products, you have to have a safe ship.
01:05:02In the case of the United States, there is no traffic here.
01:05:04You can go straight.
01:05:06That's why I say it's very advantageous.
01:05:09Let's look at China.
01:05:11China has a really huge territory.
01:05:14I'm trying to come out.
01:05:15Let's go to the Pacific Ocean.
01:05:16I'm trying to come out.
01:05:17I can't stay in Korea.
01:05:19I went down a little bit.
01:05:20Japan is in charge.
01:05:22I went down a little bit.
01:05:24I'm in Taiwan.
01:05:26I went down more.
01:05:27Philippines
01:05:28Vietnam
01:05:29South China Sea
01:05:30There's a dispute.
01:05:31There's a complicated place.
01:05:33So, geographically, it's very difficult for China to run the white flag as it pleases.
01:05:40This is just luck.
01:05:43In that sense, the United States is very advantageous.
01:05:47It's important where your father lives.
01:05:50It's definitely a real estate.
01:05:51That's right.
01:05:52Real estate is important.
01:05:53Because of this geographical advantage, it is easy for the United States to take a step forward as a powerful country.
01:05:58But I want to talk about something else.
01:06:01It's a system.
01:06:03System
01:06:04In Korea, if you look at the political system,
01:06:06Korea has a democratic system with a president.
01:06:11I think there are many countries like that in the world, but it's not.
01:06:15I'm very important here.
01:06:17It won't be erased.
01:06:201688
01:06:23What happened then?
01:06:27I'm confused.
01:06:29It's a revolution.
01:06:30It's a revolution, but it's in England.
01:06:32Industrial Revolution
01:06:34No, no, no.
01:06:35I shouted as loud as a chicken.
01:06:38It's the biggest revolution.
01:06:41I was surprised.
01:06:42Shall I tell you the answer?
01:06:43Honorable Revolution
01:06:46What is the Honorable Revolution?
01:06:49I think you've heard of it once in your life.
01:06:52There was a British king named James It.
01:06:55I keep bumping into this king and the Congress.
01:06:58And in the end, the Congress kicks the king out.
01:07:01There's a very important document that came out after the Honorable Revolution.
01:07:05What is it?
01:07:07It's a scene of power.
01:07:09The Congress asks the new king.
01:07:11You can't go against the opinion of the Congress and do whatever you want.
01:07:15And you can't violate the rights of the citizens as you please.
01:07:18You have to respect the Congress.
01:07:20So, since 1688, there's nothing special about the king's game.
01:07:25When you play the king's game, you have to do it in the previous version of 1688.
01:07:29It was much stronger before that.
01:07:32That's right.
01:07:33It's a long war of rights.
01:07:35It's a long war of rights.
01:07:36It's a long war of rights.
01:07:39It's a long war of rights.
01:07:40Please put your hands together.
01:07:42Yes, yes, yes.
01:07:43So, I had another important right.
01:07:47Property rights.
01:07:49I'm going to make money because property rights are recognized.
01:07:52What's going on?
01:07:54Where did the First Industrial Revolution take place?
01:07:56England.
01:07:57It took place in England.
01:07:59I'm telling you that the cause is here.
01:08:02Great innovative technologies are invented and developed.
01:08:07Usually, countries that don't have technology rights say that they can't be a world power.
01:08:14Technology is the most advanced technology.
01:08:17It's always connected to military technology.
01:08:20So, you have to have technology rights to become a power.
01:08:25So far, I've been talking about technology.
01:08:28I want to talk about love.
01:08:30Love.
01:08:31So, I've prepared a lure here.
01:08:35Let's turn it back.
01:08:38I've written my name, but you can tell who I am by looking at my face.
01:08:41I feel like I'm really going to school.
01:08:43Since we're talking about the strongest country today, let's talk about the United States.
01:08:49It's the first president.
01:08:51It's this person.
01:08:53In the United States, who is the best president for scholars and journalists?
01:09:01The order changes every day.
01:09:02It changes every day, but the top three don't change.
01:09:05Those three are George Washington, Franklin Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln.
01:09:11I'll start with George Washington.
01:09:13He's the first president.
01:09:15Four years.
01:09:16And one more time, four years.
01:09:17Eight years in total.
01:09:18And come down.
01:09:20People were so surprised.
01:09:21Why?
01:09:23At that time, the US president's term was four years.
01:09:27There was no condition that a woman could only do it twice.
01:09:31It was only written in the Constitution that it was four years.
01:09:33So he voluntarily came down.
01:09:35I'm going to do it twice and come down.
01:09:38What effect did this have?
01:09:40After that, other presidents wanted to do more.
01:09:44Hey, George Washington came down twice. What more can I do?
01:09:48In this way, it became a management.
01:09:52So I kept coming down, and it broke.
01:09:56When?
01:09:57When Franklin Roosevelt was next to me.
01:10:00Four times?
01:10:01I did it four times.
01:10:02I did it four times.
01:10:06But there's a little bit of a reason.
01:10:08Because when President Roosevelt became president, the United States was having a hard time.
01:10:12Why? What is it?
01:10:13The Great Depression.
01:10:14The Great Depression.
01:10:16It was a time when the economy was very difficult because of the Great Depression.
01:10:27The banks resumed.
01:10:29A very few people who have not recovered from their fear.
01:10:33So it was a time when the New Deal was formalized and tried in various ways.
01:10:38What happened in Europe on September 1, 1939?
01:10:44Germany invaded Poland.
01:10:47That's how World War II began.
01:10:50World War II
01:10:53Nazi Germany occupied France.
01:10:57They attacked London.
01:10:58Churchill said, help us. When are you going to join the war?
01:11:03It was a confusing situation.
01:11:05At the time of the war, the general was not well received.
01:11:08That's why he was appointed.
01:11:11And then, not long after that, the world came to light.
01:11:16And fix the constitution.
01:11:19So in 1951, through Article 22 of the Constitution,
01:11:23Only then can the U.S. Constitution be amended more than twice.
01:11:27That's what happened.
01:11:29But I actually think he's the best.
01:11:32Lincoln?
01:11:33Abraham Lincoln.
01:11:35A lot of people say,
01:11:37In fact, the United States was born and established after the South and North Korean War.
01:11:44What do you think happens when we talk about the South and North Korean War?
01:11:47Slavery
01:11:49Do you remember President Lincoln's famous speech?
01:11:54For the people.
01:11:56For the people!
01:11:57For the people!
01:11:58For the people!
01:12:00Be quiet during class.
01:12:02Why are you talking so much during class?
01:12:04I'll write a sentence here.
01:12:06I don't think yellow will be erased.
01:12:10DVD
01:12:12House DVD
01:12:14It's best to watch at home.
01:12:17It's a DVD.
01:12:18What does it mean?
01:12:19Eat dinner at home.
01:12:24The house divided against itself.
01:12:27A house that is divided cannot stand.
01:12:30In fact, that's what President Lincoln felt when he went to fight the South and North Korean War.
01:12:36A lot of Americans died in the South and North Korean War.
01:12:39More than 600,000 people died.
01:12:42More than the soldiers who died in World War I and the soldiers who died in World War II.
01:12:50So the war where the most young Americans died was the South and North Korean War.
01:12:56The cruelty of the civil war is that the same people have to fight each other.
01:13:01What's worse is that we have to live together after it's over.
01:13:05That's terrible.
01:13:06Nevertheless, if the United States is to exist for the future, it must be together.
01:13:13That's what I thought.
01:13:16So, in fact, the United States was really founded after the South and North Korean War.
01:13:23Now, I've talked so far.
01:13:25When you look at it that way, I think Korea is going to be a powerful country.
01:13:29Anyway, it is in a geopolitical position that is interested in many worlds.
01:13:33And there aren't many countries that have achieved economic development and democracy together.
01:13:37But if you look at the history of mankind, there are many countries that have taken the position of a powerful nation.
01:13:42But there aren't many countries that we remember.
01:13:45Because none of those countries contributed to the progress or development of mankind.
01:13:51So I want Korea to leave something like that.
01:13:56It could be a culture.
01:13:59Then I'll wrap it up here.
01:14:02Bravo!
01:14:04Bravo!
01:14:06Bravo!
01:14:08Now, last but not least, Dong-San!
01:14:10Dong-San!
01:14:12Let's call him Dong-San.
01:14:141688, Buzz's right-hand man.
01:14:17It's like a karaoke number.
01:14:19Everyone thinks I'm going to talk a lot, so I'm going to play a game that can be done by action rather than words.
01:14:25My topic is brain delusion.
01:14:27Brain delusion.
01:14:29We believe everything is right, but in fact, there are a lot of delusions that our brains have planted in us.
01:14:35Jaesik started with shibam.
01:14:38So I'm not shibam.
01:14:40Bread!
01:14:44Bread.
01:14:46Can I put this piece of bread in my mouth and swallow it in a minute?
01:14:54In a minute?
01:14:55Just a minute.
01:14:57So I'm going to give you a piece of bread.
01:15:00If any of you succeed, I'll buy everyone a drink and meat.
01:15:06Wow, this doesn't work?
01:15:08But doesn't it look like it's going to work?
01:15:11I think it's going to work.
01:15:13What if I do it?
01:15:15I think it's going to work.
01:15:17No, I think this is going to be easy.
01:15:20Can I just compress this and swallow it?
01:15:22No matter how you eat it, you can't swallow it in a minute.
01:15:26A minute is a long time.
01:15:28I'm going to buy dinner today.
01:15:30You have to measure exactly one minute.
01:15:32Please measure the stopwatch.
01:15:34One, two, three, start!
01:15:37It doesn't work.
01:15:39It doesn't work.
01:15:43Instead, you have to open your mouth and show that you swallowed it.
01:15:48I don't think it's going to work.
01:15:49I don't think it's going to work.
01:15:51If you chew it, it won't work.
01:15:54Chew it!
01:15:58Wait a minute. Jessica, you can't do this.
01:16:04It's already 30 seconds.
01:16:0635 seconds!
01:16:0940 seconds!
01:16:10It's not going to work.
01:16:11It's not going to work.
01:16:14Give up.
01:16:1610!
01:16:179!
01:16:198!
01:16:207!
01:16:216!
01:16:225!
01:16:234!
01:16:243!
01:16:252!
01:16:261!
01:16:292!
01:16:301!
01:16:32Oh, my God!
01:16:37Acting!
01:16:43My husband is the best!
01:16:45Show me your pose!
01:16:46One, two, three, start!
01:16:52It doesn't work.
01:16:54It doesn't work.
01:16:55It doesn't work.
01:17:0135 seconds!
01:17:058!
01:17:067!
01:17:076!
01:17:085!
01:17:094!
01:17:103!
01:17:112!
01:17:121!
01:17:16Husband!
01:17:17Husband!
01:17:1959.96 seconds!
01:17:210.03 seconds left!
01:17:23This was the date course.
01:17:25It was a condition to get married.
01:17:26The plan to succeed.
01:17:28In one minute.
01:17:29Wow, but if you shoot the meat...
01:17:32It's going to be 10 million won.
01:17:34Is it over?
01:17:35How was it today?
01:17:38Hey, go eat!
01:17:43I have to talk about my misunderstanding.
01:17:45I can eat your bread in a minute.
01:17:48I'm thinking about it, but I can't.
01:17:50I was going to show you.
01:17:51Kyung Hoon is holding it with his hands.
01:17:53This is more than I imagined.
01:17:56My stomach is pounding.
01:17:58This is more than I imagined.
01:18:00It's an unspeakable misunderstanding.
01:18:03So, when we look at something and judge it,
01:18:08We tend to think that what we think and judge is right.
01:18:12There's an experiment.
01:18:14There's an experiment on basketball players.
01:18:16An Italian scholar named Aliotti.
01:18:18The scene where basketball players shoot three points.
01:18:21I cut it off and showed it to you in 0.1 seconds and 0.3 seconds.
01:18:25And I divided it into two groups.
01:18:27Visually, basketball players shoot.
01:18:29The people who saw the most are the coaches.
01:18:31So I'm going to show this to the coach's group.
01:18:34I'm going to judge if the ball went in or not.
01:18:36On the other side, basketball players like Jang Hoon were born.
01:18:40Basketball players have the most experience of shooting.
01:18:44Who do you think would have done better?
01:18:46I think it's an athlete.
01:18:47The person who shot.
01:18:48The person who shot has the experience of throwing.
01:18:50There are a lot of coaches who have visual experience.
01:18:52In fact, the players are overwhelmingly better.
01:18:55Just looking at this.
01:18:57Or just looking at it in writing or learning it.
01:19:00To predict that this is going to happen.
01:19:02There are a lot of times when we get it wrong.
01:19:04Then, is it the illusion of the eye or the illusion of the brain?
01:19:07In most cases, it's the illusion of the brain.
01:19:09It's the illusion of the brain.
01:19:11How many rainbows are there?
01:19:12Seven.
01:19:13Seven? Are you sure?
01:19:14Didn't you just write it down?
01:19:16Seven?
01:19:17Who would have written it down?
01:19:18It's a graph.
01:19:21Michael Crayon.
01:19:22It's a precious heart.
01:19:24It's funny.
01:19:25In Korea, we've been learning rainbow colors since we were young.
01:19:30Our brains make seven drawers.
01:19:33I'm just looking at it as a rainbow.
01:19:36In the past Joseon and Goryeo dynasties,
01:19:39If you look at the records,
01:19:40It's called a rainbow of five colors.
01:19:43Five colors.
01:19:45And even if you go to another Scandinavian or North European country,
01:19:48There are six rainbow colors.
01:19:49Five.
01:19:50It's all different.
01:19:51If the same light comes to me with the same wavelength,
01:19:54I think everyone will experience it the same way.
01:19:57In fact, depending on how many drawers each brain makes and what kind of experience they have,
01:20:02We look at each one differently.
01:20:05I'd like to say something else.
01:20:06Are you a relative of Jang Hang-seon?
01:20:10I'm a relative of Jang Hang-seon.
01:20:17One of the most common misconceptions we have in our daily lives is that everyone will think that way.
01:20:25It's called the fantasy of the majority.
01:20:27I thought it would be really funny.
01:20:31There are a lot of cases where it's not true that everyone else thinks so.
01:20:37But I'm going to show you this mathematically.
01:20:40I'll just pick three people who will be insiders.
01:20:43Hee-chul, Young-chul, and Ho-dong, can you come forward?
01:20:45Young-chul and I are the same.
01:20:47I think there are two outsiders.
01:20:49I'll call Ho-dong, too.
01:20:51These three are nuclear insiders.
01:20:54They're all friends.
01:20:55So all the people here are friends with these three.
01:21:00But the friends sitting here are friends with each other.
01:21:06And we've decided to go on a trip.
01:21:10We're going to decide whether to go to the mountains or the sea.
01:21:13The first three people will decide.
01:21:15Is it a mountain or a sea?
01:21:16I like the mountains.
01:21:17I like the mountains.
01:21:19The rest of the class is going to the sea.
01:21:24So how do we get the majority vote?
01:21:27Three people who want to go to the mountains.
01:21:29We won.
01:21:30It's eight, right?
01:21:31If we just vote anonymously,
01:21:33The result will come out as going to the sea.
01:21:36But that's not it.
01:21:37Is there anyone in our class who wants to go to the mountains?
01:21:42Is there anyone who wants to go to the sea?
01:21:44That's what I'm asking.
01:21:46The A-type team has decided to go on a trip.
01:21:49We're going to decide whether to go to the mountains or the sea.
01:21:52The first three people will decide.
01:21:54Is it a mountain or a sea?
01:21:55I like the mountains.
01:21:56I like the mountains.
01:21:57We have a uniform.
01:21:58Is it a mountain?
01:21:59The rest of the class is going to the sea.
01:22:01That's what I'm thinking.
01:22:03So how do we get the majority vote?
01:22:06Three people who want to go to the mountains.
01:22:08We won.
01:22:09It's eight, right?
01:22:10If we just vote anonymously,
01:22:12The result will come out as going to the sea.
01:22:15But that's not it.
01:22:17Is there anyone in our class who wants to go to the mountains?
01:22:21Is there anyone who wants to go to the sea?
01:22:24That's what I'm asking.
01:22:25And they only know where their friends want to go.
01:22:31For Ji-yoon, the three of them are friends, and Jae-sik is also a friend.
01:22:36Ji-yoon, do you think there are a lot of people who want to go to the mountains or the sea?
01:22:41There are a lot of mountains.
01:22:43What about Jae-sik?
01:22:44I have a lot of mountains because I live in the sea.
01:22:47So, in fact, there are a lot of people who want to go to the sea.
01:22:52My brain only samples what close people around me think and votes, so the result is the opposite.
01:23:00Thank you for coming out and going back in.
01:23:02What is this?
01:23:03This is the end.
01:23:04What is this?
01:23:05What is this?
01:23:06What is this?
01:23:07What is this?
01:23:08What is this?
01:23:09What is this?
01:23:10What is this?
01:23:11I've been waiting for two minutes.
01:23:14In a way, the opinion of a person with a loud voice is too severe.
01:23:18That's right.
01:23:19That's right.
01:23:20So, most of the people in Korea don't care, but if people who write comments are talking about issues, it feels like that opinion is a majority opinion.
01:23:32So, one of the problems in the world we live in is that the brain believes that the majority will think this way.
01:23:42In reality, as you just saw, there are many cases where our brains believe that way.
01:23:49But I think one of the biggest misconceptions we have is...
01:23:54In a way, the opinion of a person with a loud voice is too severe.
01:23:59That's right.
01:24:00So, most of the people in Korea don't care, but if people who write comments are talking about issues, it feels like that opinion is a majority opinion.
01:24:12So, one of the problems in the world we live in is that the brain believes that the majority will think this way.
01:24:22In reality, as you just saw, there are many cases where our brains believe that way.
01:24:29But I think one of the biggest misconceptions we have is...
01:24:34I think it's a world centered around me.
01:24:37I'm thinking a lot about living alone.
01:24:40In fact, our brains evolve into a social brain, so we really only look at ourselves.
01:24:46So, no matter how much money you make, no matter how much profit you make, your health and happiness are ruined.
01:24:53That's right.
01:24:54Research shows that loneliness and loneliness are as harmful to the body as smoking 14 cigarettes a day.
01:25:00There are more than 10,000 people who die of suicide than those who die of COVID-19 during the period of COVID-19.
01:25:08People don't know this, but this is a problem.
01:25:11Let's look around and see if I'm okay with my own mind.
01:25:15I'm trying to do this campaign.
01:25:17I hope many people who are watching this video will join us.
01:25:21I want to get help, so I'm going to talk about this together and finish the lecture on our misconceptions.
01:25:27Thank you.
01:25:31I prepared a gift for the transfer students who worked hard today.
01:25:41Is it my misconception to think of this as a gift?
01:25:44That's right. I think there's something expensive in here.
01:25:47It's probably a misconception.
01:25:53I love you.
01:25:55Nice to meet you.
01:25:58Pay attention if you don't want to be a viewer.
01:26:02Ex-husband and ex-wife.
01:26:04I haven't done it in real life.
01:26:06You guys are fake, right? We're real.
01:26:08If you want to get more than 10% of the viewership, you have to be the son of two people.
01:26:14I think the queen of tears would be good, too.
01:26:16The tears of students waiting in front of the door.
01:26:18When you say good things, you touch your hair like this.
01:26:21This guy doesn't care about his pride.
01:26:23He only bows his head.
01:26:27He fell into the sea in the middle of the winter and crawled out.
01:26:30He crawled out of the window on the 23rd floor.
01:26:34He came out through the dirt.
01:26:36Are you done?
01:26:37I need to talk to you.
01:26:39Don't try to win with your face from now on.
01:26:41Does that mean I'm going to win with my face?
01:26:44No, it's more than me.
01:26:46I just told you. I have a driver.
01:26:49I've talked to you for 10 minutes when no one's around.
01:26:51You're good.
01:26:52Didn't you get hurt while riding a bike?
01:26:54If you lose, you'll get mad at me.
01:26:55I told you to do this because you don't have enough airtime.
01:27:00Shoot!
01:27:23I'm sorry.
01:27:24I'm sorry.
01:27:25I'm sorry.
01:27:26I'm sorry.
01:27:27I'm sorry.
01:27:28I'm sorry.
01:27:29I'm sorry.
01:27:30I'm sorry.
01:27:31I'm sorry.
01:27:32I'm sorry.
01:27:33I'm sorry.
01:27:34I'm sorry.
01:27:35I'm sorry.
01:27:36I'm sorry.
01:27:37I'm sorry.
01:27:38I'm sorry.
01:27:39I'm sorry.
01:27:40I'm sorry.
01:27:41I'm sorry.
01:27:42I'm sorry.
01:27:43I'm sorry.
01:27:44I'm sorry.
01:27:45I'm sorry.
01:27:46I'm sorry.
01:27:47I'm sorry.
01:27:48I'm sorry.
01:27:49I'm sorry.
01:27:50I'm sorry.