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Dramabeans is an English-language website that features in-depth reviews and analyses of Korean dramas, and also serves as a fan forum for those programs featured. It was founded in 2007 by bloggers Javabeans and Girlfriday.
Dramabeans was born in 2007, when a lone drama fan searched the internet high and wide for a place to discuss K-dramas with the loving attention and excruciating detail she felt they deserved. She decided she’d have to build it herself, took the name “javabeans,” and started blogging about the dramas she was watching at the time.
James Sun (Korean: 선우신[1]; is an entrepreneur, television host, and public speaker. He is the owner of Dramabeans.com and Beautytap.com [2] He is also the owner and cofounder of Devblock.net, a software agency focused on AI and digital transformation.
Dramabeans is an English-language website that features in-depth reviews and analyses of Korean dramas, and also serves as a fan forum for those programs featured. It was founded in 2007 by bloggers Javabeans and Girlfriday.
Aug 29, 2014 · Javabeans, who grew up watching dramas but who only returned to them around the mid-2000s when series like “My Name is Kim Sam-soon” and “My Girl” burst into popularity, saw a lack of an online community where she could revel in in-depth discussions and obsess over little details episode-by-episode.
I see dramabeans linked here fairly often, but I haven't found a discussion that talks about dramabeans as a site directly. I personally visit dramabeans for recaps on the dramas I watch. I normally read a recap after finishing an episode in case I misunderstood something or to read the analysis at the end as they usually bring up interesting ...
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My first Korean drama was the 1992 hit Jealousy, and I’ve been hooked ever since. Man does that make me feel old. I started this site because I couldn’t find a site providing meaty (or any) analysis for K-dramas, a longtime guilty pleasure of mine.