Super Rookie

Super Rookie
Also known as New Employee
Written by Kim Ki-ho
Lee Sun-mi
Directed by Han Hee
Starring Eric Mun
Han Ga-in
Oh Ji-ho
Lee So-yeon
Country of origin South Korea
No. of episodes 20
Production
Producer(s) Kim Sa-hyun
Running time Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55
Release
Original network Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation
Original release March 23, 2005 (2005-03-23) – May 26, 2005 (2005-05-26)
External links
Website
Korean name
Hangul 신입사원
Hanja 新入社員
Revised Romanization Sin-ip Sa-won
McCune–Reischauer Sin-ip Sa-wŏn

Super Rookie (Hangul: 신입사원; RR: Sin-ip Sa-won; lit. "New Employee") is a 2005 South Korean television series starring Eric Mun, Han Ga-in, Oh Ji-ho, and Lee So-yeon. It aired on MBC from March 23 to May 26, 2005 on Wednesdays and Thursdays at 21:55 for 20 episodes. The workplace comedy is a satire on Korea's corporate culture and unemployment among the country's younger generation. It scored solid viewership ratings in the 20% range.[1][2][3][4]

Plot

Kang Ho (Eric Mun) is just an average guy who got a college degree in physical education from a second-rate, provincial university. Disheveled, unskilled, and unemployed, Kang Ho has wasted most of his life kickboxing and reading comic books, much to the frustration of his family and friends who think he's just a freeloader. He sends his resumes to many companies, but nobody gives him a shot because he has no experience and no apparent prospects. One day, Kang Ho decides to apply to the same prestigious company that his handsome, successful classmate Bong-sam (Oh Ji-ho) works at. He completely bungles the interview process, but thanks to a computer error, he gets hired as the number one recruit. Struggling in a job he's totally unqualified for, Kang Ho gets by with his enthusiasm and street smarts. His co-workers include Bong-sam, an overachiever trapped by his own ambitions; Mi-ok, a mousy, bespectacled contract worker (or "temp") who was dumped by Bong-sam; and Hyun-ah, the privileged daughter of a company executive.

Cast

Main characters

Supporting characters

Ratings

Episode Nationwide Seoul
Ep. 1 14.3% 15.1%
Ep. 2 15.0% 16.1%
Ep. 3 15.1% 16.2%
Ep. 4 15.1% 16.8%
Ep. 5 17.5% 18.5%
Ep. 6 15.8% 16.7%
Ep. 7 15.1% 15.1%
Ep. 8 14.6% 15.0%
Ep. 9 16.4% 17.6%
Ep.10 17.2% 18.1%
Ep.11 15.9% 16.3%
Ep.12 16.8% 17.8%
Ep.13 15.0% 16.2%
Ep.14 19.0% 20.1%
Ep.15 17.3% 18.7%
Ep.16 16.5% 17.4%
Ep.17 16.3% 17.2%
Ep.18 15.9% 17.7%
Ep.19 17.8% 18.9%
Ep.20 23.1% 23.9%
Average 16.4% 17.47%

Source: TNSMK Media Korea

International broadcast

Fuji TV reportedly paid ₩2 billion for the drama's broadcasting rights in Japan.[6] It was well received by Japanese viewers when it began airing on October 27, 2005, which contributed to Eric Mun's increased popularity in the country.[7][8][9] It re-aired on cable channel KNTV from January 19 to February 24, 2011.[10]

In Thailand first aired on Channel 7 from March 25 to May 7, 2006.[11]

See also

References

External links

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