Fashion/Style
20101117_seoulbeats_IU

[Photos] IU Fulfills Many a Fanboy’s Dream

11

Singer/actress/ulzzang IU uploaded pictures of her adorable self, and this time, I’m sure all the boys are going crazy.

Gah, I’ve been cooking and cleaning like crazy today-I wish I had a maid costume and looked as cute as IU in it. As much as I love Thanksgiving, I cannot wait for the food coma to hit and for today to be over! Happy Turkey Day to you all- and thanks for reading SB and my posts!

(dkpop)

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  • kpopboi

    I have a personal pet peeve with non-koreans saying ‘aigooo’. Its like weaboos saying ‘kawaii’ or randoms saying ‘gesundheit’ to your sneezing. Shit’s weird as fuck.

    • ha

      I have to agree, especially when they don’t bother learning the language, just the phrases.

      • Ohemgee

        interesting that you feel this way. I speak 3 languages fluently (none of which is korean) and always find it endearing when people randomly use a well-known phrase. I suppose I appreciate that they’ve learned even a few phrases and would prefer that to people not knowing anything at all…just me though ;)

    • Ralph

      Yeh, it’s really funny when those americans who don’t even have a korean passport say ‘aigooo’. It’s as thought they think they’re korean when they didn’t even do their army duty.

      Do you have a personal peeve when people from Hawaii say ‘aigoo’ or ‘gomen’? Because people from hawaii are americans and not korean either.

  • Johnelle

    Growing up in Hawaii, some sayings that I got accustomed to were things that friends said that were just a part of everyday life. So if your friends always say something like “gomen” you’d use it too because that was just the way it was. It’s not “acting” like a wanna be, it’s adapting- using it kind of like a slang.

    I guess each situation can be different though.

  • Ralph

    Is this article supposed to be about Korean people celebrating USA-Thanksgiving? I know most Koreans and Korean pop stars have moved to the USA because they prefer to live there than in Korea, but does that mean USA-Thanksgiving is a part of Korean culture now? Is this how koreans spend their USA-thankgiving? Do they have gochujang with the turkey?

    I think we need to be told.

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