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  • Travel & Food

    Meet Korea’s pioneering ‘instant noodle critic’

    For many, instant noodles are a quick, cheap meal designed for convenience. But for Ji Young-jun, Korea's pioneering "ramyeon critic," they represent a lifetime of history, complex food science and a rapidly growing cultural phenomenon. Ji’s unconventional journey into the world of noodles began during a period of personal frustration. After enduring consecutive failures on Korea's grueling college entrance exam, he enlisted in the military. It was while wandering the aisles of the military commissary (PX) that he found an unexpected spark of inspiration. "Before finishing my service, I set a humble goal for myself: 'Let’s taste every single instant noodle available here,'" Ji recalls during an interview with The Korea Times, Monday. "Astonishingly, that simple objective completely revitalized my military life and filled it with excitement. I wanted to carry this amazing energy into the civilian world, so in 2013, I began sharing my detailed reviews on social media." For a decade, Ji balanced his passion for instant noodles with a stable career as a primary school teacher. However,

    4 MIN READBy Park Jin-hai
    Meet Korea’s pioneering ‘instant noodle critic’
  • Travel & Food

    Korea National Park Service to offer themed eco-tours this summer

    1 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Korea National Park Service to offer themed eco-tours this summer
  • Trends

    Rare Pokémon cards fetch premium prices among Gen Z, sparking thefts

    2 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Rare Pokémon cards fetch premium prices among Gen Z, sparking thefts
  • Arts & Theater

    'Amazing Thailand' art exhibition makes Korean debut

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    'Amazing Thailand' art exhibition makes Korean debut
  • Lifestyle

    Try these simple habits for fewer mosquito bites

    2 MIN READBy Kormedi.com
    Try these simple habits for fewer mosquito bites
  • People & Events

    Busan to host 21st International Magic Festival with competition, gala shows

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Busan to host 21st International Magic Festival with competition, gala shows
  • Trends

    Changing face of lunch hour in Seoul’s office districts

    2 MIN READBy Park Jin-hai
    Changing face of lunch hour in Seoul’s office districts
  • People & Events

    BTS' RM named first global ambassador of Nat'l Museum of Korea

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    BTS' RM named first global ambassador of Nat'l Museum of Korea
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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Travel & Food

Eastar Jet plans to purchase 7 planes

Eastar Jet CEO Cho Jung-seok announces the low-cost carrier's plan to resume flight services during a press conference at Courtyard by Marriott Botanic Park in southwestern Seoul, Tuesday. Yonhap By Lee Hae-rinAfter a three-year hiatus due to financial problems, Eastar Jet, a local low-cost carrier (LCC), seeks to take off once again by introducing new planes and international routes as it resumes service.Announcing the resumption of flights between Gimpo and Jeju Island, its CEO Cho Jung-seok said the company will expand its fleet by up to 10 planes by the end of this year.“Among them, three existing planes, which have been overhauled regularly during the pandemic, and the first three new aircraft will be used to fly between Gimpo and Jeju,” he said during a press conference. As international travel restrictions have lifted, most planes have been used to fly international flights, resulting in a shortage for domestic routes and a hike in ticket prices ― particularly flights to Jeju for which the average ticket price via LCC surpasses 60,000 won ($45), compared with a pre

Mar 14, 2023By Lee Hae-rin
Eastar Jet plans to purchase 7 planes
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 15, 2023

Mar 14, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 15, 2023
People & Events

Korea Times-Hankook Ilbo Spring Concert

The Korea Times and its sister paper Hankook Ilbo will jointly host the 2023 Spring Concert at the Seoul Arts Center Concert Hall, March 23, starting at 8 p.m.It will be held under the theme “Celebrating Busan City's bid for the 2030 World Expo” in the hope of providing a fresh impetus for the city's campaign to host the event. The concert will also give the audience solace at a time when the nation is in the middle of the hardships caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Award-winning violinist Han Soo-jin will take the stage under the baton of Korean Symphony Orchestra's conductor Hong Seok-won. The program consists of Shostakovich's “Festive Overture,” Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto and Beethoven's Symphony No.7.A special VIP reception will be held before the start of the concert.· VIP reception: 7 p.m.- 7:45 p.m., March 23 (Thursday)· Main concert: 8 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.· Venue: Seoul Arts Center, Concert Hall

Mar 14, 2023
Korea Times-Hankook Ilbo Spring Concert
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 14, 2023

Mar 13, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 14, 2023
Travel & Food

Korea-China sea routes to resume in April, heightens hope for tourism

A car ferry approaches the Incheon International Ferry Terminal in this photo taken on Jun. 15, 2020. NewsisBy Lee Hae-rinThe Korea-China sea travel routes are likely to resume operation next month as the international car ferry services at Incheon ferry terminal plan to end the three-year hiatus caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.Several shipping companies in the marine transport industry have announced the resumption of passenger transportation services between Incheon and various cities in China and started selling travel packages.The exact date of the resumption is yet unannounced, but the industry's reopening plan comes in the wake of the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters' announcement earlier this month to lift all travel regulations including mandatory PCR tests on travelers from China, Hong Kong and Macao. The health authorities decided to end travel restrictions against China and its neighboring countries because China has seen a stable trend in new cases of COVID-19 for over a month after the spring festival holidays in January and because there have bee

Mar 12, 2023By Lee Hae-rin
Korea-China sea routes to resume in April, heightens hope for tourism
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 13, 2023

Mar 12, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 13, 2023
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 10, 2023

Mar 9, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 10, 2023
Arts & Theater

Jung Yeon-doo selected as MMCA Hyundai Motor Series 2023 artist

Artist Jung Yeon-doo / MMCABy Park Han-solInterdisciplinary artist Jung Yeon-doo has been named the creator for this year's MMCA Hyundai Motor Series by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA), Korea.Through photographs, videos, installations and performances, Jung has garnered attention both at home and abroad for creatively delving into the all-too-familiar relationship between reality and illusion.Since 2010, the artist has broadened his focus to reinterpret memories and lived experiences that arise within modern and contemporary history ― migration, diaspora, war and disaster.In 2021, he showcased the interdisciplinary art project called “DMZ Theater” with Surya at the MMCA Seoul, where the two reimagined the buried micro-narratives ― either inspired by real historical events or modern folk tales ― associated with the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) through staged photography and live performance.A scene from interdisciplinary arts performance and installation, “DMZ Theater ― Complete Victory Theater” (2021) by Jung Yeon-doo and Surya, shown at

Mar 8, 2023By Park Han-sol
Jung Yeon-doo selected as MMCA Hyundai Motor Series 2023 artist
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 09, 2023

Mar 8, 2023
DAILY FORTUNE - MARCH 09, 2023
Trends

INTERVIEW Seoul on cusp of modernization captured through photos of vanishing 'moon villages'

Kim Jung-il's “Apgujeong” (1982) from his “Landscape of Memory” series / Courtesy of the artist, SNUMoABy Park Han-solA black-and-white snapshot captures the facade of a dilapidated shack in southern Seoul's Apgujeong-dong, with a torn-out roof and walls that turn out to be nothing more than a mishmash of tarps and nailed wood boards of wildly varying sizes.A few stranded household objects indicate that the tattered house was indeed occupied at one point ― white garments hung on a clothesline far back, coal briquettes littered on one side and a handcart that was likely a source of income.The obvious visual clash between the derelict shack and rows of identical high-rise apartments looming in the background would catch the eye of any passerby.That was exactly the case for student photographer Kim Jung-il in 1982.Inspired by Eugene Atget, an acclaimed French photographer who dedicated his craft to documenting the urban landscape of 19th-century Paris before its disappearance to modernization, Kim went on a self-assigned mission to record Seoul's postwar terrain

Mar 8, 2023By Park Han-sol
[INTERVIEW] Seoul on cusp of modernization captured through photos of vanishing 'moon villages'
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