Italian family's Korean life : Kids love K-drama and Korean pork belly but parents are not
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- Опубліковано 13 жов 2024
- The video is from 2004, 20 years ago. But kid's love of Korean dramas and pork belly is the same as it is today. It's funny to see parents who are familiar with Italian culture and kids who look like typical Korean kids.
All copyrights to this video belong to KBS.
KBS is a public broadcasting service in South Korea.
#lifeinkorea #immigrantkids #koreanschool
🎥 Check out Previous Episode 💓: ua-cam.com/video/MeSnImc-fIk/v-deo.html
Do you have an update where are this family now ? Are they still in Korea ?
We want mooore
What a beautiful family! I wish I had had one like theirs. If there had been a third/fourth/fifth episode about this lovely Italian family I'd have kept watching it. Hopefully all of them are doing fine.
Watching this makes me feel so nostalgic. Because i also grew up in a big family. I have 5siblings. But now, they are all grown up. Some became professor, some are married. I'm still into College. I was around Gabriel's age at that time when i had my siblings, big family. It was fun.❤️❤️
The family shown in this footage is so Beautiful. I hope they are living Happily wherever they are.❣️😊
Korean dramas are crafted and meticulously executed. They acknowkedge human problems and emotions. Their actors are simply beautiful. No wonder people around the world are discovering Korean dramas and loving them. Thank you Korea.
it would be awesome to see them take a family trip to italy!
They are now adults and most of them live, work and have a family in Italy, traveling in Italy for most of them is a daily reality.
It was filmed in 2004 they live in Italy now
I loved this mine series as an Italian passionate about Korea! But I need all of their instagrams now! 😂❤ I saw Agnese became a language interpreter, as she wish🥺💓 so heartwarming❤
Ho pensato la stessa cosa ma purtroppo non riesco a trovarli su instagram 😩
this is amazing!! I love the storytelling of this documentary!
Aw all the at the end following her... I definitely enjoyed watching this documentary❤ I hope the family is doing great today too! It's amazing to see a family happily living life in a foreign country just like the foreigners in it! My best wishes go out to them all😊
Sharing a piece of bread...that's a true and beautiful friendship. I really hope that she is still in contact with Mijin.
"Ditto" in real ver🐇
There are two version of Ditto Korean movies?
I so enjoyed this video! ❤
1- these girls are more Korean than me
2- as an ethnic Korean who grew up i the states, I understand how they feel
They just live in Korea they are not Korean. Take anyone who moves away from their country to another they will adapt to the the other way of life
@@Lillyxxxo lol, that sounds weird as shit since I'm an American of Korean ethnicity.
Being part of a country or "Korean" in this case is understanding the culture and being part of it.
Just because Korea is one of the most homogeneous societies on planet Earth doesn't mean non-ethnic Koreans can't be Korean. Now, this is a standard American viewpoint and not shared widely by native Koreans.
I looked up their names and Noemi she went to Ewha woman’s University and she works in Italy for Samsung, Agnese she went to
Yonsei University has two kids she lives in Italy working as a PR manager. Francesco went to Sogang university lives in Italy and works in a supplier company.
Miriam three kids lives in the USA looks like she used to live in S. Korea with her kids but she moved, works as a Director at Morning Calm Birthing Services ( but I am not really sure if she still works there bc she moved to the US). Gabriele I have no information about him looks like he went to Yonsei but I am not really sure. For their parents I have seen a photo of their dad from 2016 and looks he lives in S.Korea (maybe). I don’t really trust the internet so don’t take too seriously what I write in here maybe some information is not correct or out of date.
@@Repeuhah they wouldn’t stay too long anyway, they aren’t even half Korean. They need to rebuilt a new life in Italy and USA so they don’t lose anything if they do come back to south Korea. If you live in South Korea for 50 years and then come back home, you’d have nothing, struggling with sense of identity and no friends. There are no guarantees that you will be forever keeping Korean friends, living and working in Korean society among Korean people as foreigners.
Why do say “rebuild a new life in Italy and USA”? They are Italians from Italy whom had no connection whatsoever with the US, also, the kids moved to South Korea when they were very little (one of them wasn’t even one year old back then) and their very first friends were South Koreans. We don’t know the reasons that pushed them to move out of South Korea (they might be tied to so many different variables, like finding a partner who can’t or isn’t willing to live there; a better paying job proposal; etc) so let’s not speculate about it and about their feelings about their own cultural identities.
@@Repeuh Francesco wrote in a post a few years ago that he missed Italy (and even if Korea is beautiful, Italy is unbeatable). 2015 is not a century ago, South Korea can give a good lifestyle but honestly life in Italy can be REALLY good and fulfilling.
@@Repeuh They went to Korea to follow their missionary parents and were raised as Koreans among Koreans, evidently they did not see the side that attracts foreigners (which is often just a fantasy created by kdramas), but the everyday reality of Korean life and they preferred to leave for a life that was better for them.
I googled Gabriele Mangano Korea he is still in Korea and working for a company in Incheon
i hope the kids can grow to love their italian culture too!
They do, because they live there now
The previous video shows the mom teaching her kids Italian history, and the family speaks Italian among themselves. And some people searched their names on the web, and they all seem to be living in Italy now, so I think the parents did a good job raising kids truly biculturally.
@dellyspice y is my comment dumb? :(
Ofcourse. Its Sorry I Love You. How can you not love this drama.
이 가족분들 지금은 이탈리아로 돌아가서 산다던데 20년가까이 흘러서 어떻게 지내는지 궁금하넹
막내가 지금은 29살 됐을테고 노에미도 30대 후반 부모님은 거즘 70대 바라보시겠네
낭만 미쳤다.
향수병 옛날 생각남 ㅠㅠ
미안하다 사랑한다 드라마🤣🤣🤣
그래서 소지섭 소지섭 했구나
5:27 School gates closed ??? They lock you out if you're late ??? 😂🤣🤪
More like demerits.
Forced Absence 😂🤣🤪
I live in Southern Europe and we do the same here.
They close the gates and open them again. And when the teacher opens the gate for latecomers, your name will be put down by the teacher so that you'd be getting appropriate punishment (e.g., extra cleaning after school). You won't be late for classes because they don't want that.
im wondering where they now and what they doing..
E bellissimo anche perché mi ricorda un po lo stile di ditto delle nj l'unica cosa strana sono i sottotitoli iniziali che non c'entrano niente con quello che dicono
Wonder if any of the kids married a korean person ☺️
What year was this? 1999?
2004
these ppeople are older than me.. i t would be nice if we got an update!
2005 - we saw the middle daughter taking that year's suneung in the previous episode.
@@tobyk8125 the girls are in their mid-30s now though.
@@HKim0072 Yep, but the eldest is 41 and living in the US
I wanna know what are they doing now
Some clips were repeated or had that happened only for me
why are they in korea did the family immigrate there ??
Their Dad went to South Korea for missionary purpose after overcoming of his cancer surgery.
@@dannyrun thanks
@debbiesedereas3485 my pleasure 🙏 ☺️
Does anyone know maybe their IG and where they are now/What they are doing and everything?
Ancoraaaa
Recent in korea. One class 22 student 3 class😢 per grade
They came to Korea as missionaries in 1996? Wow that’s old school. I know there were European and American missionary families in Korea living among locals since joseon dynasty. So this was filmed in 2006, based on the computer, fashion and commentary seems like Korea of that era. Definitely more foreigners in seoul (bucheon is where they lived near seoul) now than back then, except American military personnel. Wonder how they are now, possibly living in Italy.
I haven't found news about Gabriele and the parents, but the older sister, Miriam, lives in the USA, while Agnese, Noemi and Francesco live in Italy. All four have good jobs and the three sisters are also married and have children.
I had never heard of Italian missionary families who go around the world preaching Christianity, but probably they belong to a fundamentalist branch of Catholicism or are Christian but not Catholic, this could explain such unusual behavior.
@@melinda6921I think I saw a tau cross in their car so they can be Franciscans tertiaries, I don't know if it's the right word,
they are catholics
@@melinda6921 I don't think it's so impossible. Italian laic missionaries are common around the world. There are plenty of peculiar groups inside Catholics church.
It was broadcasted in 2004. The description says it. Definitely more foreigners now than back then, but we didn't lack Americans and Canadians because almost all English cram schools (hagwons) had multiple native speakers (and preferably White foreigners though we now see more Black and Asian English native speakers now). I lived in one of the metropolitan areas that's not Seoul or Incheon, and my neighborhood had quite a few White people mostly working in hagwons. But that might be because I lived in a huge hagwon district, the biggest outside Seoul and the surrounding towns like Bundang. But you definitely didn't see that many foreign tourists or non-English speaking foreigners because few Korean hagwons teach other European languages. Lastly, some people looked up their names and posted updates in the comment section. It seems like one is living in the US and the others in Italy. Some of them have a Korea-related job in Italy.
@@paolocarpi4769 The absolute majority of Italians are Catholics but they are hardly missionaries. But in Catholicism there are various much more fundamentalist branches, which make religion their reason for living.
I read somewhere about a Francesco Mangano who was a young missionary of the Neocatechumenal Way in South Korea when the Pope visited the country a few years ago, and since I doubt that there are dozens of missionary families with the surname Mangano in South Korea I think we solved the mystery.