South Korean convenience stores seem to be getting wilder with each passing year, offering hundreds of instant meals, gold bars, single malt whiskies and, at one point, BMWs. I wrote about why in my latest:
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
Posts by Max Kim
Read the rest of our five-part @latimes.com series on how L.A. might become more climate-resilient in the coming decades: www.latimes.com/california/s...
Americans often come to South Korea and balk at the glut of high-rise apartments, seen as soulless, sterile, suffocating. But as cities like LA face severe housing crises, there is something to be said about the very different idea of homes behind them
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
Even before Trump, U.S. leaders complained about the lack of American cars in Asia, pointing to trade or regulatory barriers. But the reasons Asian consumers don’t buy American cars are far less complicated.
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
Growing political gaps between men and women are being observed all over the world — including in South Korea, where the recent presidential election showed a staggering 40 percent point difference between 20-something men and women.
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
The prospects of Trump wooing back Kim Jong Un were already looking rather dim, but his strike on Iran might have been the final nail in the coffin. In my latest:
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
A group of 105 South Koreans — led by a lawyer who was behind two presidential impeachments — is suing former president Yoon Suk Yeol for emotional damages caused by his martial law declaration
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
Thanks John 🙏
South Korea's new president, Lee Jae-myung, has had an extraordinary life and a uniquely difficult path to the presidency. My latest:
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
Korean Americans are finding themselves on the hook for service in the South Korean military — all because a rapper dodged it.
Sometime In the last few years, I started noticing that South Korea's love of loanwords was reaching absurd levels. And as I discovered last fall, there's a government agency that's furiously trying to translate them:
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
With historically opposing wildfire seasons, the US and Australia send each other firefighting resources when things are slow at home. But the L.A. fires hint this system is cracking. My latest:
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol has been impeached just 11 days after the martial law fiasco — but a constitutional court’s final sign-off remains:
www.latimes.com/world-nation...
So theoretically at least, we may end up in a situation where education minister Lee Ju-ho — fourth in line who wasn't present at the cabinet meeting — ends up running the country while half the ministers get arrested.
If PM is out, next in line is deputy PM/finance minister Choi Sang-mok. But Choi was also one of the 11 members present at the cabinet meeting right before the martial law declaration, all of whom may also be in legal trouble.
What happens if Yoon is arrested? Nobody knows. PM might take over. Yoon might try to run things from a cell. But the PM is also a suspect in the insurrection investigation.
There is talk now in the local media of a possible death penalty for Yoon, who is facing insurrection charges and has reportedly hired lawyers amid increasingly damning testimonies from military officials suggesting he was personally trying to incapacitate the legislature.
S. Korean President Yoon hasn't appeared in public since a brief public address on Sat. His party chief and PM have controversially deputized themselves in his absence. The military won't say whether they've been receiving orders from Yoon. Total chaos.
www.latimes.com/world-nation...