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1-8 of 8
- A story about an investigating team leader, Hwang Joon-cheol, in charge of investigating boys who are suspected of robbery at the local town's supermarket, 'Woori Super'.
- Prosecutor Yang Min-hyeok, who is known for being headstrong, ends up in a complicated situation because of a suspect who commits suicide. He faces the true nature of a huge financial scandal while investigating a case to clear himself of suspicion.
- Kim Kyung-ho is fired by his university after he questioned the validity of a math question in its entrance exam. Kim files a lawsuit against the university, but it is dismissed. Out of frustration he confronts the judge with a crossbow. Kim is arrested. He says that he did not shoot the judge but the judge insists he did.
- On September 4, 1984, democracy movement leader Kim Jong Tae (Park Won Sang) is arrested and taken to an infamous interrogation facility in Namyeong-dong. For the next 22 days, he would be cruelly and continuously tortured in all manners by interrogators intent on forcing him to confess to communist collaboration.
- After Seon Yu's father committed suicide leaving behind a large sum of debt for them, Mother and 12-year-old Seon Yu move to a new place to have new start. After transferring to a new school there, she gets a lot of attention from prankster Jeong Guk. Will Jeong Guk be able to help Seon Yu out from the depression she's in?
- While travelling to the French National Library (BnF) to see Jikji, the world's oldest movable metal type book printed in Korea, a Canadian, David Redman discovers that no one knows anything about the book printed in Korea in 1377. Realizing Eurocentrism is at play, David sets off on a journey through Europe and Korea with Sarang Ness and the Jikji team to find how the print technology transferred from 13th Century Koryo to Europe.
- Tracking the links between the Gutenberg and Goryeo metal types, this documentary finds the "Pope's Letter to King of Goryeo" in the Vatican archives. Could this be the final proof that the Goryeos created the world's first printing press?