Sarah Son, a lecturer in Korean studies at the University of Sheffield, told Insider that the debt crisis and squalor seen in South Korean cultural exports like "Squid Game" paints only part of the picture.
Kim Keunha first moved to Seoul at 19, drawn to the bright lights of the capital.
Since then, Kim has seen Mapo bridge turn into a hotspot for suicides, drawing the desperate and debt-ridden to plunge to their deaths in the waters of the Han River.
His biggest problem is an eye-watering debt of some $40,000.
Kim's experiences reflect the unforgiving realities of life for some young South Koreans. Stuck in dead-end jobs, with growing debt and no real means of buying a home.
Hwang Tae-ho, 28, an aspiring musician who used to bartend at a club cannot afford a conventional housing unit because he doesn't have enough savings to pay the "wolse."
Hwang told Insider that he, too, is deep in debt, having racked up around $8,000 in unpaid credit card bills that he has difficulty paying the minimum sum for every month.
The upheaval, spanning multiple industries and vast swaths of the country, is the result of one giant issue: China's inability to borrow or buy its way out of its current economic crisis.
The typical Chinese millennial makes $22,000 a year but has no student debt, grew up in an economic boom, and has learned how to outhustle everyone else.
Professors at Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology have designed a toilet that converts methane from one's faeces into an energy source. 💩
BeeVi uses a vacuum and a small amount of water to send poop from the toilet into an underground tank and bioreactor, prompting its creators to call it a "super water-saving vacuum toilet."
Xiapu County in China's Fujian province is almost a little too picture-perfect, with photos of the county’s scenic spots abound on Weibo, China’s equivalent to Twitter.
Xiapu is still a largely agrarian town, but much of its picturesque landscape — and the people within it — is created by teams of photo crews masquerading as fake farmers and fishermen. insider.com/fake-rural-chi…
For the right price, Chinese and foreign visitors alike can get the perfect shot for their social media profile, complete with "special effects" courtesy of local businessmen angling to facilitate photoshoots. insider.com/fake-rural-chi…