I've started watching a series on Netflix: Extraordinary Attorney Woo, about an autistic attorney set in South Korea. Spoilers for the show I guess. I'm not 100% sure about the depiction of autism in the show, given what I know from firsthand experience, but the writing and the drama is actually pretty decent. Our protagonist Woo Young-Woo is portrayed very sympathetically; she's not a genius, but she is a living encyclopedia of law with a photographic memory. She's not totally socially inept, but she has a hard time interacting with people and has to learn how to get along with her colleagues. She's fixated on whales and other mammalian sea life, flies into unsolicited monologues about random whale facts, has kind of a rigid and clumsy gait, and speaks in lightning fast way with almost no inflection or space between the words. It kind of comes across as being a very blunt stereotype, but she's a pretty likable character overall I'd say.
What makes it a little confusing however is how starkly different the South Korean legal system seems to be from the American System, and I don't know enough about South Korea to be able to differentiate what is based in reality and what is a dramatization for the sake of entertainment. For example, the different episodes all seem to center around different types of cases, first episode we have a case about homicide, then another episode we have a case about a specific type of patent on a device, and in another case we have a lawsuit against the ?government? to prevent a highway from being built through a rural town; and I'm thinking "How the utter fuck are these lawyers simultaneously specialized enough to be able to handle different cases like this?" cause atleast in America, from what I know, lawyers are HIGHLY specialized in different facets of the law. Though that may just be because America is so huge and aggressively overcomplicated, and South Korea has the divine benefit of just being a smaller country that, in global terms, became independent and modernized only pretty recently, like within the last hundred years or so, and therefore it's legal system and code of laws might actually be comprehensible to individual lawyers.
My only other concerns are things so specific to South Korea that I'd probably need to ask an actual Korean to explain them to me. One being that a character is in the running to become the Minister of Justice for the country, but is concerned over the fact that they had a child out of wedlock becoming known, which would apparently be a huge scandal if it were proven, and I can't help but think "...that's a scandal? Really?", but I guess, as an American, I'm just used to my politicians being debased, immoral pieces of shit; fuck if the person I was voting for ONLY had bastard children as their only sin, I'd be SO THANKFUL.
In the episode I'm watching right now, the major point of drama is that the main character was found to have been hired due to "Nepotism", but the exact definition of nepotism here seems to be a uniquely Korean one. The main character was hired into the law firm because the CEO knew the MC's dad back in University, and they were friends; and a side character figured this out and utterly lost his fucking mind. The way I understand nepotism, it's a way to for the elite to keep their wealth in the family, or just amongst themselves, and the relatively poor Woo Young-Woo and her single father completely fails this metric. The next is familiarity or connectivity, it would never occur to me that just being friends apparently qualifies as nepotism, as Woo's family and the CEO aren't financially linked together at all. The next is qualification, it'd obviously be nepotism if Woo were unqualified for her position... but she's eminently and completely qualified. It's also a private company, so it seems to me that the entire point is moot since private companies, atleast here in America, can hire whoever the fuck they want for any reason they want; if the CEO wants to waste money employing their friend's disabled daughter, they have the right to do that, as far as I know. It'd be different if it were a governmental position, but it's not. I might just be totally in the wrong on this one due to my ignorance on the subject matter, I'd honestly have to look into it more, but just from a google search it seems that South Korea is riddled with nepotism anyway, so that makes it even more bizarre that these characters are losing their shit over our main character catching a break for a position she's qualified for anyway.
So far I'm really liking this show, I'll probably stick with it to the end.