Review for the 8 show
I binge watched a Netflix series for the first time in a while. I got so engrossed that I lost track of time. Perhaps it was because what THE 8 SHOW aimed to convey closely resembled our own lives.
The 8 Show, based on a webtoon, tells the story of eight protagonists. Each character is wounded, shunned by society, failed, or has experienced despair, and it wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say they continued living with a desire to die. An invisible organizer gathers these people and proposes a game.
The game has very simple rules, but because of these rules, the participants who join the show gradually deteriorate over time. If they had just been content with what was given to them, they might have avoided tragic outcomes or actions that hurt each other.
But The 8 Show tells us that we humans are not such beings. The reason I watched until dawn, cutting down on sleep, wasn’t because of the glamorous cast or my fondness for the original work. More than anything, I was captivated by the setting of each floor in this series.
Participants who had experienced and were living miserable lives received a proposal and all gathered in one place. Some scenes remind me of Squid Game. Before entering, they have to draw one of eight cards. Since no one knew the true value represented by the cards, they chose based on their intuition and entered.
The cards represent rooms on each floor, and participants enter their respective rooms to start the game.
Here, the meaning of the cards signifies the invisible or too visible social classes in our society. Some are born rich and live without worries, achieving what they want, turning even failures into pleasure, while others struggle every moment to survive, sacrificing everything, but in the end, only debts remain in their lives.
We can easily find such disparities in life among people on the streets and acquaintances. Although we all know about these differences, since there are no visible ranks like in the military, we live in the same space and time, sometimes envying or ignoring each other.
In The 8 Show, these classes are expressed as wages determined by the floors. The higher the floor, the significantly higher the hourly wage is designed. In the end, even though they spend the same time, the value of money varies according to their status. I sympathized with and reflected on the society we live in through this aspect.
Whether we live a minimum wage life set by the state or earn higher wages, we don’t really have much choice. Parents tirelessly urge their children to study a little more to raise their wages, working day and night to afford tuition. However, since there’s no mutual understanding between parents and children, the children easily dismiss the meaning.
They never understand why they are told to study so hard when they don’t want to. But from the parents’ perspective, they think, "I have to end my life on the first floor, but I desperately want you to live at least on the third floor."
Parents didn’t initially accept the reality of living forever on the first floor. Like those who aim to save a billion to move up from the first floor to a higher place in the show, they too held onto such hopes. But reality, like The 8 Show, is harsh, and they had to give up.
Capitalism has a dual nature. The rich get richer, and the poor often remain poor. Although there are significant opportunities that arise a few times, those opportunities inherently carry the risk of failure. In financial management, opportunity reflects effort to a very minimal extent. Ultimately, it's impossible to always succeed.
Money makes more money, and in front of money, we become miserable and submissive. Accepting this process more naturally might be the process of growing up for the common people.
In this regard, the actors in The 8 Show performed perfectly. They vividly conveyed the desperate and arrogant attitudes befitting their roles through the screen. I couldn’t help but applaud their undeniable performances. While watching, I kept wondering which floor I was living on. Clearly, the life I’ve walked is that of the lower floors. My parents lived that way, and so did I. Hence, I struggled and threw myself into trying to climb up even a little.
Just like the first floor in the show, which chooses to collect and store the waste of each floor, there was a time when I chose humility as well.
No one forced me to do so. I did it to survive. It was easier to save a lump sum to move up a little if I sacrificed my youth and endured hunger. Looking back, I realize that what I lost for that money was irreplaceable.
It was time. I recently feel that I might have exchanged my youth for that cost. Of course, being forty is still youthful. The adults I study with envy me. But nowadays, I intensely envy those in their twenties who seem carefree. I envy their freewheeling actions and their lack of plans.
Being forty, with too many burdens on my shoulders, makes me simply envy them.
We always live envying someone else. Satisfaction vanishes when we compare. If there were no floors in the show, even the first floor might have been content with what was given and wouldn’t have thought of extending time. They might have avoided a tragic end. But when there’s something to compare, desire grows. Very quickly.
Looking at it this way, my resignation might be a delusion created by my desire. I left that safe fence aiming for something higher, but I can’t say I’m particularly happy.
I still crave more, so satisfaction doesn’t come easily. Maybe, like The 8 Show, I might realize the importance of things after all the shows are over.
The 8 Show seems to be telling us
Nothing changes, so just accept it and live. Don’t be greedy, and be grateful for what’s given. But don’t forget, you’re human, so you can’t keep greed and desire away.
I somewhat agree. Perhaps, if it weren’t for that, we wouldn’t have developed this much.
Overheating is a fact. The growing gap between the rich and the poor constantly gives despair and frustration to those on the lower floors. The rich keep smiling, and the poor keep crying. But it seems it’s not just money that fills that gap.
There comes a moment when one realizes this. Anyone who has achieved a desperately wished-for goal and felt emptiness would understand this.
I was one of those who used to shout, "I wouldn’t want anything else if I had this much money! I would happily live doing what I want with that money!" The size of that goal doesn’t matter.
Eventually, one realizes that true happiness is not material. What truly fills us isn’t our worth but the precious things around us.
Perhaps both the original webtoon Money Game and The 8 Show wanted to tell us this.
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