logo
Korean eatery boss impresses guests by balancing table full of dishes on head while serving

Korean eatery boss impresses guests by balancing table full of dishes on head while serving

A South Korean restaurant owner has wowed many people by being able to carry a whole table full of dishes on his head to diners.
The head-turning skills of Kang Jin-gyu, 55, has turned his restaurant into a tourist hotspot in Uidong Valley, a scenic resort near Seoul, South Korea.
To save the effort of carrying dishes one by one from the kitchen to the dining area, Kang decided it would be easier to carry the whole table of food.
Kang Jin-gyu with a fully laden table on his head. He turned to carrying food orders this way after his hands became sore serving in a traditional fashion. Photo: YouTube
He has mastered balancing a long table for 10, stacked with food and drinks weighing 36kg, on his head.
Kang makes at least 150 such trips every day, according to the South Korean media outlet SBS.
Kang can even climb up and down staircases balancing a table on his head.
He said he used to carry the tables using his hands, but switched to his head because his hands hurt.
Kang said the balancing secret was to not use the highest point of his head, but slightly to the side of it.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The legacy of Hong Kong's signature curio shops
The legacy of Hong Kong's signature curio shops

South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

The legacy of Hong Kong's signature curio shops

Since the mid-19th century, Hong Kong has been famed for the extensive array of (mostly, but not exclusively, Chinese) curios available in speciality shops. A mainstay of the local tourism industry, generations of visitors have departed these shores with some appealingly 'oriental' item tucked away in their baggage as a memento of their stay. While some are genuine antiques, most curios are recently manufactured. Porcelain items, jade and intricately carved netsuke remain popular, along with Swatow embroideries, Mandarin coats and scroll paintings. Despite the wholesale decimation of African elephant populations in recent years, carved ivory curios remain popular purchases for the less environmentally conscious, and Hong Kong's numerous ivory shops have insisted, for the past few decades, that items are all made from 'old stocks'. Tourists browse among the second-hand and curio stalls at Upper Lascar Row. Photo: Winson Wong From the 1920s, open-air second-hand stalls along Upper and Lower Lascar Rows , just below the Man Mo Temple on Hollywood Road, were regularly referenced in contemporary guidebooks and thus became popular tourist hunting grounds for curiosities. More credulous visitors still hope for hidden treasure among the random bric-a-brac, mostly caked in dust, found jumbled together. For some bargain hunters, this fusty atmosphere is a large part of the appeal. Until well into the 60s, these lanes also had a well-deserved reputation among local residents as a thief's market, where newly burgled householders surreptitiously checked out stalls to see whether their stolen property was being fenced. During the worldwide tourism boom that characterised the Roaring Twenties , wealthy passengers who travelled on round-the-world ocean liners typically staged through Hong Kong on their journeys. In the interwar years, upmarket shopping arcades located within popular hotels, such as The Peninsula in Kowloon or between the Gloucester and the Hongkong Hotel in Central, each had at least one curio dealer to meet demand from passing tourists. Surrounding backstreets had many more to choose from. Interwar Hong Kong was an excellent place to buy high-quality Japanese curios, such as netsuke, unusual as their widespread availability here may appear today. A hawker selling used goods on Upper Lascar Row in 1972. Photo: SCMP Archives Hong Kong in those years had a sizeable resident Japanese community, many of whom had made their homes in the British colony for decades, and who spoke English and Cantonese, as well as Japanese. As a free port, curio items, like almost everything else on offer in that long-ago 'shopping paradise', were imported and sold unburdened by export and import tariffs and local sales taxes. Consequently, purchases made in Hong Kong were frequently cheaper than in their country of origin. And unlike Japan, where curio items varied throughout the country, Hong Kong's speciality shops that sold such wares were within pleasant strolling distance of each other and stocked a wide variety.

Ex-girlfriend who blackmailed K-pop idol with sex video gets suspended sentence
Ex-girlfriend who blackmailed K-pop idol with sex video gets suspended sentence

South China Morning Post

time7 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Ex-girlfriend who blackmailed K-pop idol with sex video gets suspended sentence

The former girlfriend of a 26-year-old South Korean pop star has been given a one-year suspended sentence for threatening to release a sex video of them together in a bid to end his career. The Seoul Eastern District Court sentenced the woman to one year in prison, suspended for two years, for her threats to the K-pop singer, who is still active in the scene. She was sentenced under the Act on Special Cases Concerning the Punishment of Sexual Crimes (coercion using video recordings) and for property damage, according to legal platform LawTalk News on Wednesday. The woman was also ordered to complete 40 hours of sexual violence counselling and barred from working at institutions involving children, teenagers and people with disabilities for four years. The woman had escalated threats to the singer and also damaged his phone during an argument. Photo: Shutterstock The couple dated from November 2020 to March 2022, according to celebrity news website Kbizoom. As the relationship started deteriorating, the woman began blackmailing her boyfriend with sex videos filmed during their time together. Her first threat was on December 10, 2021, when she created a social media account using the singer's image and texted him the link along with a portion of a sex video involving the two, saying: 'Quit being an idol. The only path left for you is the military.'

Netflix K-drama Mercy for None review: So Ji-sub leads middling gangster revenge saga
Netflix K-drama Mercy for None review: So Ji-sub leads middling gangster revenge saga

South China Morning Post

time9 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Netflix K-drama Mercy for None review: So Ji-sub leads middling gangster revenge saga

2.5/5 stars Advertisement Lead cast: So Ji-sub, Heo Joon-ho, Gong Myung, Ahn Kil-kang Mercy for None, Netflix Korea's latest gritty genre original out of South Korea, is a show about a man who destroys himself to seek justice for his dead brother. It is also about fathers blinded by their love for their sons. But most of all it's a show about men beating the living hell out of each other. The man who does most of that beating is the hulking Nam Gi-hun, played by broad-shouldered bruiser So Ji-sub ( Doctor Lawyer ). Gi-hun used to be a top lieutenant in the Bongsan Gang, led by Gu Bong-san (Ahn Kil-kang, A Shop for Killers ), which is closely affiliated with the Joowon Gang, led by Lee Joo-woon (Heo Joon-ho, Buried Hearts ).

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store