“This hotel in Korea has wide, pink parking spaces just for women.”
“I’m staying in Korea right now and apparently there’s a TV channel dedicated to dogs...as in programming FOR dogs.”
"Movie tickets can look like this."
“Solar-powered benches here in Seoul, South Korea, complete with USB and wireless charging docks”
“Korean KTX trains play ’healing broadcasts’ where they just show newborn puppies rolling around for 5 minutes.”
“In South Korea, they camouflage cell towers to look like trees.”
“A bathroom in the Incheon airport has a clock embedded in the mirror.”
“The building across from my hotel looks like a zipper.”
"A surprising fact that really shows South Korea is living in the future is its age counting system. If a baby is born on December 31, they will be 1 day old on January 1 of the next year, according to our system. Meanwhile, in South Korea, if a baby is born on the last day of the year, they are considered 1 year old; on the first day of the New Year, January 1, they will turn 2 years old. For official government documents, legal procedures, and age limits on beginning school, the international system is used, which is the one we are all so familiar with."
“Starbucks in Seoul is offering used coffee grounds for gardening.”
“The trashcans at Gimpo Airport in Seoul look like luggage and have clear receptacles.”
“This public toilet in Seoul with a face mirror when you sit down.”
"The life expectancy of women is projected to break the 90-year-old barrier by 2030."
#24 Not sure about the importance of watching oneself while taking a sh#t.
#21 And how exactly is "counting years of age funnily" "the future"?