Concerned as he is with gender perception in Korea, and the mechanics of females in society and gender relationships, I wonder if
James Turnbull would be interested in this article, service, or treatment of topic:
from the Korea Times:
Is 'Substitute Man' Modern White Knight?it's an article about a quick service enterprise gaining momentum these days where, basically, (for example, in the case of a business called "Any Man," if a single woman has a "man" issue to deal with -- say, a bookshelf to move, a bug to kill, or, I suppose, a swoon to revive, she can thumb up the service on her speed-dial, and a "white knight" on a scooter will arrive at her house within ten minutes to put his thumb on the ribbon for the gift-wrapped present, properly operate the plumbing snake, or open that darn pickle-jar. It's written up as if it's exclusively women who use the service, and exclusively men who are employed as such.
In other news:
My friend's recent experience with a bank's slap-in-the-face credit card acquisition policy for foreigners seems to put the lie to this one, but
the article says banks are looking at expat customers as their next big customer demographic:
Banks See Expatriates as Gold Mine