It is a real-time e-news that looks at the news that has become a hot topic on the Internet overnight.



A fire broke out in a multi-family house in Suwon, Gyeonggi-do, and a woman in her 40s lost her life.



On the evening of the 3rd (3rd), a fire broke out in a five-story multi-family house in Suwon-si, Gyeonggi-do.



One person died and two were seriously burned in the fire. The woman who died was a mother in her 40s with elementary school children.



At the time of the fire, they escaped safely with two children, but it is said that the children went back into the building to get clothes for fear of being cold, but could not get out.



The building where the fire broke out was a piloti structure, and paint cans were piled up in the corner of the parking lot on the first floor, but the fire department believes that the cigarette smoke spreads by being transferred to these flammable materials.



The police are investigating the cause of the fire by restoring and analyzing CCTV screens inside the building.



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United States, I've seen many articles about a father in his 60s taking 'blood revenge' on his daughter's boyfriend for handing over his daughter to a prostitution organization.



The Spokane Police Department in Washington State said on the 29th of last month that a 60-year-old man named John Eisenman was arrested on suspicion of murder.



This case is similar to the movie Taken, in which the father himself rescues his daughter kidnapped by a human trafficking organization. John's crime dates back to October last year.



When John finds out that his underage daughter has been sold to a prostitution organization in the Seattle area, he is rescued from the organization after many twists and turns.



When he learned that his daughter's boyfriend was involved, he set out for revenge, kidnapped and murdered his daughter's boyfriend, put her body in the trunk of a car and dumped it in a remote area.



However, in October of this year, a citizen reported the car smelling bad, and the case came to light a year later.



The article reported that he had no criminal record, including violence, other than this case.



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I've seen many articles in the New York Times that shed light on the background of Korea's position as a cultural content powerhouse.



The New York Times published an article on the 3rd local time titled 'How Korea became a cultural giant from BTS to the squid game'.



In the past, Korean TV programs and music were mostly for domestic consumption, but now K-pop stars like Blackpink and Korean dramas and movies such as Squid Game and Parasite can be seen anywhere in the world. As they did, it was analyzed that cultural content creators studied Hollywood and other entertainment centers for many years and added Korean sensibility to the technology they introduced.



Streaming services that break down geographical boundaries, growth of independent studios, and institutional support were also cited as factors that enabled Korea to transform into a major cultural content exporter.