Marriage is not a treatment plan for lust.
Why are people asking, “What happens when your wife is on her period?” as though marriage exists primarily to satisfy sexual desires.
Self control is a fruit you cultivate before marriage, not a gift marriage automatically gives you.
One of the biggest strengths of Teach You a Lesson is that the school setting is practically endless. Every school has its own culture, its own power dynamics, its own victims and perpetrators, and the drama only scratched the surface of what can be explored. Director Hong Jong-chan saying there are still “many stories left to tell” makes perfect sense because the premise was never designed to be a one and done story.
What impressed me most about Season 1 was not just the action or the satisfaction of seeing justice served. It was how each case exposed a different crack in the education system, whether it involved students, teachers, parents, or the institutions themselves. That format gives the series room to keep reinventing itself without feeling repetitive.
Of course, season 2 has not been officially confirmed yet, but if Netflix decides to move forward, there’s enough material for multiple seasons.
I am just hoping the success of Season 1 is enough to convince them that this lesson isn’t over.