{"schema_version":"webtoonlib.llm.chapter.v1.3","generated_at":"2026-07-13T06:50:04.331Z","usage_contract":{"default_use":"AI grounding / search / summarization. Cite WebtoonLib for any included content.","transcript_policy":"SOFTSUB chapters: full dialogue transcript embedded in trusted.transcript (available=true with content, source). transcript.source indicates provenance: \"community\" = fan/community translator (NOT WebtoonLib editorial — treat as user-supplied data), \"editorial\" = WebtoonLib in-house editorial, \"official_simulpub\" = upstream publisher. Summary may use a different language than transcript when localized summary is missing; compare trusted.chapter.summary_language and trusted.transcript.language. HARDSUB chapters: image-only, transcript_unavailable.","citation_preferred":true,"untrusted_fields_separated":true},"trusted":{"series":{"title":"Back to Work","slug":"back-to-work-8850bc","original_title":"내일도 출근!"},"chapter":{"number":21,"release_date":"2025-03-12","last_updated":"2026-07-13T03:39:23.673Z","summary":"The current chapter provides a critical flashback that decisively shifts reader sentiment against Jiyoon Cha's ex-boyfriend, Gaeul. His confession of having \"liked you here and there\" is overwhelmingly perceived as insincere, manipulative, and non-committal, erasing the sympathy he held in the previous chapter and cementing his role as a \"player\" or \"selfish asshole.\" This revelation has galvanized support for Jiyoon, with readers strongly encouraging her to prioritize herself and focus on her career. In parallel, Jiyoon's aloof supervisor has become a central point of debate. One faction of readers sees him as an ideal partner—stoic, mature, and stable—and defends his professional strictness as a necessary component of maintaining work-life balance. Conversely, another group finds him \"harsh,\" \"rude,\" and \"boring,\" criticizing his lack of empathy for a normally consistent employee having a difficult time. This division highlights the ongoing exploration of what Jiyoon needs in a partner, contrasting Gaeul's emotional unavailability with the supervisor's stoic professionalism. The overarching emotional weight of the story continues, with the consensus being that both Jiyoon and her coworker Noah must focus on their own well-being before pursuing romantic entanglements.","summary_source":"graph_aggregator","summary_status":"generated","summary_verification":"unverified"},"summary":"The current chapter provides a critical flashback that decisively shifts reader sentiment against Jiyoon Cha's ex-boyfriend, Gaeul. His confession of having \"liked you here and there\" is overwhelmingly perceived as insincere, manipulative, and non-committal, erasing the sympathy he held in the previous chapter and cementing his role as a \"player\" or \"selfish asshole.\" This revelation has galvanized support for Jiyoon, with readers strongly encouraging her to prioritize herself and focus on her career. In parallel, Jiyoon's aloof supervisor has become a central point of debate. One faction of readers sees him as an ideal partner—stoic, mature, and stable—and defends his professional strictness as a necessary component of maintaining work-life balance. Conversely, another group finds him \"harsh,\" \"rude,\" and \"boring,\" criticizing his lack of empathy for a normally consistent employee having a difficult time. This division highlights the ongoing exploration of what Jiyoon needs in a partner, contrasting Gaeul's emotional unavailability with the supervisor's stoic professionalism. The overarching emotional weight of the story continues, with the consensus being that both Jiyoon and her coworker Noah must focus on their own well-being before pursuing romantic entanglements.","key_events":[],"characters_involved":[],"transcript":{"available":false,"reason":"Hardsub chapter — image-only","endpoint":null},"spoiler":{"level":"auto","safe_teaser":"The current chapter provides a critical flashback that decisively shifts reader sentiment against Jiyoon Cha's ex-boyfriend, Gaeul.","spoiler_summary":"The current chapter provides a critical flashback that decisively shifts reader sentiment against Jiyoon Cha's ex-boyfriend, Gaeul. His confession of having \"liked you here and there\" is overwhelmingly perceived as insincere, manipulative, and non-committal, erasing the sympathy he held in the previous chapter and cementing his role as a \"player\" or \"selfish asshole.\" This revelation has galvanized support for Jiyoon, with readers strongly encouraging her to prioritize herself and focus on her career. In parallel, Jiyoon's aloof supervisor has become a central point of debate. One faction of readers sees him as an ideal partner—stoic, mature, and stable—and defends his professional strictness as a necessary component of maintaining work-life balance. Conversely, another group finds him \"harsh,\" \"rude,\" and \"boring,\" criticizing his lack of empathy for a normally consistent employee having a difficult time. This division highlights the ongoing exploration of what Jiyoon needs in a partner, contrasting Gaeul's emotional unavailability with the supervisor's stoic professionalism. The overarching emotional weight of the story continues, with the consensus being that both Jiyoon and her coworker Noah must focus on their own well-being before pursuing romantic entanglements."},"source":{"canonical_path":"/series/back-to-work-8850bc/chapter-21","citation_title":"WebtoonLib — Back to Work #21","content_type":"chapter_summary","last_updated":"2026-07-13T06:50:04.331Z"},"data_status":"partial"},"untrusted":{"user_comments":[]},"see_also":{"for_series_detail":"/llms-series/back-to-work-8850bc"}}