This year, I accidentally came across the anime Hayan Ma-eum Baeggu, which translates as the White Heart Baeggu, although I think the correct word is the White Dog Baeggu. Unfortunately, there are no good Russian subtitles for this anime, but I liked this anime and the main character, so I decided to create this beautiful fox who is only looking for those fights in which the fighters will not give in to each other.
Category 3D Models / Portraits
Species Fox (Other)
Size 1024 x 1024px
File Size 1.26 MB
So this fox here is all white, which implies that he is from an Arctic realm. But is he also south korean, like the show that inspired his creation? Does south korea have harsh winters like that with tons of snow?
I like how you have got the color of his eyes being the same shade as his jean shorts, that was a good choice.
I like how you have got the color of his eyes being the same shade as his jean shorts, that was a good choice.
Well, yes, I made Bae a little arctic fox, although his homeland is South Korea, and I doubt that there are arctic foxes there. Let's assume that his ancestors moved here for some reason. And you're right, the series about a dog separated from its owners and going home, and whose namesake is my Arctic fox, was filmed in the same South Korea, and was based on a true story about a Korean Chindo dog who walked to his mistress for a long time. Russian Russian subtitles Unfortunately, there are no normal subtitles for it, there is only Russian hardsub and Russian voiceover, but I would recommend that you watch it if you ever get good subtitles in English.
That's a good point you made about the subtitles. I wanted to tell you that there is a new AI program include inside of new builds of FFDshow which is called Whisper. It will automatically, live and in real time, provide subtitles in any language you want while watching a video that has audio in a foreign language. I have not personally used it but it could be very useful to you since Russian subtitles are probably harder to come by and rarer than english subtitles.
It seems there are actually 2 Jindo dogs that were named Baekgu.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_Jindo_Dog
Loyalty
In 1993, a 7-year-old female Jindo named Baekgu (translated as a White Dog), raised by Park Bok-dan, an 83-year-old woman on Jindo Island, was sold to a new owner in the city of Daejeon which is located about 300 km (180 mi) away from the island. The dog escaped her new home and returned to her original owner, Park, after seven months, haggard and exhausted. Baekgu remained with her original owner, who decided to keep the loyal dog, until the dog died of natural causes seven years later. The story was a national sensation in South Korea and was made into cartoons, a TV documentary, and a children's storybook. In 2004, Jindo County erected a statue of Baekgu in her hometown to honor the dog.
Another Jindo, also named Baekgu, a four-year-old male at the time who lived alone with his owner Park Wan-suh residing on Jindo Island, did not eat anything and mourned for his dead owner for seven days after the owner died from a liver disease in June 2000. According to Chosun Ilbo, the dog accompanied his dead owner for three days until other people came to find the body, followed the owner to his funeral, and came back home, not eating anything for four days. The Korean Jindo Dog Research Institute brought him under its care, but a person related to the Institute announced that the dog would not interact with anyone except for his feeder as of 2005.
It seems there are actually 2 Jindo dogs that were named Baekgu.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_Jindo_Dog
Loyalty
In 1993, a 7-year-old female Jindo named Baekgu (translated as a White Dog), raised by Park Bok-dan, an 83-year-old woman on Jindo Island, was sold to a new owner in the city of Daejeon which is located about 300 km (180 mi) away from the island. The dog escaped her new home and returned to her original owner, Park, after seven months, haggard and exhausted. Baekgu remained with her original owner, who decided to keep the loyal dog, until the dog died of natural causes seven years later. The story was a national sensation in South Korea and was made into cartoons, a TV documentary, and a children's storybook. In 2004, Jindo County erected a statue of Baekgu in her hometown to honor the dog.
Another Jindo, also named Baekgu, a four-year-old male at the time who lived alone with his owner Park Wan-suh residing on Jindo Island, did not eat anything and mourned for his dead owner for seven days after the owner died from a liver disease in June 2000. According to Chosun Ilbo, the dog accompanied his dead owner for three days until other people came to find the body, followed the owner to his funeral, and came back home, not eating anything for four days. The Korean Jindo Dog Research Institute brought him under its care, but a person related to the Institute announced that the dog would not interact with anyone except for his feeder as of 2005.
FA+

Comments