* Translated by AI

Starnews

Father who distributed 4.5 million flyers after his 18-year-old daughter went missing.. 'Kkoko-mu' in tears

Published:

Choi Hyejin

*This content was translated by AI.

/Photo=SBS
/Photo=SBS

'Stories That Keep Telling Themselves' (hereinafter 'Kkoko-mu') highlights the case of an 18-year-old girl who went missing while returning home.

The SBS variety program 'Kkoko-mu' airing on the 7th is titled 'Special: Finding Long-term Missing Children 2 - We Are Looking for Her'. Singers Jo Jae-je, actress Kim Hye-eun, and Keith of Life Bell will appear as listeners.

In this broadcast, the program traces the disappearance of Song Yang, who vanished without a trace from a bus stop in Pyeongtaek in 1999, and reveals the story of a father who traveled across the country, hung banners, and distributed flyers in search of his missing daughter.

Among these revelations, it is disclosed that Solbi's song 'Find' was created based on this actual case. The song, with lyrics such as "Even as the seasons change, you are not here, only your photo remains," deeply moves the heart. It was created to convey the father's earnest wish to find his missing daughter, Song Yang. Solbi stated, "Whenever I think of the father, a fluorescent vest comes to mind. I was deeply impressed by the story that he always wore fluorescent clothing when hanging banners on highways, worried that people might not see him otherwise, and he appeared extremely earnest." She added, "I wrote the lyrics for 'Find' with the hope that I could share even a part of the father's sorrow."

Most of all, the studio was instantly turned into a sea of tears upon learning of the father's paternal love, who had driven 1.08 million kilometers over 25 years, hung 3,700 banners, and distributed 4.5 million flyers in his relentless search for his missing daughter. As the father's agonizing paternal love to find his daughter until his last breath and his guilt over her disappearance were revealed, Bell wiped away tears, saying, "It is so sad that the father is determined to see his daughter's face before he dies." Kim Hye-eun reportedly sobbed, saying, "I think I would have felt the same way as a father."

Especially, the broadcast delivers a shock by revealing that three years after Song Yang's disappearance, a woman named Choi, who got off at the same bus stop, also went missing and was later found as a decomposed corpse in a field near the bus stop.

The heart-wrenching story of a father's desperate paternal love, who searched for his daughter for 25 years and made everyone in the studio sob, will be revealed in the main broadcast of 'Kkoko-mu'.

/Photo=SBS
/Photo=SBS

<© STARNEWS. All rights reserved. No reproduction or redistribution allowed.>

*This content was translated by AI.

Recommended News

Daily Trending News

Editor’s Pick

Latest in Entertainment