Work hard,madonna erotica - ralphi's eroticism vox play hard -- that’s South Korea’s formula for success.
For one South Korean entrepreneur, it only made sense to bottle that formula from his home country and bring it to the hands of hard-working, hard-playing Americans.
Sisun Lee's product, Morning Recovery, is a hangover cure based on some of the many traditional remedies in South Korea's heavy drinking culture.
The idea is to chug a bottle of it after a big night, before you go to bed. Lee claims that you'll wake up without the typical effects expected.
SEE ALSO: Music festivals: expectations vs. realityThe former Tesla and Uber product manager appears to have hit upon nascent demand for the drink outside of South Korea. Morning Recovery's Indiegogo campaign now stands at 300 percent of its $25,000 goal, less than 24 hours after the page went live.
Morning Recovery's magic ingredient is Dihydromyricetin(DHM), a chemical extracted from a fruit called heotgaein Korean, of the Hovenia dulcis tree, or Japanese raisin tree.
It also packs milk thistle -- said to be beneficial for the liver, which works hard when you drink alcohol -- vitamin B complex, prickly pear extract, and taurine.
Unfortunately for Lee and his team at San Francisco's 82 Labs, testing the product meant many nights of heavy drinking.
“It was really all about testing samples on myself, so I literally just got drunk every night and wanted to see if this worked. That's really the only way you do it,” he says.
Eventually, after realising that he's stumbled upon something huge, Lee left his job at Tesla in June to go full out on launching Morning Recovery.
The drink isn't the first of its kind to hit the western market. Other hangover solutions such as Before Elixir, Resqwaterand First Aid Shot Therapyhave surfaced in the U.S., but Lee says Morning Recovery differentiates itself by its entire compound of ingredients.
With some of the longest work hoursand heaviest drinking habitsin the world (not to mention drinking frequently for work), South Koreans have long needed a workaround to get through the week.
When a hangover is no excuse to stay home, they turn to sukchwi haeso eumryo-- hangover remedy drinks, which have understandably become a $120 million industryin South Korea.
Office workers take the small glass bottles, branded Condition, Bacchus or Vita 500, before a night out or the next morning to relieve the pain. Japan has its own version.
View this post on Instagram
People swear by them. People like Kim Duck-hyeon, a 37-year-old office worker in Incheon, west of Seoul, who has been drinking them for 10 years.
“The hangover drinks really work. They help me cut the hangover fast and relieve my headache much better the next day,” he said, while nursing a glass of somaek -- a signature Korean concoction of soju and cheap beer -- at a work function on a Tuesday night.
“Salespeople who need to drink for work have them every day just to survive!”
So when Lee visited Korea for the first time in his adult life last December and discovered just how intense the drinking culture was, he was blown away by the lightly sweet mystery juice that softened the blow of a heavy night out.
He returned to the U.S. and ordered some for his friends, who reacted positively too, he says.
“Because Korean drinking culture is so severe and intense, this thing came to market way before everyone else and there's just been a lot of innovation around it,” he says.
“The alcohol market in Korea is about $9 billion and the U.S. alone is 25 times bigger than that, and yet there are no synonymous hangover drinks and beverages in the U.S.”
Eunwoo Hwang contributed to this article.
Five Photographs by Ellen AuerbachDisney+ is already cracking down on password sharing in CanadaWildlife Photography Awards reveal People's ChoiceThe Sennheiser Momentum True Wireless 2 are 53% off at AmazonOpenAI is reportedly working on an 'iPhone of AI' — whatever that meansThe Battle of the Butt: Revisiting Norman Lear’s Cold TurkeyStaff Picks: Baseball Cards, Barbarian Days, BlowTwitter/X just fired half of its election integrity teamLooking at Vermeer’s Paintings in Manhattan'Saw X' review: A surprisingly sentimental splatterApple Music Favorites are a thing in iOS 17.1We're watching the return of the tears of joy emojiHart Crane’s Bizarre, Audacious Unpublished Poem#ReadEverywhereA Brief History of African Americans in OperaLook: Richard Brautigan’s Poetry Inspires TechnoThe only recipe you need for airWhen Paperback Covers Get It Wrong—Very WrongAlphabet Finds Google at Its Most Machiavellian'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for September 29, 2023 'Wordle' today: Here's the answer, hints for April 28 How 'Judy Blume Forever' uses animation to illustrate taboo topics Posters from the Paris Protests, 1968 by Atelier Populaire Staff Picks: Bookshop Door, Thinking Fast and Slow by The Paris Review Talking Dirty with Our Fall Issue by Sadie Stein Is Bluesky the one? A Twitter alternative takes off. Jess Phillips MP on remembering Jo Cox and speaking truth to power Ari Aster and Joaquin Phoenix on 'Beau Is Afraid's most challenging scene Want to try Bluesky? Look carefully at the terms of service. Staff Picks: A Fan’s Notes, Foster Wallace on TV by The Paris Review Stop Me If You've Heard This by Daniel Herbert Elusive Epigraphs; Travel Books by Lorin Stein Mia Khalifa is now a TikTok star, and she loves it Google Meet gets 1080p video resolution (with a twist) Night Shifts; Manufacturing Arrows by Chris Flynn 'Polite Society' is a fierce, one Labor Days by Chris Flynn Beyoncé's releases new song, website for Black creators on Juneteenth Equestrian Summer Camp; Desolation Canyon Ranger by Chris Flynn 'Peter Pan and Wendy' review: Disney's live
1.7202s , 10195.1875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【madonna erotica - ralphi's eroticism vox】,Evergreen Information Network