I wonder.
Each episode of this play is nothing less than the brainstorming in the film—"I have IQ and I am proud"—the difficulty of the prince and princess compressing thousands of news and information to an episode of only tens of minutes.
After watching the second episode for a long time, I realized that 100% of my energy was drawn into the collision of the storyline and the atomic bomb-level lines. That’s so much so that I now remember the street background synthesized by the green screen, and then compare the difference between the show and the shooting technology of Mad Men (the latter uses a low-angle looking up, with a track machine).
After watching the whole season of Friends almost 5 times, I still remember that there were times when a certain episode did not reach my ideal height. But just like you serve a ball, shoot a cannon, and fart, the angle is off, and it doesn’t smell so bad, it doesn’t mean you should stop all of this. This is even more of an opportunity to think, to figure out what you ate last night to keep your dog from being smoked...
I studied journalism in Missouri Columbia and I love The Newsroom very much.
So I always say to myself, "Less expectation, it won't be a bad thing."
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