The first episode seemed to me to vent. It happened that I just saw a set of pictures, which proved that many of Obama's actions toward the people are show, but in fact, the security guards have isolated the public and reporters. It is believed that this is true after 9/11. The democratic politics rooted in elections itself is mixed with performance, which does not affect the democratic righteousness itself. The first episode of "Black Mirror" touches the core of democracy. There will be transactions and shady in the operation of power, but the independence of the judiciary and the ubiquitous supervision of the media, especially the power expansion of mobile phones and Weibo network media, make public figures Privacy has quickly become a consumer product, with nowhere to hide.
Another sharpness of "Black Mirror" is that people have a nightmare about the flood of media. Personally think the second episode is the most profound. Joyce's life is not the multimedia ideal country described by Apple and Microsoft. You don't have to do it yourself. Everything is done on the visual platform, including sexual intercourse. When I see each atomized individual sitting in its own small square, and the animated puppet on the LCD screen conveys the feelings and emotions for you, my hair is terrified. The billion grains implanted behind the ears in the third episode are not the fantasy of people who are troublesome to memorize memories or even three meals a day, but the convenience makes people desperate. When I forget the word, I no longer want to look through the dictionary but mobile phone and Baidu. When browsing e-books on the mobile phone, it is troublesome to directly listen to or watch TV dramas. When the paper and words are far away from the brains that I honed when I am a student, I am addicted to being thundered. And the endless illusory ocean of downloading obsessive-compulsive disorder and online games that eDonkey is used to, whether a certain moment makes you feel exhausted or even desperate, even if it is very subtle, it flashes by. But in life, in human nature, the real touchable things are being separated and alienated bit by bit by technology, unconsciously.
This is not only a TV series, but a multimedia performance art, a three-dimensional Shakespearean drama. Now Yifa feels that the path of its cultural traditions can be seen in many foreign film and television dramas, which are in the same line.
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