Interesting, but media textbooks? hehe

Axel 2022-09-12 05:18:30

Finished the first season intermittently in the form of four or six.

It's interesting how to say it, but it's not worth such a high score.

To write a story from the perspective of a team after an event occurs, it's okay to watch an episode or two, but if it's a season, it's a bit empty. The whole team is bloody and united, and even the previous jerk Don has become a good person, a little too perfect.

Each episode revolves around an event or theme, and storytelling improves in later episodes. As far as characters go, Mac and Sloan are my favorites, but the screenwriter's character relationships aren't really to my liking.

The relationship between Mac and Will has been tangled for a whole season. It is not a complicated entanglement, but Will unilaterally does not know whether to forgive Mac. After I finally figured out that I should forgive Mac, I found that although I wanted to forgive Mac, there seemed to be some hurdles in my heart that I couldn't overcome, and then I left it to the next season to tangle.

Maggie is a typical girl who is soft-hearted and unprincipled towards her boyfriend. No matter how firm his stance was, as long as his boyfriend Don apologized and showed his favor, he immediately turned his head and threw himself into Don's arms regardless of his previous suspicions.

Jim is the classic spare tire boy, and then gets tangled up with a spare tire girl. When I saw him pursue Lisa again, I thought he was really a reliable guy, but when he was mentioned, he was about to abandon the spare girl.

I literally didn't see the relationship between Sloan and Don in the legend, only when Mac yelled at Will at the end of the tenth episode.

It's good to practice listening as a pastime, and the language of journalists is great, but it's better to forget that the excessive spiritual, moral and political values ​​are even regarded as textbooks or something.

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