Two years ago, I decided that I couldn't understand American dramas like Mad Men. There are too many characters, and the background is too unfamiliar. What I think is more subtle is that the struggles of America in the 1960s to turn from conservatism in this show are reappearing one by one in today's East Asian society.
- The slogan of the lipstick case in the first season is Mark your man, think about whether it is exactly the same as the slashing men who have been flying all over the world these years. Advertising is about happiness. If you spend money on this thing, you will have love and happiness.
- Don called his wife when he temporarily invited people over for dinner, and told her that he wanted to invite people home for dinner. Betty said that there might not be a dinner for guests at home, and Don accused her in a frivolous tone, "Tell me, you use me What's in the refrigerator you bought, Birdie?" In "Day Yan", when the husband confiscated his cheating wife's mobile phone, he also said, "I bought the mobile phone, and I paid for the phone bill. Until now, few people have asked men how to balance family and life. They took away the right of their wives to work, but took all the credit for themselves.
- The character setting of Hiruen is also very subtle. The husband is the editor-in-chief of the newspaper, and the theme he planned in the play was "Wife who cheated at three o'clock in the afternoon" and hired an artist to paint. As a result, my wife sees different men outside every day, and also gets along with a down-to-earth painter whose illustrations are not sexy enough. Don used his happy family as a successful Kodak turntable ad copy, but his wife lived in pain, despair and anxiety every day. It's all so ironic.
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