This is a nice drama to watch when you feel like people have been using a chain saw on your nervous system all day. The only time your stomach will knot while watching this is during one of the many, many, many times the camera pans the entire length of the 2FL's legs, from her ugly boots to her crotch length, loose legged jeans panties.
I'd pretty much lost any hope that there was even going to be a season 2, so seeing that the second season is coming and the date is set is such good news to get on a pretty lousy Valentines's Day in 2021.
I first started watching this after it ended, but couldn't make it past the first two episodes because the FL is constantly wailing. I mean, WAILING, which becomes unbearable to listen to, and it doesn't take long to feel that way, either (not saying she doesn't have a good reason.) It's like hearing a baby cry on screen: you can only take that for a minute and then you're out.,
But I picked it back up again and finished it, which surprised me. This kind of drama is not really my thing, but it was done well. You need some patience for the first 4 or 5 episodes, but that pays off in the end.
I finished watching it for the 2nd time recently. It's very good. There are several love lines and they're all…
I don't think anyone can tell you whether you should watch it, though. Most people who've commented about the drama liked it, and recommend it to others to watch. So . . . yes? Everyone gets a happy ending in this drama, and everyone gets together. So . . . yes?
is this worth watching? i see alot of good reviews about this drama. :< im kinda in a slump rn so im tryin' to…
I finished watching it for the 2nd time recently. It's very good. There are several love lines and they're all entertaining. I liked the good feels I had while watching it so much, I watched "My Father is Strange" again, too.
This is quite a long drama (100 episodes or so, each 30:00), but if you're looking for a drama that is satisfying and entertaining, this is it.
One thing, though. England's monarchy is ceremonial, not ruling. The Queen is kept informed, and she may have an advisory role. By no means can the monarchy be said to be "ruling".
It's always referred to as chess because of the character "qi" in "Weiqi"; "Qi" in Chinese means chess.
There is a version of chess in China. It isn't Go, nor is it like Western chess. It may be that Go and the Chinese version of chess are called exactly the same thing. That is pretty confusing for everyone, isn't it?
What she tried to do is a crime in many states in the US. As far as I know Taxes state is were most surrogacy…
Yikes. There is no evidence that she attempted to persuade the surrogates to abort the children yet, and discussing it with her family as possibility is not illegal. If these are legal surrogate relationships, there is paperwork that covers each parties rights and obligations. Pretty sure that abortion at 7 months is not even remotely in there. If it's a grey or under the table sort of arrangement between the surrogates and the couple, then all bets are off, but the relationships would still be governed by Texas state law. [That would be "Texas", not Taxes. Taxes are what we pay to put up with Texas.]
In any case, abortion is moot, as the children were born, and her ex-husband has apparent custody. Where the children live and with whom is a matter for the courts, but the ex-husband is the parent of two legal United States citizens, and that's pretty solid grounds for his being allowed to stay in the States. Whether he wants to stay, and stay with his kids, is an entirely different subject.
I strongly disliked her in Love 020, and now I have little respect for her as a person, too.
We don't get to know anything about the details of her marriage, their divorce, the couple's surrogacy arrangement and subsequent children born as a result, but the macro view is really unpleasant.
As for the drama itself, leave it to China to punish everyone involved in the drama's production because one of the actors is probably indecent. Not that the drama was ever going to see the light of day anyway, of course.
This drama was . . . flat, though. It seemed to miss several opportunities to intensify the plot lines because it was so timid about saying what's at the bottom of all the revenge. It missed being great by quite a lot, and by the end, I was thinking it was just average. Not the exciting revenge drama I was hoping for.
The Asian game of "Go" ("Weiji" in China, "Baduk" in Korea, "Igo" in Japan, according to Google) is not even a little bit similar to Chess; why dramas keep mis-labeling Go mystifies me. They don't even look alike.
But I picked it back up again and finished it, which surprised me. This kind of drama is not really my thing, but it was done well. You need some patience for the first 4 or 5 episodes, but that pays off in the end.
This is quite a long drama (100 episodes or so, each 30:00), but if you're looking for a drama that is satisfying and entertaining, this is it.
One thing, though. England's monarchy is ceremonial, not ruling. The Queen is kept informed, and she may have an advisory role. By no means can the monarchy be said to be "ruling".
In any case, abortion is moot, as the children were born, and her ex-husband has apparent custody. Where the children live and with whom is a matter for the courts, but the ex-husband is the parent of two legal United States citizens, and that's pretty solid grounds for his being allowed to stay in the States. Whether he wants to stay, and stay with his kids, is an entirely different subject.
We don't get to know anything about the details of her marriage, their divorce, the couple's surrogacy arrangement and subsequent children born as a result, but the macro view is really unpleasant.
As for the drama itself, leave it to China to punish everyone involved in the drama's production because one of the actors is probably indecent. Not that the drama was ever going to see the light of day anyway, of course.
Does anyone have an idea about why this happens?