I think he was trying to avoid her being responsible for his debt as his wife. Still wrong. I think they were…
Dramas tend to turn the worst thing that happens into the best thing that could have happened. I would be okay if it were done in a way I can live with. Two-thirds of the way in, now we find out what is going on and I am supposed to care? There can be some sort of payoff for their relationship, but I was never invested in it to begin with. I like Jing Jing, I do not particularly care about the guy or their marriage, divorce, or possible reconciliation.
He doesn't drop it, he says he puts it to the side.
Now I am more interested in starting Rebirth For You than picking You Are My Glory back up. I am more curious than contrarian. I am trying to recall the worst drama I have seen, but my mind must be protecting me from recalling it. I do think that I can deal with bad dramas, but it is the good ones that gut punch you with a terrible finish that I dislike the most.
I don't think it was him that spread that rumor. But probably will take him back.
I guess we should feel lucky we did not see someone tell him that he made the right decision. I would much rather see a "I'm not sure you should do that" rather than "they will understand eventually" type of take on noble idiocy. Perhaps his company was having problems because of the way he deals with problems.
He doesn't drop it, he says he puts it to the side.
I would never say never. If I needed the money, I would sell it in a heartbeat. I do think that writers and screenwriters in China are already behind the eight ball when it comes to developing projects due to the red tape it must go though. It is hard to imagine the creative process under those conditions. I have not seen Rebirth For You, but I did try to watch You Are My Glory. It was a little difficult to get into, so I paused it awhile back, hoping it was just a hiccup in my viewing experience. Perhaps since it is a few days until new episodes of this one, I can try to pick it back up.
She definitely will take him back, I've seen prior the episode starting, they're having some sort of breakfast.
It is a fluffy drama, so I can imagine she will take him back. It always makes me wonder if they love the good times and abandon ship in rough times, what about the next rough time?
I don't think it was him that spread that rumor. But probably will take him back.
He did not have to unilaterally make that decision if he actually thought more of his wife is what I am saying. They never seem to think about any unintended consequences of their actions.
Personally, I feel that his style of dressing is too much. The clothes are expensive and I could even see one…
He did roll into his first day of work at his mother's tech company in a leather jacket, jeans with rips and placed his helmet on a coffee table. He has been all over the place in terms of style. I think just because you can pull off wearing something does not mean you should. I do think it fits his overall ML "one-of-a-kind-that's-why-they-love-him" image.
I love you so much I would rather make you hate me, crush your heart, and ruin your business reputation rather than let you share in my troubles... I would be disappointed if Qian Jing Jing takes him back. Dramas tend to make you think that noble idiocy is a one time thing ,and not a sign of a much bigger issues in a person or relationship.
He doesn't drop it, he says he puts it to the side.
I would like to think that a vast majority of the time, writers start out with the best intentions for their work of love, but like love itself, can get lost along the way and end up in a place they did not expect (for better or worse). I hope readers would take our conversation as lighthearted humor and not some scathing mockery of dramas overall. You have to enjoy watching dramas to gleam these pearls of drama wisdom. I like a lot of these dramas with the aforementioned plots and tropes. Yeah, they can make no sense, and my brain screams no, but my heart draws me in. For Why Women Love, yeah it has a weak plot, and the story seems to write itself, but I watch it for the chemistry between the main leads. As long as that is the focus, anything else (plot, second leads, other romances) is icing on the cake (positive) or bumps in the road (negative).
He doesn't drop it, he says he puts it to the side.
What about the grand gesture? The purchasing of every single flower and set of string lights in the city. A public holiday (apparently) for everyone associated with the leads so they can have their confetti poppers ready. As he bend down to propose on the most wonderful memorable day of their lives, the ominous phone call. Of course, we would have silenced our phones, but how is the ML supposed to find out he is a noble idiot if he does not answer it? Apparently it is terminal, so he stands up and tells the FL he was lying to her and does not love her. He gives her back to her childhood friend to take care of and disappears without telling her. Clean breaks and dramas do not go together. He is secretly helping her, making her unable to move on, as she cries herself to sleep every night only to be crazy mad during the day. He does go to America (where there is no form of communication), and his incurable illness is cured. The female lead is this close to moving on with her life when he shows back up... Like most dramas, I have confused myself about how all of this is supposed to end. Do you do an open ending and make viewers mad, or do you wait until the last five minutes to wrap every single story line up even if it does not make sense, and in the last minute have then kiss like everything is back to normal even though he ghosted her for a year? I would have liked to do a post credit scene with a time skip showing them and their baby but funding was tight. It would probably just be bloopers because who would not laugh and have bad takes with some of the lines they have to say, and some of the things they have to do in dramas.
He doesn't drop it, he says he puts it to the side.
Totally understandable. The ML is the kind of guy who gets backstabbed by his family and friends, and makes excuses for them and when the FL talks to another guy for two minutes, he will have a meltdown, assume the worst, and breakup without hearing her side of the story. I mean, because what excuse does she have to talk to anyone else besides cheating on the ML.
He doesn't drop it, he says he puts it to the side.
It would also be nice if he had an assistant who could run his company while he is figuring out how to date the FL. You cannot run a company and date at the same time in these dramas. Added bonus if the assistant could offer terrible relationship advice.
He doesn't drop it, he says he puts it to the side.
Do not forget he needs to have a backstory that could make you cry yourself to sleep for a week or some unusual phobia that he has somehow hidden from the public despite being a public figure. Plus the childhood friend who is obsessively in love with him, yet he is clueless. Am I missing anything?
I am not sure if uncomfortable is the word I would use, but I understand. I take it as they want to show how they…
I do not know why they do it, but that is what it seems like to me. It just seems like they have a camera right in front of his face a lot though. If you like his face, that is probably not the worse thing to happen.
I am trying to recall the worst drama I have seen, but my mind must be protecting me from recalling it. I do think that I can deal with bad dramas, but it is the good ones that gut punch you with a terrible finish that I dislike the most.
I have not seen Rebirth For You, but I did try to watch You Are My Glory. It was a little difficult to get into, so I paused it awhile back, hoping it was just a hiccup in my viewing experience. Perhaps since it is a few days until new episodes of this one, I can try to pick it back up.
Like most dramas, I have confused myself about how all of this is supposed to end. Do you do an open ending and make viewers mad, or do you wait until the last five minutes to wrap every single story line up even if it does not make sense, and in the last minute have then kiss like everything is back to normal even though he ghosted her for a year? I would have liked to do a post credit scene with a time skip showing them and their baby but funding was tight. It would probably just be bloopers because who would not laugh and have bad takes with some of the lines they have to say, and some of the things they have to do in dramas.