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What’s the most devastating line you’ve ever heard in a domestic film or television drama?

It’s not that it ruins the three views, but the more I watch it, the more I feel that some of our current film and television dramas really make people wonder why such people can be screenwriters. Of course, this does not mean that all domestic film and television dramas are Very poor. Today I will be a "troll" for once. If you have any opinions, feel free to come and troll me.

Today I want to talk about the TV series "Mother's Way". Let's first talk about the content of this TV series. The heroine in the TV series is called Ying Niang. Originally, she was also a girl from a wealthy family. Later, she became a girl from a rich family. After giving birth to three daughters, she was rejected by her husband's family, and later she seemed to be separated from the children again. Forgive me for not reading it all, I just couldn’t stand it anymore. First of all, I want to say something about the heroine. I don’t know if she has plastic surgery or not. There is nothing wrong with her. It doesn’t cost me money. She mainly looks like she has no acting skills and her expression is stiff. And from a rough look, it seems that her ultimate goal is to have a son.

Ying Niang married the son of a wealthy family, and her first child was a daughter, named Pandi. Later, the second child was a girl, so the second child was named Zhaodi. As everyone knows, this is Wanting the next child means a son. What’s funny is that when she gave birth to her third child, the heroine encountered dystocia and was eventually born a girl, so the girl was named Nianni. So I blame myself.

Moreover, the relationship between the heroine and her husband’s family is not good. When her husband’s family asked her husband to divorce her, she did not say a word about why her man was not good. Instead, she felt guilty, saying that she did not have a prominent family background. Well, he also said that he was not very educated, and most importantly, he complained that he had not even given birth to a son. Faced with such a husband's family, she would either kneel to this or that all day long. In short, she felt sorry for everyone in her husband's family.

Later, she gave birth to a son. Many years passed and her daughters grew up. One of her daughters was an anti-Japanese activist. When she was about to be killed by the Japanese, she said she could not save her daughter. When her son grew up, he became a traitor. When her son was in trouble, she jumped in to block his gun. When her son was sad about the death of his sister, the heroine said that his son was her lifeblood. I don’t understand what’s so great about this heroine? All I saw was having a son and blind filial piety.