[Memes + Funny + Various Ways to Fight Marriage Pressure + Lao Liu] Also known as "108 Ways to Deal with Marriage Pressure." Due to the dramatic decline in marriage rates in recent years, Mango TV created the live broadcast "Four Generations of Marriage Observation" to help everyone appreciate the beauty of marriage. One family each from the 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s was selected for observation. Lin Hao, a single man born in the 2000s, served as the control group. "Marriage is too extreme; being single keeps me safe." "Being single is good; I can be with whoever I want." "Children and grandchildren will have their own blessings; without them, I will enjoy my own happiness." ... Mom: If you don't get married, I won't be able to sleep at night. Lin Hao: How about taking a night shift? Mom: I love children. You can have a child without getting married. Lin Hao: I can find you a nanny job. Relatives: You should do what you should do at your age. You should get married when you're old enough to die. Lin Hao: Do I have to die when I'm old enough to die? While everyone else is struggling to make ends meet, Lin Hao is enjoying life to the fullest, playing games, fishing, and sleeping in. He was supposed to be a negative example and went crazy. The audience cried with envy: This is the life we dream of!
Xie Yang, who was lucky enough to qualify for the national love variety show, just wanted to make some money, say goodbye to the involuted big city, and go home happily to the small shop he had been thinking about. But unexpectedly...
Lu Ze, 24 years old, a straight-through bachelor’s and master’s graduate from Peking University, thought he’d become an excellent teacher after graduation.
But…
“Lu Ze, tomorrow you’ll go to No. 3 High School’s Rocket Class as a temporary homeroom teacher. Remember, you’re going undercover. Your mission is to mislead those students.”
To carry out the mission, Lu Ze is forced to make a series of morally questionable moves:
“Our class gets a full weekend off. No morning or evening self-study.”
“Phones are allowed.”
“No dating in front of me.”
“Teachers aren’t allowed to assign any homework.”
“…”
Everything he’s doing is being livestreamed 24/7 on a reality show called Model Teachers.
The show also features rocket classes from two other high schools:
A strict 1980s-born homeroom teacher who enforces discipline with military-like precision.
A 1990s-born homeroom teacher who relies on emotional coaching and daily motivational speeches.
And then there’s Lu Ze, born in the 2000s—who lives by one motto: “Enjoy life while you can.”
At first, no one had any faith in Lu Ze’s class. But…
Two months later…
“Lu Ze, what the h*ll happened? Why did your class do so well on the midterms?”
Lu Ze: “Maybe their foundation was too good. Just wait—by finals, their scores will definitely drop!”
End of the semester…
“Lu Ze, what’s going on?”
Lu Ze: “Hang in there—next semester, their scores will fall for sure.”
One year later…
“LU ZE!!”
Lu Ze: “Don’t worry…”
Many years later…
“You were supposed to go undercover at No. 3 High School—how did you end up as principal?!”