The concert scene has been transformed into a mourning hall, and the post 90s generation can t keep

Mondo Social Updated on 2024-01-31

On December 29th, a ** meeting in Chengdu directly appeared on the hot search on the Internet, causing many people to discuss. What caused the discussion was not the heated discussion, not the quality of the meeting, but the layout of the scene.

Some netizens commented like this:"This is not the scene of the ** meeting, but the scene of the mourning hall."

So what kind of scene is considered to be a mourning hall?Let's take a look.

The whole scene is white, the white tent, the white rope connects the two sections standing in the air, the couplets with white paper and black characters are hanging on it, and the shop of the stall adopts the style of the five-element gossip map, and the tone of the whole scene is to cut white, and even the owner of the stall is wearing a white Zhongshan suit.

From a distance, it looks like a mourning hall standing on the field. It's intimidating, and I can't help but feel fear.

The customers who entered the booth said that when they went in, they thought they had gone to the wrong venue, and they felt like a mourning hall, but after understanding it, they found that it was a five-element gossip fortune-telling booth built by college students, and said that their thoughts could not keep up with young people.

Some netizens said: Just a gong-playing Taoist priest is missing.

Now many people say that there is a generation gap with the post-90s people now, and they can't keep up with their ideas at all, and the layout of the mourning hall like this is probably why the post-90s generation has to sigh that they can't keep up with the thoughts of these college students.

I don't object to everyone putting forward more novel ideas, but innovation can be grounded but not grounded, this proper underworld equipment, whose idea is it?

While pursuing innovative thinking and individuality, we should also pay attention to the protection of cultural traditions and public order.

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