Today, a group of photos of suspected 'Dou Jingtong becoming a monk' were revealed by a microblog blogger. Later, the staff clarified: 'it's just shaving to make the hair grow again. It's really not a monk. It's a misunderstanding!'
The same misunderstanding is that today's "post-90s' collective monks" who brush up the circle of friends have triggered multiple outstanding cases, such as "divorce", "bankruptcy" and "middle-aged crisis" among the post-90s.
In fact, the so-called 'post-90s' are just the new generation of the Internet. The people who keep up with them show different personalities, attitudes, outlook on life and values, which at the same time reflect the future direction of the film and television industry.
If "becoming a monk" is just a change of post-90s' habits, then the first post-90s' audience has become a monk.
As a generation growing up in the Internet, the post-90s generation is naturally closer to the Internet.
From online culture sweeping the Internet, to online drama and Internet explosion, online games and mobile games are rampant, and the post-90s' entertainment methods are almost contracted by the Internet.