While both fans and fans were keeping an eye on the sales list, a documentary quietly logged into Penguin Video——

"I Love Shamate" is a documentary about the origins and daily life of Shamate.

Documentaries have important social value and historical significance, but their commercial value is very low. The audience is very small (but very loyal), there are few out-of-circle works, and they mainly focus on food.

A documentary about the killing of Matt, I was sure of it just by looking at the name.

But no one expected that this documentary would go viral as soon as it went online!

At the beginning, documentary director Li Yi posted a link and explanation on Weibo:

"This is a detailed and cruel investigation and sorting operation. In two years, 79 people who killed Matt were interviewed and more than 1,000 videos were collected. Here, you can see different people."

Not many people knew him at first, but because he was previously involved in Su Zhe's black draft, he gained some people's attention.

When he released the documentary, these people became the first viewers.

So - word of mouth exploded!

Weibo is full of comments:

[Very shocking, highly recommended, will give you a different feeling. 】

[They have been ignored for too long, and their plight is only seen through documentaries. 】

[Hey, I am ashamed of my arrogant contempt before. 】

【Huh? Su Zhe was actually mentioned in it! 】

Many people are at @Su Zhe.

At this time, the sales curve slowed down. When Su Zhe was idle browsing Weibo, he said in surprise:

"Huh? Director Li Yi, who helped me prove my innocence before, made a movie called "I Love Killing Matt"."

When Lin Shan'er heard this, she immediately asked curiously:

"Romance movie? It's so rare to kill people with surnames... By the way, I remember, Sha Wujing!"

The water friends in the live broadcast room all laughed like crazy:

[I never expected that Sha Matt and Sha Seng were from the same family. 】

[Sha Monk wears a skull necklace, which is indeed very killing. 】

Su Zhe quickly explained:

"It's not a romance film, it's a documentary. Shamate is just...Japanese visual kei, you know? It's more exaggerated than that."

Lin Shaner finally understood:

"So this is a fashion documentary? Is visual kei popular in China? Then do I want to have a killer look?"

She is really enterprising.

Zou Yongmei looked at her helplessly. Just when she was about to explain, she heard Su Zhe answer seriously:

"Yes, release it as soon as possible, preferably tomorrow, just in time for this hot spot, it's already going viral without even looking at Weibo!"

Lin Shaner nodded seriously and even picked up her phone, preparing to contact her agent.

Zou Yongmei couldn't hold it back and burst into laughter.

The barrage also laughed like a dog:

[Su Zhe simply had a grudge against Lin Shan'er's appearance. He first turned her into a ghost, and then tricked her into becoming a killer! 】

[Haha, I just want to laugh when I imagine Lin Shaner’s killer look! 】

[How come I didn’t realize before that Su Zhe Yaner is bad! 】

Lin Shan'er just didn't understand the meaning of the words and was not a fool. She immediately realized something was wrong and puffed her cheeks and asked:

"Oppa, are you lying to me?"

Su Zhe finally couldn't hold back his laughter. He just didn't want to look at the sales list. His quality was too low, so he simply opened Penguin Video and deliberately changed the topic:

"It's okay to be idle, let's take a look together."

At the beginning of the video, there is a bustling station, with groups of migrant workers pouring into different cities and crowded into similar factories.

Interview excerpts are interspersed:

"I'm 12 years old. I went to work in the city after I was in fifth grade."

"11 years old, not finished elementary school."

"I was 14 years old, halfway through junior high school, and came out with my fellow villagers."

"..."

The expressions and tone of each interviewee were very calm, but they conveyed a kind of silent temperament.

Su Zhe and the other three stopped joking and were instantly attracted by the documentary.

Among the interviewees, some still had bright hair, some had their hair cut off but exposed tattoos on their arms, and some were already in suits and leather collars, looking very "normal."

But when they talked about the reasons for dropping out of school, they were very plain:

"I had no choice. My family was poor. My father fell out of the factory and died in bed. I had no choice but to work."

"My friends asked me to come out to play, and I just wanted to see the outside world. No one cared about me, so I really couldn't continue studying. I thought I had to work anyway, so I just stopped studying."

"My family says it's useless for girls to study. They should work early to support the family."

Listening to these accustomed words, the barrage in the live broadcast room became less.

The difference in the world is that when you get used to the surrounding environment, you can never imagine that there are completely different groups of people living on the same land.

What you take for granted may be what others only dream of.

At the same time, what you dream about is what others take for granted.

The world has never been connected, it has just been brought closer by technology so that we can see each other.

But sometimes, the clearer you see, the more painful you feel inside.

At this time, the documentary screen went black and subtitles appeared——

[Almost all Shamat come from rural areas in the central and western regions]

Su Zhe took a look.

Although the language of the documentary is very simple, it does a good job of showing the plight of these people.

They came to the colorful city, but they did not belong here. While children of the same age in the city went to school, they worked in a harsh environment.

Later, they came into contact with the non-mainstream culture that was popular at the time, but lacked aesthetic education, so they developed more exaggerated Shamut styles.

Zou Yongmei couldn't help but recall:

"When I was in school, non-mainstream music was popular, but the teacher was very strict and would only use Martian prose when speaking."

"But how can they have teachers to teach them?" Su Zhe sighed, thinking of Xu Cui, "Society is not a good teacher. It will only slap them hard with ridicule, contempt and 'banning the three customs'."

A barrage asked:

[But I remember that some killers were really bad and arrogant. 】

[Yes, I have watched the video. 】

Even Su Zhe had memories, but he didn't pay too much attention at the time.

The documentary plays exactly to this scene:

After Shamate got out of the entertainment industry because of his "outrageous" look, he began to suffer massive attacks from online to offline——

Fake Sha Matt deliberately shoots a self-destructive video to stigmatize Sha Matt to gain traffic;

The Lezi people sneaked into their group, obtained management rights and then disbanded the group;

Justice Bar friends conducted friendly activities such as bar bursting;

The media hyped it up and... imposed a ban;

The factory also demands that they return to their "normal" image!

From stigmatization, to all-round attacks, to final characterization, and finally to life pressure, "Shamate" quickly disappeared in the wave of social development.

The barrage was shocked. Su Zhe was also a little surprised and said with emotion:

"Society, this teacher, is really cruel."

While he was feeling emotional, he suddenly discovered that a familiar melody appeared in the documentary.

"A Diao" sounded, and the stories of Su Zhe and Xu Cui appeared in the documentary.

This was something Li Yi specifically requested from Penguin Video, which was officially authorized by Penguin Video (the copyright of the song belongs to Su Zhe, but the film and television rights that were played at the time belong to Tencent), and was placed at the end of the documentary with a subtitle -

[But our society is becoming more inclusive, and some people are willing to listen to different voices. 】

[I also hope that they can all become free birds. 】

What Su Zhe said to Xu Cui, under Li Yi's editing, directly turned into expectations for all the killings.

This is also the warmest scene among all the cruel clips in the entire documentary.

Su Zhe's heart was agitated and he was keenly aware of the impact of this scene. He quickly opened Weibo and found that on the hot search list——

["I Love Su Zhe\

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