Tumgik
#Xie Nanxiang
baiyu-universe · 2 years
Text
Thank You Doctor Bai Yu interview
Q: A lot of people think Bai Zhu an unlikable character in the beginning. What's your opinion on him?
A: From the perspective of Bai Zhu, he's a pure and simple person with his own firm principles. He's not the perfect male protagonist, especially that he appears too sharp in the beginning. But in fact, what he values most is that the patients get the most timely and effective treatment. Therefore, in the early stage, he and Xiao Yan have some disputes about the ideas of "curing the disease" and "saving people", which is why his teacher sends him to work in the emergency department. Through his daily interactions with Xiao Guang (adopted son), his family background and the treatment of different medical cases, he gets a deeper understanding of the profession as a doctor: it's not only about curing diseases, but also about heart.
Q: What are the similarities between Bau Zhu and you?
A: Hahaha, we both have the surname Bai. We're similar in personality: we're the people that stick to our decisions.
Q: What homework did you do to play Bai Zhu?
A: There're a lot of medical cases, so I put more effort in preparing each case, understanding the cause and treatment of them. The other is to sort out Bai Zhu's character development. He's not a traditional "grow-up" character. He's someone who experiments gradual changes, from complete rational in the beginning to emtional empathetic at later stage. So I put more focus on specific and subtle details.
Q: How does it compare to the first doctor you played? (Bai Yu played Xie Nanxiang, a medical intern, in the 2015 drama "Grow up")
A: It's completely different. The first time I played an academic loser who learns to improve his skills to become a better doctor. But Bai Zhu is a very capable doctor and his development is more about understanding the relationship between medicine and humanity. Basically, from a poor student to a top one. Besides, this drama is also different. You imagination was limited to the characterization of Bai Zhu, and in the professional part, we completely followed the guidance of the on-site supervisor doctor.
Q: In the drama, Bai Zhu is an emergency doctor, and there will be many first aid operations. What are the difficulties in shooting these operations?
A: The biggest difficulty is that we think that doctors will be in a hurry when rescuing people, but in fact they are very steady when they are doing so. Because we haven't really experienced so many things that doctors have done, it's difficult for us actors to find out the real state of doctors when they rescue. I remember a scene where Bai Zhu was on his way to a meeting. He encountered a chain-reaction car accident on the highway and had to open the airway for the patient through the sunroof. We are not professional doctors, and the rescue scene on the highway is a very urgent situation. We are not so familiar with and skilled in medical operation procedures. It was really quite challenging for us.
Q: As the best surgeon of the department of cardiac surgery, how is the shooting of the professional operation scenes of Bai Zhu done?
A: We need to remember the usage and gestures of various medical instruments during the operation. If there are lines during the performance, it's easy to ignore some real details. Many doctors will definitely watch medical dramas, and they will know whether we are right or wrong at a glance, so the director payed a lot of attention in details to help us. And we had doctors with the crew throughout the play, and they will help us correct our gestures or practical things at any time.
Q: How do you feel about the collaboration with Yang Mi this time? What's your opinion on the role of Xiao Yan?
A: I think she is great. We had a lot of professional terms to say, and it was very hard for me. And even if you understand these terms, it is difficult for you to remember them. But she always said them right. Her role is very capable and calm. Xiao Yan and Bai Zhu actually have some differences in philosophy, but after experiencing many things together, they make progress together and have integrated each other's ideas with themselves.
Q: Netizens have been discussing the relationship between Xiao Yan and Bai Zhu. How do you see the relationship between them? A: At the beginning, the two seem to have some misunderstandings or confrontation with each other. They grow up together to be very reliable persons and work side by side.
Bai Zhu is a very proud person. He's not very direct in expressing his feelings. His love is a soft and subtle. For example, He does heartwarming things like buying shoes for Xiao Yan, but he's shy and refuses to admit it. This kind of emotional scenes are different from my previous ones, not as direct and straightforward.
Q: Through this play, what new understandings have you gained about the profession of doctors? What kind of existence is a doctor in your eyes?
A: After filming this drama, I realized that it is really not easy to be a doctor. They dedicate so much time in curing diseases and saving lives that they really don't have much time to live a good life.
In my eyes, they are angels in white, who heal the sickness and save people. It used to be a superficial feeling, but after playing a doctor this time, and experiencing the pandemic, they're the persons that I deeply admire and respect.
Q: In the play, many cases are used to tell the stories of doctors, patients and their families. How do you see the relationship between them?
A: I think it is mutual understanding and mutual trust. Doctors are a group of people who help patients to overcome the diseases. Doctors, patients and their families should be on the same front, more like allies facing illness and death together. They're equal and should respect each other.
Q: If you could say one word to Bai Zhu, what would it be? What about Xiao Yan?
A: (To Bai Zhu) Pride is still needed! Bai Zhu is the kind of person who doesn't listen to what you say, you have to let him experience it by himself. It's good, just keep going.
I want to say to Xiao Yan: "put away your pride, Xiao Yan, hahaha, forget about that ex-boyfriend, forget about your fiancé!".
Q: Can you share a little secret of healthy life?
A: Eat more noodles.😂 To live a healthy life, you must maintain a positive attitude. I think this is more important. I hope everyone can maintain a positive attitude.
Source
10 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
Bai Yu sitting 101 - just fling a limb, any limb, multiple limbs even.
9 notes · View notes
youtiaoshutiao · 6 years
Text
me watching suddenly this summer/忽而今夏:
"so this is the famous bai yu that is popping up all over the internet nowadays......
Hold up, isnt this caoguang?!
Wait a minute, isnt this also xie nanxiang?!
So caoguang and xie nanxiang are the same person?!"
1 note · View note
atlas416 · 2 years
Text
Xie Jing
XIE JING (謝旌)
(? ~ ?)
Tumblr media
Xie Jing was a Wu officer.
In 219, the invasion of Jing Province was underway, and Lu Xun (陸遜) took over as commander from Lu Meng (呂蒙). Under Lu Xun, Xie Jing and Li Yi (李異) led 3,000 men to attack Shu officers Zhan Yan (詹晏) and Chen Feng (陳鳳). Li Yi led the navy, while Xie Jing led the infantry to cut off the Shu fortress. They promptly defeated the Shu forces and captured Chen Feng. 
He was very successful during the rest of the campaign, defeating Deng Fu (鄧輔) at Fangling Commandery and Guo Mu (郭睦) at Nanxiang Commandery. 
When Wen Bu (文布) and Deng Kai (鄧凱), two barbarian men from Zigui County, rose up to fight the Wu forces, Xie Jing was sent to attack them and he dealt them a decisive defeat. Wen Bu and Deng Kai fled to Yi Province. Lu Xun would later persuade Wen Bu to surrender to Wu. 
Nothing else is recorded about Xie Jing after this.
SGZ 58, ZZTJ 68
0 notes
Text
Tumblr media
Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six
Time for the next installment of my Bai Yu Sitting Project.
Unlike Part One, this'll focus on just one drama because the damned thing is 38 episodes long and I'm pretty sure the man spends a large majority of his time sitting, leaning, and/or lounging.
It’s called Grow Up, a medical drama that I cannot find English subtitles for, and it's been around long enough that I doubt I ever will. But, hey, things like this are the whole point of trying to learn the language, right?
So, those willing to join me in the continuation of whatever this is turning out to be, get yourself comfortable and head on under the cut, this is gunna be long.
Tumblr media
For little weirdos like me doing nonsense projects like this,Grow Up is a veritable treasure trove. I mean the man does this in the very first episode.
Tumblr media
He makes them put the box down and immediately sits on it and pulls a leg up. And he’s making a point, I get it, I mean I don’t understand it, since, y’know, it’s all Chinese and I can only pick out a few characters, but why did the leg have to go up? He could’ve sprawled, done a bit of manspreading that I know he is fully capable of after watching this. But no. Leg up. Only one foot may touch the floor.
So, yeah, it’s a treasure trove of sittings and leanings and loungings. Even though his character, Xie Nanxiang, is technically only a ‘support role’, I’ve still managed to gather about 70 screenshots, and that doesn’t actually catalogue every time he sits, leans, and lounges.
I was going to try and whittle the screenshots down, but I couldn’t bring myself to really do it. I think I managed to cut about three? So when I say this is going to be long, I mean it’s going to be long and pretty image heavy.
I have however made attempts at organisation. So instead of just a random array of images, I’m going to group them under sets...that’s filming sets, not position sets.
We’ll start off with the nurse’s station/desk. You know those tall desks you get on wards? Yeah, if they were on that set then it was pretty much guaranteed Bai Yu would be leaning on it. And if he wasn’t leaning on it initally, then he would be by the end.
I didn’t take a screenshot every time he leaned, I managed to rein my madness in enough to not do that at least, but I’ve catalogued the different kinds of lean.
The first is the common arms crossed lean, which, I will grant you, makes sense to use, considering I don’t know anyone who hasn’t leant on this kind of desk like this.
Tumblr media
The second is the single arm lean. He didn’t need to lean here. Would’ve been fine to stand. But this is Bai Yu we’re talking about. So lean he did.
Tumblr media
Third is the casual backwards lean. He probably shouldn’t be leaning here. I’m fairly certain that’s one of the chaps they refer to as Laoshi talking to them. Everyone else is standing respectfully. Bai Yu? Nah mate, Imma lean.
Tumblr media
And lastly - if a surface is at butt leaning height, Bai Yu will take advantage.
Tumblr media
Something I’ve noticed while watching this (and bear in mind I skipped most of the non-Bai Yu parts), more often than not, Bai Yu is the only one to be leaning/sitting/whatever posture he’s taking. It’s kinda fascinating.
The next set is the hospital in general, so corridors and rooms that aren’t the staffroom because that’s a whole set in and of itself.
This one made me giggle, because the moment the woman he’s trying to impress left, he practically flung himself back on this bed and got comfy.
Like, did he need to do that? Probably not.
Was that going to stop him? Of course not.
Just as a side note, is patient privacy a thing? Like, yeah, they’ve the big curtains to draw around the bed. But that’s a big window, with no curtains, no frosted glass, and a path beside it. Are you inviting the general public to a show? The lack of cover is just begging nosy passersby to look in.
Tumblr media
Of course leaning is a common occurrence in the hospital. But if you put a bar at Bai Yu butt height you really can’t expect anything different.
Also it always throws me when he turns sideways in the doctor’s coat. From the front, it gives him a width he doesn’t have, then he turns and suddenly goes flat, and you have to blink because for a moment you’d forgotten just how damn skinny the man is.
Tumblr media
I dubbed this the ‘no help. just lean’ shot. Those are his parents, yet why would he help packing when there is a convienient windowsill at butt leaning height?
Tumblr media
The vending machine is also a favoured leaning post, both in sickness and in health.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
For the final lean of this set, can you spot him? This is an example of Bai Yu leaning while everyone is standing. It’s a legs crossed side lean.
Tumblr media
And look at this. He gets up shortly after this, but of everyone in the room, he’s lounging on the sofa. He could’ve been standing like the rest of them. But that wouldn’t have the same effect now would it? I’m beginning to wonder if Bai Yu’s penchant for leaning, sitting, and lounging is not just him being...well him, but also an indicator of Bai Yu being a very clever man and a rather good actor.
Tumblr media
Now then look at that face. Regardless of how ridiculous this Project is, I shall always be grateful to it for giving me the expressions Bai Yu has in this scene. His pouty, disgruntled, get-me-off-this-ride face makes me want to squish his cheeks.
I also find it endlessly amusing that although he is topless in this scene, great efforts seem to be made to keep him more or less covered as this is not one of Those dramas that have a Designated Bath/River/Body of Water Topless Scene.
Tumblr media
Also injury and illness counts because he gets to spend his time lying about on a surgery table.
Tumblr media
And finally for the general hospital set we have...this.
Everyone else is sitting on chairs and stools.
Bai Yu?
Weird animal toy thing.
He could’ve sat on a chair, a stool, even the floor. But no. He chose to sit on this. How is that even remotely comfortable?
Tumblr media
(Still with me? We’re almost halfway...kinda. Maybe I should split this drama into two posts. We’ll see how long the next set is first)
From inside the hospital we move to the outside, because that’s natural progression right?
Outside the building we can encounter things such as the common sprawling lounge. He seems to enjoy hooking his elbows over things.
Tumblr media
Then he will head to some planetarium type thing where they have the screen on the ceiling. And, just, I know he’s having some kind of emotional issues, with angsting over failed relationships and whatnot (ok to be fair I’m only assuming that’s the case given everything that’s going on, even though I don’t understand what’s being said). But! Bai Yu, sweetie, precious, dearest darling man, get your goddamn shoes off the headrest of the seat in front of you!
I want to bundle him up in a cuddle and thwack him with a rolled up newspaper at the same time.
Tumblr media
Bai Yu and cars.
I’m becoming vaguely convince the man has a magnet or something in his arse.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
And just look at this.
Bai Yu, sir. What’s that saying?
Once is chance, twice is a coincidence, three times is a pattern.
Tumblr media
Y’know, I don’t know why, but I was actually surprised he could do sit-ups.
He was doing them before he was interrupted by the girl, then he ended up doing more with the bloke. Of course he didn’t get his arse off the ground when the bloke, one of the teachers/mentors, turned up. Unlike the girl who popped up to her feet.
Tumblr media
There is something oddly appealing about the image he makes laid out on the grass though.
I mean, she looks like she’d probably welcome the sweet release of death, and if they’ve just done exercise then same, girl, same.
But he just makes you want to curl up next to him and have a nap or something.
Tumblr media
This bar scene...*sigh*
He could sit in a chair.
But no. He chooses to lean on the pillar.
And when he does decide to sit. Does he pick a chair?
Tumblr media
No.
No he does not.
Tumblr media
The angsty roof, where people seem to go to have a bit of a cry or emotional stare off into the distance.
For a bit of context, this is how people tend to be on that roof.
They stand, they might lean. They have their angsty moment.
Tumblr media
But Bai Yu?
Bai Yu is not built for this boring sort of crying angst.
No no no.
He must do more.
So he sits on the bloody wall, crossing his legs over the thin metal bar that is probably cutting off his circulation, while he has his emotional moment.
Tumblr media
How did he even get up there? That is not a short wall. You can’t boost yourself up like it’s a kitchen counter. The pair standing next to each other in the context images? The taller one is Bai Yu, just look where the top of this wall comes to. There is no boosting onto this.
So did he hop up onto the table, then the wall, and walk around the edge until he got to this spot for his angsty moment?
*sigh* this man.
Tumblr media
Last ones for outside the hospital.
They are, oddly enough, of instances where Bai Yu isn’t sitting.
I know, weird right?
But look, he could be sitting. The sofa is right next to him, and he falls asleep there not long after this. And it would make sense to sit on the sofa, or at least the arm of the sofa because that photo he’s looking at was on the table top, not on the shelf below it.
This is an instance where he probably should be sitting.
But no. Bai Yu goes against that and instead he just crouches. Because that makes sense right?
Tumblr media
Then here!
Everyone else is sitting.
He has the perfect place to sit right behind him.
But he remains standing for the entirety of this scene. There is not even a hint that he might sit down in such a fashion as I’ve come to expect from this man.
But maybe, just maybe, that’s the point.
Tumblr media
A point I’ll look at more in Part Three, because the length of this would be truly ridiculous if I kept going.
So! Next time on the Bai Yu Sitting Project! Dorm Rooms and Staffrooms! Awkward angles and did-your-roommate-seriously-just-tuck-you-in? moments!
Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six
11 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four,  Part Five, Part Six
Part Three!
...or I suppose technically it’s part two of Part Two since this one will finish up what the other one started.
Shall we return to Grow Up?
(This’ll be long even though I managed to be a little ruthless and cut some of the images.)
We’ll start with the staffroom and finish with the dorm rooms.
I am only assuming it’s a staffroom. For all I know it could be some kind of common room. But they spend a damned lot of time there. They eat. They hangout. They study. And it’s not just the students, so I’m calling it a staffroom.
Anyway! This breakfast bar thing props up a fair amount of leaning, from general side leans.
Tumblr media
To the favoured elbow hook lean.
What I find funny about this particular surface is that Bai Yu’s legs are so long that he actually can’t sit ‘properly’ at it. If he sits straight, then he has to lean forward, since his knees are knocking into it. And when he does sit close (his feet aren’t on the floor, since he’s on a stool, so he can sit properly), he has to spread his legs in some form of obscene manspreading fashion that made me cackle and that I apparently managed to not get a screenshot of (and annoyingly I can’t remember which episode it was in).
Tumblr media
Right then, on to the table.
Literally.
On to the table.
Because, clearly, Bai Yu can’t resist sitting on a tabletop.
Tumblr media
I made a post about it a while ago, but I’m still not over it so, just as a quick break from the sitting - that outfit is certainly a choice of the wardrobe department.
I mean just look at it, with it’s mustard trousers paired with that top, and a lime green tie. It’s like someone threw the 70s at him or something and went with whatever stuck. I feel like it shouldn’t work. But why does it? Is it a Bai Yu thing?
I mean I know he can pull off some slightly questionable fashion choices - that denim on denim look he has as Zhao Yunlan is something I’d normally say isn’t a good idea, but he looks damn good in it. There is also the jacket with the buttons on the back that I’m still questioning to this day. And the time they apparently rolled him in glitter. And, ok, I happily admit that I don’t tend to understand fashion, and I understand even less of Chinese fashion, but, just, how did this choice come about? Pretty much everyone else in this show seems to wear ‘normal’ sedate clothes. Then there’s this guy. With his bright colours, his polka dots on polka dots, and his cravats. Honestly, mixing his outfit choices with his sitting preferences and relationships, I’m becoming convinced that this is just another example of Bai Yu giving his character Disaster Bi energy. The dude ain’t straight, and the dude ain’t gay. I’d say this dude is a Certified Disaster Bi.
Tumblr media
Ok, back to the table and Bai Yu’s leaning back in an almost draw-me-like-one-of-your-French-girls manner.
And, like, there is a chair right there.
But nope.
The unpadded table is apparently more appealing for this man’s relatively flat arse than the padded chair that is right there.
I mean, yeah, he makes an appealing picture that’s visually different from everything else going on, but that does not negate the fact he ignored the empty chair that’s right next to him in favour of draping himself over the table.
Tumblr media
And look, he can sit at the table as opposed to on it. There’s quite a few instances where he’s sitting at the table in a chair like a proper person. Granted, in pretty much every instance he’s sitting with his legs crossed, because god forbid he have both feet touching the floor.
But of course this table also sees moments where he’s doing something different to the others. Like here. Everyone is standing, he’s sitting.
I think he’s sulking a bit in this one, but still. Different position, different aura, still not supporting his own meagre weight.
Tumblr media
And here with his gay little scout-esque neckerchief/scarf thing, leaning back, not sitting properly.
Tumblr media
He does this lean back on the sofa too.
Tumblr media
The shot is only a couple of seconds long, then he’s standing up, just like in Part Two, where he’s the only one sitting when the Teacher Doctor guy opens the door, and I touched on this a little in the previous part. But I’m really starting to think it might be a deliberate thing that’s quite clever in drawing the eye.
I should probably preface this with saying I know basically nothing about the processes that go into acting and film making. I am however technically a historian by degree and, therefore, fully capable of pulling theories out of my arse which I will then scrabble around to find sources to back them up.
So! The theory is that movement naturally draws the human eye, and if everyone is the same then a scene can fall flat. Sameness is boring, your eyes can flit over it and not take in any details.
Bai Yu?
Bai Yu is a fidget (seriously go watch his livestream videos, he fidgets, fiddles, and wriggles), this movement can be used to his advantage in drawing the eye. That scene up there? He’s not just leaning back, he’s also shifting about. He’s not in focus, but you can be damned sure that movement made my eyes focus on him before I even knew it was him.
And for combating the sameness? Look at the examples above - he’s lounging on the table, different posture to everyone else - he’s sitting while everyone else is standing -  in the previous part he’s standing while everyone else is sitting. I thought at first my eyes were drawn because it’s Bai Yu and, well, he’s a favourite of mine so why wouldn’t my eyes be drawn. But then I realised they would’ve been, regardless, because he’s different. He breaks up the sameness, he stops it being flat. It reminded me of a scene in Pride and Prejudice, where the Bennett girls turn one way, but Mrs. Bennett turns the other. I remember watching or reading a commentary about it, the move being praised. I don’t remember exactly what was said, just that it was praised for being different and adding something to the scene, and it made me wonder if Bai Yu makes similar decisions?
Tumblr media
Ok, onto the seating area proper.
He was actually sitting on an armchair properly before this, with both feet on the floor and everything...he looked so uncomfortable. Then he moved to sit on the arm of the sofa, because of course he did.
Tumblr media
Y’know, pillows get hugged a lot in this programme, mainly by Bai Yu, but by others too sometimes.
Tumblr media
And why sit normally when there’s a perfectly good coffee table in front of you to rest your foot on and make some viewers wince because why is your ankle bending that way? How is that even comfortable?
Tumblr media
Just look at it. Barely resting on the table with his other foot adding weight to it.
You make my joints ache, sir.
Tumblr media
Ok so technically I probably could’ve cut this one, since he’s just sitting on the sofa, nothing fancy, legs crossed, arm slung over the back as he pulls faces while she’s playing a game - she’s training to be a doctor but has a fear of blood so to get her use to it his character gets her to play fighting games(?) and someone else puts red dye on her hands - but this ends up leading to...
Tumblr media
...this.
And just...what? How...?
That can’t be comfortable, surely.
I don’t even...are your joints even real, sir?
Tumblr media
If your own joints are twinging in sympathy pain, this is your chance to go give your arms a shake and your body a wiggle before we head to the last section of the dorm rooms. Make sure everything is where it should be to remind yourself that you’re not the broken marionette doll Bai Yu can apparently become.
Right. All shook out? Good.
First stop the girls’ dorms, last stop the boys’.
There’s not much in the main girls’ room, really, just his usual sitting with his legs crossed because obviously the floor is lava and can’t be trusted with both feet.
Tumblr media
I’m not sure how much he can be blamed for this one, as he’s technically been thrown into the chair by the little doctor trainee whose character reminds me a bit of Wen Qing.
As a side note, when you’re watching something that you don’t understand the language of, scenes like this can really throw you, because you’re just sitting there minding your own business, when suddenly they’re alone in the room together and Bai Yu’s character is taking off his tie, before striping off his shirt and tossing it on the sofa, and then you’re sitting there like wait, what? When did...? I thought...? What? But then he just gets tossed into the chair and some kind of conversation happens that makes you relax because, yeah, from your vague understanding of the characters, that makes more sense.
Tumblr media
Even though he was tossed down, he didn’t actually need to keep his feet on the chair, but of course that didn’t stop him.
Tumblr media
He is actually capable of looking comfortable sitting in this particular chair, he even gets to hug a pillow while doing it.
Tumblr media
Now then, the boys’ dorm.
He came in, he saw them, he plopped down on the coffee table.
He could’ve sat on the sofa, he could’ve pulled up a chair, but nope. Coffee table.
Tumblr media
Obviously, as previously mentioned, the floor is lava, so at the first opportunity he lifted both feet on the table and happily sat on it like an indulgent cat or something.
Tumblr media
The sofa.
This sofa is not big enough for a full Bai Yu stretch out, but he can happily curl up on either end.
Tumblr media
You could turn him into Bai Yu themed bookends.
Tumblr media
Now, from watching Guardian we are all aware that this man is fully capable of embodying the spirit of a cat.
I, however, raise you the spirit of a Great Dane.
Tumblr media
I see no difference between these two images.
Tumblr media
Also not even this character’s mother can get him to sit properly. She prods him up and shuffles him over, and the first thing he does is pull up a knee.
Tumblr media
Y’know how people starfish in bed? Well Bai Yu can apparently starfish in an armchair. He just plops down and flings his limbs out.
Tumblr media
I almost didn’t catch this one, it’s part of some studying montage thing, and I thought he was sitting properly since he’s leaning forward, and I can clearly see his slippers.
Then I had a ‘wait, hold up’ moment, went back, and looked properly.
Tumblr media
There are no feet in those slippers.
There are no legs attached to them.
So even when you think he’s sitting properly. He isn’t because he is kneeling. And I almost missed this ridiculousness!
Tumblr media
Yes, Bai Yu, sit on a bed post that is clearly not meant to be sat on.
This is a moment where he could’ve leant against the wall, but evidently saw even the smallest flat surface as an invitation to sit.
Is that post migrating to places a bed post shouldn’t be migrating to?
Should’ve thought of that before you went and sat on it.
Tumblr media
Not only does illness and subsequent surgery give him an excuse to lay on a gurney, it also gives him an excuse to lay in bed!
Tumblr media
Apparently being tucked in by other men is also something not entirely unique to Bai Yu’s Zhao Yunlan. That bloke, the roommate that he went on a not-date-but-looked-like-a-date-with-wine-and-everything, seems like an absolute sweetheart and I’m still pissed at what they did in the last episode. It was uncalled for, script writers, uncalled for!
Although, I suppose, in regards to this project, it is kinda ironic that by the end, of the three men in their 'friendship group' of seven, Bai Yu’s character is the last one standing.
Tumblr media
If I was a ‘they were roommates. Oh god they were roommates’ kinda writer these beds would be a bloody godsend. Just look at the watching and pining potential if top bunk guy was mooning over bottom bunk guy, while top bunk was doing work at his desk, and bottom bunk was sleeping.
The potential, people, the potential.
So that’s it. Grow Up is all done, and I can confidently put this in the column of Bai Yu quirks that become character quirks.
If you want to watch it, it’s available on Youtube, but there aren’t any subtitles. It’s on Dramacool too, but, again, no subtitles and the quality is horrid compared to Youtube.
Considering I couldn’t care less about the main storyline, it’s not actually a bad little drama.
Part One, Part Two , Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six
6 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
This might just be one of my favourite screenshots purely for its ability to make me cackle.
Just your face, sir.
Your pouty, disgruntled face.
It makes me snicker.
4 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Whoever was in charge of Bai Yu’s character styling in Grow Up certainly made some Choices.
Like, how does that even work? Mustard trousers, lime green tie, and a busy pink and purple shirt?
I am baffled.
And I originally thought the cream polka dot trousers with the white polka dot shirt paired with the blue paisley tie was an odd choice, then they throw this at me.
5 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Sometimes it’s fun knowing the traits and quirks of certain animals because it means you can make comparisons like this and make yourself laugh.
Bai Yu is fully capable of embodying Great Dane energy and you cannot convince me otherwise.
4 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media
Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six
Part Five!
Now with gifs!...since I’ve learnt the most basic of basic gifmaking and it was actually quicker than trying to pause at just the right moment, which has been enough of an issue previously to make me swear through gritted teeth.
Time for Love O2O - that’s both the film and the series since the little overachiever just had to get cast in both.
Ready?
Bai Yu plays a character called Cao Guang in both the film and drama. In the film he seems to be a smushed together version of what in the drama are two separate people.
Now then do you see this slightly bewildered expression while looking at a computer screen? Because this was basically me watching Love O2O, both film and drama.
Tumblr media
Why the bewilderment?
Well, I’ve come to expect a certain level of odd sitting and leaning from Bai Yu. I almost expect all his characters to be some form of Bi Disaster now. But Cao Guang? So far I’ve never seen Bai Yu sit so straight. It’s slightly unnerving, in a similar way to if someone went into your house and moved things just slightly to the left. There’s not enough of a difference to cause major problems, but there’s enough for your mind to feel uncomfortable and twitchy because something is just off.
I mean, don’t get me wrong, he still does his Bai Yu thing, but it’s almost muted, I suppose is the best word to use for it.
We’ll start with the film version, which also has the alternate title of One Smile is Very Alluring apparently.
Before this moment, he’s actually sitting properly at the desk. Both feet were on the floor and everything which was just weird. But then he stood and transitioned into a lean, that made it a little less weird.
This is, technically, also further evidence that if something is at Bai Yu butt height, he will lean/sit on it. I think I’m going to have to start capitalising it since Bai Yu Butt Height now seems to be a Thing.
(I could not get this paused at just the right moment, so here, have a gif)
Tumblr media
And look here! He’s sitting kinda properly and only vaguely uncomfortable looking, but that has more to do with the situation than the sitting.
Seriously, so weird.
Tumblr media
If we stick with just the general premise of ‘does he sit or doesn’t he’ then being on a horse counts...even though watching the game scenes hurt me in a major secondhand embarrassment way. Just...the outfits, people, and the hair...I just...I can’t.
Tumblr media
At one point he gets his arse handed to him multiple times, which leads to quite a bit of time on the floor.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Even the set refuses to let Bai Yu get up and support his own body weight apparently. The weirdness of him standing under his own power is obviously just too much.
Too odd.
Too strange.
He must be returned to his natural state of being.
Tumblr media
The car magnet he’s got implanted in his backside did manage to do its job though...even if it was in the background and barely lasted a couple of seconds at most.
Tumblr media
Now then, the drama. Admittedly I only got to episode 11 then I started skipping because I got a bit bored with the main pairing and general story. But the bits I skipped to? Yeah...I may have gone a little over fixated on the whole way of sitting thing since I found myself analysing the degree of leg bend when his feet weren’t in shot to gauge whether or not both feet were planted on the ground or if one was on top of the other and...yeah, let’s just say it was a good thing when I got to the end of this drama. For what remains of my sanity if nothing else.
Look, most of the time, if he’s not standing and walking, he’s like this.
Sitting properly, feet on the floor. And yeah, it counts as not supporting his own weight. But what happened to the floor is lava? How hard was it for him not to cross his legs, or put one foot on top of the other, or rest his feet on something else?
Tumblr media
He does cross this legs sometimes, and you can even see it fully a couple of times.
Like here, this is what I’ve come to expect. This is a normal seated look for this man.
Tumblr media
He sits.
He flicks one leg over the other.
He’s happy.
Simple.
Tumblr media
But most of the time, he doesn’t have his legs crossed in this drama. Which led me to leaning forward and squinting at the screen when moments like this came along.
Because those legs are crossed. I’m sure of it.
Cao Guang, as a character, is not the kind of person to sit like this often. Bai Yu, as a person, can’t seem to stop himself fully though.
Tumblr media
And look at this.
When it comes to this desk, this is the weirdest he sits. Which isn’t weird at all! It’s still kinda sitting properly!
Tumblr media
And then this. This is one of those moments where I spent way too long staring at his legs trying to determined if he had one foot on top of the other.
From the angle, and the shadows, and the different heights of his knees, I have decided that yes, he does had one foot on top of the other. He is playing the floor is lava when the camera can’t see his feet.
(...don’t judge me for diving off the deepend on this one. I’m already judging myself hard enough)
Tumblr media
Cao Guang might not be much of a weird sitter, but he is still a slight leaner if the opportunity presents itself.
Tumblr media
Especially in Bai Yu Butt Height circumstances.
Tumblr media
But in general, he’s less of a full body lean, and more of a light, quick lean. And it always seems to be on things he himself has placed there.
Like a moped,
Tumblr media
or a camera.
Tumblr media
He does sit on the floor in a sweaty mess after having his arse handed to him in a 1 on 1 basketball game.
Seriously, if you want a sweat physically dripping off of him Bai Yu, then this is the scene for you.
Tumblr media
Further sittingwise you have some general sitting in what I think it meant to be a foreign country(?).
Tumblr media
And the delightful lift-and-turn he’s got going on here.
(and I’ve only just realised that ErXi has her hand up as though if she can’t see the teacher, then the teacher can’t see her. I adore this woman, she’s just so cute)
Tumblr media
Hospitals.
Every character of Bai Yu’s I’ve encountered so far has a different way of sititng in hospitals.
Zhao Yunlan looks like he’s barely seconds away from either sliding to the floor or giving himself back problems, Xie Nanxiang is partial to a lean or a cross legged sit. Cao Guang? I would describe it as he sits like a bloke - legs spread, elbows resting on his knees. This might honestly be the straightest Bai Yu character I’ve ever encountered.
Tumblr media
Of course he also has an in-game character in this. The wig is less cringe worthy than in the film, but there is something about his eyes in this that freaks me the fuck out so you won’t be getting on the floor pictures or looking in the direction of the camera pictures because looking at it too much seems to trigger a mild fight, flight, or freeze response in me. And I’m in no mood to deal with such ridiculousness.
So, in game character. He does spend time on the floor, only a little though. Most of his time is actually spent walking. But then they get in a boat and Bai Yu gets to indulge in his favoured elbow hook seated position generally reserved for benches and breakfast bar surface things when he’s on a stool.
Tumblr media
Ok, last but not least, the moped!
This is a moped that birthed a headcanon for me.
It would seem that regardless of character, if something is a form of transport with wheels, then Bai Yu will find some way to sit or lean on it.
Tumblr media
And y’know what? He is fully capable of looking damned good while doing so.
Tumblr media
So that’s it? I think the conclusion I can draw from this one is that Bai Yu’s sitting, leaning, and lounging habits are things he can either turn up or tone down depending on the character. It’s just that more often than not the characters he plays allow him to turn it up. But Gao Guang was one of the more subdued ones, more straight blokey vibes, than Bi Disaster ones.
Both film and drama are available on Netflix (at least here in the UK they are).
They’re also on YouTube - film - drama - with subtiles and pretty good quality.
And both are on DramaCool - film - drama
The drama is on Viki too.
Part One, Part Two, Part Three, Part Four, Part Five, Part Six
16 notes · View notes
ao3feed-weilan · 4 years
Link
by tigragrece
Words: 477, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
Series: Part 9 of Kisses are like tears
Fandoms: 镇魂 | Guardian (TV), 长大 | Grow Up (TV)
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: M/M
Characters: Xie Nanxiang, Yè Zūn
Relationships: Xie Nanxiang/Yè Zūn, mention of shen wei/Zhao Yunlan
Additional Tags: First Crush, Flirting, Angst with a Happy Ending, Hurt/Comfort
0 notes