The narrator introduces us to the "blue book company" of "seek right" , the company that owns the app. The company's representative, "xiaoaiai," tells us that the founder and his wife had a "terrible quarrel" in the street the day before, and that they're going to meet again at their quarterly meeting. He also tells the audience that the number of "users" of the app has "returned to its highest-ever level" and that the company has "done a good job" in handling the recent "scandals" . The blue book company, however, is not buying this story. They're angry that an adult "met a minor" through the app, and then took her to a hotel. They think that the app is "insane" and "outrageous," and that "there is something wrong" with their supervision of the "unnamed source." The narrator tells the company to stop this "insultous" activity, and to hand over the business to "tianxun," the founder's son-in-law.
The narrator introduces us to the "blue book company" of "seek right" , the company that owns the app. The company's representative, "xiaoaiai," tells us that the founder and his wife had a "terrible quarrel" in the street the day before, and that they're going to meet again at their quarterly meeting. He also tells the audience that the number of "users" of the app has "returned to its highest-ever level" and that the company has "done a good job" in handling the recent "scandals" . The blue book company, however, is not buying this story. They're angry that an adult "met a minor" through the app, and then took her to a hotel. They think that the app is "insane" and "outrageous," and that "there is something wrong" with their supervision of the "unnamed source." The narrator tells the company to stop this "insultous" activity, and to hand over the business to "tianxun," the founder's son-in-law.