After a debt of 700 million yuan, she became the national best actor.
As the eldest daughter of the Li family, Li Bai Wen received three calls the moment he woke up on the day he graduated from university.
On the first call, the Li family went bankrupt and now owed the Shen family 700 million yuan.
Number two, her father had run away and was probably in Canada.
On the third call, the Shen family said that if they couldn't return the money by the end of the year, they would top up all of the Li family's assets.
Then, what would happen next was the tragic life of the eldest daughter of a down-and-out family, or the story that the eldest daughter of the Li family and the overbearing CEO had to tell?
No, no, no, none of that.
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Li Bai asked. He was a mysterious human.
She was the world-famous Best Actor, the uncrowned king in the hearts of thousands of fans.
She was the young lady of the Li family who was heavily in debt, and she was also the target of the group of tenants who were in so much pain that they wished they were dead.
She had the perspective of a god walking in the city. The joys and sorrows of humans were different, especially for her.
Li Bai asked,"I'm the Thousand-faced Movie King!"
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Overall, it’s not bad—it’s a decent fanfic—but I’d advise the author to check out other novels and fanfics to see how the ANBU actually operates. Because from what I’ve seen, this seems like a bit of a slapdash job. The ANBU simply can’t operate like that, especially when it comes to monitoring the Jinchūriki . It can’t be just one ANBU member watching over him; there should be at least three from ANBU or the Root. At least a few members, because Danzo wouldn’t leave the Jinchūriki unsupervised. They’re unlikely to work alone; it’s impossible. What if some ninjas from the Land of Lightning show up again and try to capture the Jinchūriki—how is a single ANBU agent supposed to handle that? That’s why I’d advise the author to read another fanfic: “Naruto: I Got ‘Return by Death’ Kind Of Cheat!” Even though it’s a Chinese knockoff, it does a pretty good job—maybe even a great job—of describing the realities of ANBU work.