Their uniforms were 3,500 pounds of uniforms, and a huge amount of alcohol and drugs were consumed at dinner once a semester.
As a result, the photographs may look different if you know that the shops they visited were ruined not only in restaurants such as refrigerators and tables, but also in wallpaper and floor.
At Sam's Club's initiation ceremony, you might be frowned upon to learn that there was a dirty sexual performance, of course, a prostitute, and a 50-pound bill burned in front of a homeless person.
Their disgusting and destructive gathering was a secret known only to a few people, who put a blank check in the shopkeeper's hand and shut him up, and you might shake your head, saying, "The world is big and there are many freaks."
However, once you know that the people in the picture are former British Prime Ministers David Cameron and Boris Johnson, and that other people are also representatives of UK famous consultant companies, broadcasting producers, newspaper owners and lawyers, the story is different.
This picture was taken by members of the Bullingdon Club, which actually existed at Oxford University School, where these children grew up and are now the upper echelons of the power that controls Britain.
"If Britain was like this, would our society be different?" No, wait. "Before asking such a question, they need to find out why and why they made such a meeting.
Play takes the audience to their dining room.
The members get together and the party starts, but the atmosphere flows to an unintended place: wine is served different from what was ordered, and the food is not to your liking.
Charlie, an escort specialist, leaves the shop saying that what the members want is not a service he can do. The owner asks the people who drink and shout to get out.
Their discontent with the shopkeeper soon turns to the rest of the class, who express their anger that they can no longer tolerate the rest of the class who do not know their subject.
They're getting rougher, they're taking off their social shells, and they're molesting Rachel, the shopkeeper's daughter, who comes in to serve them, but it's not enough.
They set an example for the things they don't want to see - a scene that might have happened at a 1987 Bullington Sam's Club meeting.
Written by British Playwright Laura Wade, it premiered in London in 2010 and has since been staged in several European venues, including Our Europe: Why.
Maybe it was because the deviations from a British School gave a kind of deja vu to many European audiences.
Cho Tae-oh, a careless character in the 2015 film "Veteran," may be a rich "chaebol third generation," but he was not at the top of the power to make laws and lead society.
Play is now Sangyeon, a society where School violence perpetrators with legal fathers go to prestigious universities without reflection or disadvantage, and victims should remain silent.
Someone with a father who has served as a senior government official quits a company he has worked for six years and receives 5 billion won in severance pay, which is the land where Play is Sangyeon.
There has never been a clearer picture of what kind of personality and social gaze constitute the upper echelons of our society.
I'm not happy with the actors' performance, but I've decided to go easy on them because it's still early in the show, because I've endured what Ryan Sam's Club members say throughout the show.
"We're not like them. We're posh."
Well, that's good, because it's easier to deal with them if they're showing their thoughts than if they're being polite, whether they're comfortable or not, even if they don't feel very good.
Again, this Play is not pleasant or enjoyable, but it gives some kind of enlightenment. If you want to know what it is, please find a theater. "Performing at Yes24 Stage 3 by May 21st.
This article can also be read in Jian's brunch.