Would you break up with your boyfriend who has been in love for 7 years for a breakfast?
In 2016, Japan launched a gourmet fan that gathered the four major actresses of the new generation in Japan, which is the second season of "Eat Breakfast at Tiffany" with a Douban score of 7.3, which is delicious and healing.

The four actresses of Trindel Reina, Hirozu Mori, Yuko Shinki, and Tokunaga Eri played on the same stage, starring in four different types of urban women in the new era.
It's all due to a change in attitude towards life with a breakfast.
The heroine, Played by Reina, is a company employee who works for a small company with only 4 people, plus the president.
Although the company is small, she has a very happy life, a smooth job, and a boyfriend who has been dating for 7 years.
Recently, she began to re-examine her relationship with her boyfriend, because her boyfriend always returned late for socializing, and he lay down in bed without changing his clothes, letting him eat breakfast with him, and constantly complaining.
In Marizi's heart, a good breakfast is the key to unlocking a good mood for the day.
When she encounters difficulties, she always thinks of the rich breakfast that her mother made for herself when she was a child.
Mariko finally decided to break up with her boyfriend, don't think that the breakup was because of a breakfast, in fact, the two people's living habits, life goals have been very different.
Risha, played by Yuko Shinki, is a yoga teacher.
She has an older sister who longs for love and family, who was abandoned by her father when she was a child, and who grew up to be split by her boyfriend, risha, who firmly believes that men are unreliable things.
Risha is obsessed with work, does not talk about love, and instead of leaving painful memories, it is better to live alone.
Suddenly, her father, who had disappeared for many years, came to find Risha, who she did not want to see, but could not resist her father's entanglement and decided to have breakfast with him.
Dad took her to a restaurant for dinner, and suddenly said, "The first time you came to Tokyo when you were a child, I took you to eat this thing, remember?"
She had long forgotten about her childhood, and what she did not expect was that this man who had abandoned their mother and daughter for many years actually apologized to her.
Risha looked at the little old man in front of him, strange and familiar, both annoying and pitiful.
Risha just urged her father to have breakfast first, and she didn't intend to forgive him right away, but she chose to reconcile with herself first.
Noriko, played by Hiroshi Mori, is the manager of a bar.
In middle school, Noriko was determined to study abroad, but for various reasons she did not succeed, and now she can only work in a small bar, she has a boyfriend, but only wants to play with her.
Her way of getting along with her boyfriend is simple, with Dianzi leaving work in the evening, the two finding a hotel to rest, and parting ways the next morning.
Noriko suddenly felt a sense of powerlessness, she hated her life now, she hated her worthless self now.
Lost, Noriko walked into a crowded noodle restaurant with no chairs, only a long table, and she ordered a bowl of udon noodles and a hand-kneaded rice ball.
On a winter morning alone, she was eating and eating, and suddenly burst into tears.
She thought of the breakfast balls made by her mother when she was a child, and thought of herself, who had been full of ambition, but now she had become a worthless person.
The person next to him didn't say a word, only silently handed over a pack of tissues, bowed slightly to The Noriko, and left.
Breakfast at Tiffany (Season 2) is based on the food comic of the same name.
This is a "magical" Japanese drama, and before this, there has not been a film or television drama that can spend so much effort to describe breakfast.
In just one episode, you can see a variety of breakfasts: Tokyo-style omelette, ham chestnut egg roll, fig seasonal vegetable salad, Benedict eggs and so on.
What is breakfast? Everyone has a different answer.
For Mariko, breakfast is the key to awakening happiness; for Risha, breakfast is her sister's silent care; for Noriko, breakfast is the cure for her heart.
I, the person who doesn't eat breakfast, want to have a good breakfast after reading it.