Director's Comment:
The Change In Me, with its one season and eight episodes after Vurgun, brought serious viewers to the channel. Although it was not watched millions of thousands of times, it reached one and a half thousand views with its first episode. This was the first original story I directed in English and fictionally set in the US. As we only know the US culture from the internet like everyone else, we've had quite a challenge until we filmed and wrote the first episode. Also, since the audience of the channel is Turkey/Turks, I didn't think it would be possible to reach the audience it was supposed to reach. Frankly, it cannot be said to have reached that far. However, my only goal was to express what I wanted to tell with the Sims and produce something, as usual. That's why I'm grateful for all the views. The series revolved around a story where two people had gotten married at an early age to escape from their families, but barely finished a year since they don't even know each other, let alone get to know each other. Joselyn and Mason made all kinds of mistakes, failing to get to know themselves or each other. At the end of eight episodes, I think everything reached its goal. It was a very different project from my other projects in terms of plot and handling of the events. I believe that we reinforced everything with small social messages from the beginning.
Our voice actors worked with great devotion. Everything went as we planned. It was a project in which I contributed a lot to myself in every aspect. Both the last scene and the first scene contained many social messages. Mason represented black and Joselyn represented white. Mason was a young man who had closed his ears to his own inner voice and lived his life with his father's breath on his neck. Joselyn, on the other hand, was a middle-income young woman who did not want to live the life her family wanted, was loved by her friends, was social, but did not know what she was looking for. Mason was so distant from his own emotions that he lived only by the direction of his mind. He had come to that day with the hearts he had broken and the bad words he had said. On the other hand, Joselyn was a woman who lived her feelings within herself, even though she was a social woman and tried not to break anyone's heart. Mason was so lonely that his family was not even with him until his father died. On the other side Joselyn's whole family was in her life. Cory—the complete opposite of Mason—was purely emotional, thoughtless of himself. Instead of stopping himself for his feelings, he punished Mason each time. In his first serious relationship, Calvin became so attached to his partner that he couldn't imagine a life without them. We untied all these knots in eight episodes and told our story one by one. Thus, we answered the question "Does love always equate to happiness?"