Ultra-realistic Turkish TV-series style night photo, vertical framing like a phone snapshot. Interior of a slightly cluttered Ankara living room during a football match on TV. Warm yellow ceiling light and the blue glow from the TV, no studio gloss. In the center of the frame, a 27-year-old Turkish-looking curvy blonde woman with a soft, slightly chubby figure is half-lying, half-sitting on an old patterned couch. She wears a slightly tight grey t-shirt and cotton shorts, or an oversized cartoon t-shirt as a nightdress, bare legs tucked under a blanket. Her hair is a bit messy from the day. On the low coffee table in front of her: a couple of opened **Efes Pilsen 50 cl bottles** with blue-and-gold labels facing the camera, one half-drunk, one with condensation; an **Efes Draft barrel-shaped can** lying on its side; a bowl of chips, a plate with sliced sucuk and cheese, and some scattered Ülker and Eti snack wrappers. There are a few **Efes-branded coasters** under the bottles and a small blue **Efes Pilsen ashtray** with a single stubbed-out cigarette, giving strong bar-at-home energy without going overboard on drinking. Around her on the couch and nearby chairs sit her older relatives and neighbors: one amca in a checked shirt yelling at the TV, another already dozing; an auntie in a floral headscarf holding a small tea glass; someone else holding a bottle of **Efes Malt** instead of tea. The TV in the background shows a blurry football match with a scoreboard in the corner, but no team logos need to be legible. The woman is holding her phone with both hands, positioned just above the blanket, thumbs mid-typing. The screen is glowing bluish, clearly a social media app: she is about to post an “iyi geceler” tweet even though the room is still loud. Her expression is slightly ironic, like “iyi geceler ama ev susmuyor.” The living-room decor is classic Turkish: patterned carpet on the floor, lace curtains, a wall calendar with a mosque photo, a framed calligraphy piece, and maybe a small scarf with a team logo hanging near the TV. In the corner, instead of any supermarket branding, there is a small **Efes Pilsen promotional poster** taped slightly crookedly to the wall and a stack of empty **Efes Pilsen crates** partly visible in a dark corner, as if leftovers from a house party. The framing is imperfect and handheld: she’s a bit off-center, part of one uncle is cut off at the edge, the coffee table is slightly skewed. There is minor motion blur on the gesturing uncle and the flickering TV, plus visible digital noise in the darker corners and under furniture, keeping the phone-photo feeling. Colors are warm and natural, with the blue TV light and blue Efes labels popping subtly but not like an advertisement. Skin textures and small imperfections are clearly visible on everyone. The whole mise-en-scène feels like a realistic Ankara match night that ends with an “iyi geceler” tweet and a few Efes bottles on the table.