After going through the transition pains of 1855, Jerome Bonaparte's work became exceptionally easy.
Apart from receiving documents submitted by the secretariat every day, Jerome Bonaparte spent the rest of the time hosting salons and accompanying his wife and children on family outings.
Some newspapers, under the direction of Jerome Bonaparte, began to report on the warm life and tabloid news of the Bonaparte family to the outside world.
The citizens of Paris, through newspapers, perceived an emperor different from the mainstream depiction, an emperor more grounded than the one described in the mainstream press. When the public discovered the emperor's lifestyle and entertainment (fishing, horseback riding, playing cards, flirtation) was no different from theirs, an invisible sense of closeness emerged, and the public's support rate for the Bonaparte government gradually rose.
