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China’s soft power push gains ground as entertainment exports surge

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China’s soft power push gains ground as entertainment exports surge​



  • China’s cultural trade grew by 38.7 per cent year on year in 2021 to more than US$200 billion, the State Council says
  • Entertainment exports are gaining popularity in Asia due to cultural links, rising quality, prices and Beijing’s backing


Ralph Jennings

Published: 8:15am, 15 Sep, 2022
1509ae02-87ce-452c-b5ba-39ab22495a0b_be57cea1.jpg

A scene from China’s sci-fi blockbuster The Wandering Earth. Photo: China Film Group Corporation

In Taiwan, people are flocking online to play Identity V, a mobile “horror” game developed by Chinese company NetEase. In Vietnam, made-in-China films like Journey to the West, My Fair Princess and Shanghai Bund are essential viewing on television.

Across Asia, Chinese media and entertainment exports are gaining popularity due to cultural links, rising production quality and fair prices.

“It’s much cheaper to buy games from China and [the trend] has been established in Vietnam for a long time,” said Nguyen Thanh Trung, director of the Saigon Centre for International Studies at the University of Social Sciences and Humanities in Ho Chi Minh City.

“The game industry in Vietnam is not fully developed, so that is a reason the game companies import Chinese games.”

A boy looks at a poster for the animated film Everest Nguoi Tuyet Be Nho, also known as Abominable. Vietnam pulled the film from theatres over a scene featuring China’s claims to the South China Sea on a map. Photo: AFP

A boy looks at a poster for the animated film Everest Nguoi Tuyet Be Nho, also known as Abominable. Vietnam pulled the film from theatres over a scene featuring China’s claims to the South China Sea on a map. Photo: AFP

Though economics explains part of it, China’s cultural exports are also making inroads because Beijing has launched a soft power push to expand its appeal in a region where it is still embroiled in several territorial disputes.

That has left some offshore consumers worried about political messaging, especially via film, and wondering whether apps will collect personal data for review by authorities in Beijing.

Chinese cultural exports such as the 2018 war film Operation Red Sea have drawn attention to Beijing’s claims of sovereignty over swathes of the South China Sea – claims that Hanoi disputes. Vietnamese elders worry about “an invasion of Chinese culture”, Nguyen said.

China’s cultural trade grew by 38.7 per cent year on year in 2021 to more than US$200 billion, according to the State Council, the country’s cabinet.

In July, 27 government departments issued a joint guideline to “promote the high-quality development of foreign cultural trade to grasp new opportunities brought by the digital economy”.

China has 28-point plan to boost soft power overseas, increase cultural exports

The guideline will help exports such as film dubbing, games and animation align with the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, an Asia-Pacific trade pact that encompasses 30 per cent of the world’s gross domestic product, the state-backed China Daily reported last week.

Beijing wants to flex soft power abroad by harnessing online cultural venues and Chinese cultural leaders, the guideline said.

The National Press and Publication Administration this week released a list of 73 video games for handheld devices suitable for export. NetEase, which had one game featured on the list, traditionally seeks users in Europe, Japan and the United States.

Chinese media exports will find audiences most easily around Asia, from Japan through Singapore, experts said.

That is despite Beijing’s long-standing territorial disputes in the region, including with Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei and Japan, many of which remain unresolved.

Identity V, the first asymmetrical horror mobile game developed by NetEase.

Identity V, the first asymmetrical horror mobile game developed by NetEase.

In Malaysia, about a quarter of the population understands Chinese, so they welcome China’s games and TV shows, said Ibrahim Suffian, programme director with the polling group Merdeka Centre in Kuala Lumpur. He said TikTok, a video-sharing service developed by Beijing-based Byte Dance, is one of the fastest growing apps locally.

In Taiwan – which Beijing regards as a breakaway province – soap operas and variety shows produced on the mainland are watched widely, said Huang Kwei-bo, associate professor of diplomacy at National Chengchi University in Taipei.

Chinese filmmakers learned techniques from Taiwan, Japan and South Korea, he said, and have received government grants to boost production quality and cast superstars.

“A lot of their quality today won’t lose out to Taiwan’s programmes,” he said.

The televised competition Sing! China, for instance, counts Taiwanese star Jay Chou and mainland celebrity Na Ying as coaches.

Song Seng Wun, 62, from Singapore, has started watching Chinese period dramas over the past year after they began appearing on Netflix alongside older series from Japan and South Korea.

The characters and computer-generated imagery of Chinese films have improved over the past five years, Song said. He and his wife have also taken a shine to Chinese actors and he watches up to 90 minutes of drama per night.

“It’s the usual formula of having good character and a plot,” the bank economist said. “But Chinese series often run twice as long as their Japanese counterparts. “They learned anime from Japan, so it’s lifelike.”

However, experts say some content from China advertises tourism or defends Beijing’s zero-Covid policy.

Elsewhere, there are questions over how China’s growing media exports might affect data privacy.

James Gomez, regional director of Bangkok-based think tank the Asia Centre, said some gamers and users of Chinese apps know their movements could be tracked and messages intercepted.

“But I guess people take the financial or economical decision – ‘the product is cheap and I’m not saying anything sensitive anyway’,” Gomez said.

China’s apps have faced accusations that they have security flaws that make them vulnerable to privacy breaches and, in some cases, actively harvest sensitive data from users.

Beijing has recently taken steps to tighten oversight of personal data, though new laws have created uncertainty.

While China’s cultural exports will find a ready audience among ethnic Chinese populations in Southeast Asia, the region still looks more often to the US and Japan for media, Gomez said.

 
Still far from being on Hallyu tier.To be fair, Hallyu is a wall .

JApan - Anime ,Manga.
Korea-kpop,Kdrama.
China- Games?

Korea can't compete with Japan in Anime & Manga.
Japan can't compete with Kpop & Kdrama

Both have their own strength and weakness.
What is for China ?

China's massive movie industry has potential for global impact,but quality control in China has fallen far below global hallyu,producers only want some pretty face that caters to fandom,not Pretty face + talent like korean stars, the quality control of script and production is nowhere near Korean standard.It's about profit and mass production for the greedy Chinese producers . Chinese screenwriters and directors in most mainstream projects are amateurs compared to their much more capable and well-vetted Korean counterparts.
Same thing with animation, Chinese animation itself is top tier but the script and direction are nowhere near Japanese standard of consistency and quality overall.

The place where China improved close to the lvl of Korean standard is variety shows,but idk if they learned from the Korean directors that were hired or if it's Korean directors that are still directing all the good shows. But without hallyu-like clout, not many notices it.
Well Korea and Japan are major soft power exporter , only behind the imperial softpower of Hollywood, they thrive without whole of western media engaged in smears against them.China has much higher hurdle to cross yet the reward would also be that much sweeter.
 
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Still far from being on Hallyu tier.

JApan - Anime ,Manga.
Korea-kpop,Kdrama.
China- Games?

Korea can't compete with Japan in Anime & Manga.
Japan can't compete with Kpop & Kdrama

Both have their own strength and weakness.
What is for China ?

China's massive movie industry has potential for global impact,but quality control in China has fallen far below global hallyu,producers only want some pretty face that caters to fandom,not Pretty face + talent like korean stars, if the quality control of script and production is nowhere near Korean standard.It's about profit and mass production.Chinese screen writers and directors in most mainstream projects are amateurs compared to how capable and well-vetted their Korean counterparts are.
Same thing with animation,Chinese animation itself is top tier but script and direction is nowhere near japanese standard of consistency and quality overall.

The place where China improved close to the lvl of Korean standard is variety shows,but idk if they learned from the Korean directors that were hired or it's Korean directors that's still directing all the good shows. But without hallyu like clout,not many notices it.
To be frank, I'm not fond of Korean pop culture, hope China doesn't copy it, it's unnatural to see men without body hair.

Also, for Japan it's ACG culture - Animation, Comic and Games, these are the top industries of cultural exports in Japan, that neither US and China can reach, for now.
 
Still far from being on Hallyu tier.To be fair, Hallyu is a wall .

JApan - Anime ,Manga.
Korea-kpop,Kdrama.
China- Games?
Have your heard Tik Tok?

it's unnatural to see men without body hair.
Unnatural? 99% of Chinese men don't have visible body hair. it's the genetic thing. Chinese people have no idea of what deodorants for cause we never need them.
 
Have your heard Tik Tok?
Tik Tok is a social media platform, every country it's different.
I'm against it because it lowers attention span, short video formats create ADHD kids.

Unnatural? 99% of Chinese men don't have visible body hair. it's the genetic thing. Chinese people have no idea of what deodorants for cause we never need them.
Uh, chinese/asian men can grow beard and body hair, what are you talking about?
Look at Guan Yu'sdepiction.
1663233174219.png

Now imagine if he's shaved clean, that's Korean pop culture.
 
Tik Tok is a social media platform, every country it's different.
I'm against it because it lowers attention span, short video formats create ADHD kids.


Uh, chinese/asian men can grow beard and body hair, what are you talking about?
Look at Guan Yu'sdepiction.
View attachment 879261
Now imagine if he's shaved clean, that's Korean pop culture.
They are paintings, I m Chinese I know what I m talking about.
 
My 2 cents:

China should not try to go the Japan / Korea way trying to produce dark, cryptic material or bubblegum-pop trash. China has enough ancient history to produce period dramas or movies portraying the life of ordinary middle class Chinese in rural areas, the transition from the days of Mao to Xi, the challenges brought upon by the rapid changes in economic conditions etc.

I like Iranian film makers due to this reason and also some regional film makers in India who continue to resist the rubbish Bollywood orbit. This is when soft power will really emerge. Rest of the world does not want to see Chinese versions of the same stuff (video games / movies / songs) that they are already getting an overdose of from US, Korea, Japan. Provide authentic local stuff and the world will lap it up.

This should be accompanied by China easing up its tourist visa access, even providing visa on arrival. It is a vast country with jaw dropping landscape. People will start arriving in no time.
 
To be frank, I'm not fond of Korean pop culture, hope China doesn't copy it, it's unnatural to see men without body hair.

Also, for Japan it's ACG culture - Animation, Comic and Games, these are the top industries of cultural exports in Japan, that neither US and China can reach, for now.
Korean pop culture is the strongest force in the world.You can be hairy or not hairy based on the role and concept .If you want to be a heartthrob actor in a college drama aimed at females you better not be a hairy gorilla,it all depends on the role and criteria.

China will never achieve the success of boybands/girl bands like Korea,for now that's a specialty of a selective few Korean labels in the world, and you need complementary Korean culture to go with it . Chinese culture seems more suitable for solo singer.Chinese akage wouldn't let a local group thrive.
China needs another Teresa Tang(though taiwanese) like talent that can utilize the massive Chinese technology and resources .China has more chances in specialized tiktok like songs ,which are actually a great trend now .
I still don't see a label like SM,YG calibre in China.They industry leaders just want easy money rather than honing their skills.

Just like in tvdrama,Japanese natural aesthetics and culture isn't as effective as Korean aesthetics and culture is globally .
Similary ,Japanese natural aesthetics and culture is much more effective in anime & manga globally.

But China has more potential in movies ,webtoons, in games it's already among the top,but movies ,dramas and movies have more real life impact.


At least in entertainment and cultural export industries china is very bad at supporting and growing those that deserve the push ,when anyone gets too popular or effective,they get torn down by jealous industry competitors,or swindled by their greedy higherup .China truly can never have anything good.

China's biggest cultural promoter on youtube is liziqi ,she's more effective in promoting china than probably all of Chinese networks combined, but she has been inactive for past 2 years because of fallout with her business partners,she's a matter of national interest IMO,if similar case occurred in Korea of 2002, the culture ministry would have intervened to sort the dispute ,made her produce videos again.

Not just liziqi,It is the same case with many illustration project authors that have to leave their popular work because of fallout with the label after their work start getting popular, those shit happens because of the system at the base of the industry is a mess, if these aren't fixed ,how can China dream of being major culture content exporter?


look at the likes this chinese author received

200k + is an insane no of likes for webtoon illustration,China needs to support talents like her that clicks with global audience and use their works in webtoons as bench mark for quality and improve upon. What China really lacks is consistency that's due to poor overall standard .
 
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My 2 cents:

China should not try to go the Japan / Korea way trying to produce dark, cryptic material or bubblegum-pop trash. China has enough ancient history to produce period dramas or movies portraying the life of ordinary middle class Chinese in rural areas, the transition from the days of Mao to Xi, the challenges brought upon by the rapid changes in economic conditions etc.

I like Iranian film makers due to this reason and also some regional film makers in India who continue to resist the rubbish Bollywood orbit. This is when soft power will really emerge. Rest of the world does not want to see Chinese versions of the same stuff (video games / movies / songs) that they are already getting an overdose of from US, Korea, Japan. Provide authentic local stuff and the world will lap it up.

This should be accompanied by China easing up its tourist visa access, even providing visa on arrival. It is a vast country with jaw dropping landscape. People will start arriving in no time.
too late on the bubblegum pop trash lol, we already have Genshin Impact, King's Avatar, EXO-M.

Yet China is one of the few countries still writing songs in classical language played using traditional instruments. Imagine if Indian pop music was still in Sanskrit or if American rock songs were written in Shakespeare English.



There's plenty of TV shows about the economic transition


Even TV shows about corruption


Africans actually mention that the themes in Chinese TV resonates with their values.

 
Korean pop culture is the strongest force in the world.You can be hairy or not hairy based on the role and concept .If you want to be a heartthrob actor in a college drama aimed at females you better not be a hairy gorilla,it all depends on the role and criteria.
Is this true? From a pure profibility issue, is k-pop and k-drama actually stronger than japanese manga/anime/games, or even chinese games from Tencent?
I actually very much doubt this, since the video games market are bigger than the music and drama market, even bigger than the movies market nowadays, and the biggest gaming companies in the world right now are Tencent, Sony and Microsoft, and none of them are korean companies.

Also, the only time I see korean films with beard nowadays is the Admiral series with Yi-Shun-shin.
Some can grow a full beard but most can't. the beards in this poster were fake and pasted, you don't know?
Is this a defiency in modern chinese genetics?
And no, some beards in that poster are definitely real.
 
Recently, China imported a lot of athletes from abroad: from Africa, South America, North America, Europe. Provides green cards, money, housing, and women to foreign athletes. Encourage foreign athletes to marry Chinese women and have many mixed children.

Do you think it is a reasonable way to expand soft power?

View attachment 879276

View attachment 879275
No matter what, Vietnam cannot escape China's cultural gravity. That's why so many Viet songs on Youtube are translated Chinese songs, why Vietnamese bloggers travel to China to make videos and why so many Vietnamese watch Chinese TV.
 
There's plenty of TV shows about the economic transition


Even TV shows about corruption


Africans actually mention that the themes in Chinese TV resonates with their values.

I find my beard-less sense tingling, why are these people not having a single beard...
I know some of the executives are supposed to shave, but regularly working class are also cleanly shaven? Hmmmm.
 
I find my beard-less sense tingling, why are these people not having a single beard...
I know some of the executives are supposed to shave, but regularly working class are also cleanly shaven? Hmmmm.


beards = medieval

clean shaven = modern
 
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