Chinese TV in the Netflix Era

Chinese TV in the Netflix Era

Edited by Xu Xiaying (Richard Xu) & Liu Hui

Anthem Series on Television Studies

This book aims to provide an account of Chinese television, particularly online drama series, or webisodes, with an awareness of the existence and competition of Netflix.  

Hardback, 100 Pages

ISBN:9781839987052

April 2023

£80.00, $110.00

  • About This Book
  • Reviews
  • Author Information
  • Series
  • Table of Contents
  • Links
  • Podcasts

About This Book

Subscription-video-on-demand (SVOD) services are available on many online video streaming platforms (VSPs) in China, such as iQiyi, Youku, and Tencent Video, backed by Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent groups (BAT), respectively. The video content on these platforms matches those broadcasted on national or provincial television, or originally produced and exclusively streamed on the VSP. Meanwhile, VSPs purchase the distribution rights of foreign films and television series to enrich the content pool—for instance, the first season of the U.S. sitcom Friends (1994) is now available on Tencent Video. The content on VSPs can be viewed on a computer screen, iPad, or cell phone or be streamed on the television screen, facilitated by 4G or 5G networks. Audiences now have the option of watching video alone on their preferred screen while interacting with other viewers through bullet screen comments. So television has grown to be an increasingly flexible and dynamic mode of communication.

In this context, this book aims to provide an account of Chinese television, particularly online drama series, or webisodes, with an awareness of the existence and competition of Netflix. Currently, Chinese VSPs of webisodes cannot defeat Netflix in terms of production value, nor can they be like Netflix, as is the case for its Belgian alternative. The chapter analyzes the strategies that these VSPs deployed for survival and development. However, the media convergence of broadcasting, telecommunications, and the internet is far more complicated than technology convergence. It involves negotiations of power relations, commercial interests, and national cultural security concerns. 

Traditional models of TV drama distribution are being transgressed. China Central Television (CCTV) and provincial stations no longer dominate the market. TV drama release schedules have changed from “TV station first, internet later” strategies to synchronous schedules, or even “internet first, TV station later” strategies. Audiences 18 to 30 years old represent 67.2% of the audience of TV dramas online. The relationship between state administration and VSP marketization is by no means straightforward or easy to grasp. It is a consensus among Chinese television scholars that there is a paradox between implementing a neoliberal strategy of marketization and maintaining control over ideology and national cultural security. TV drama production and consumption are at the center of this paradoxical relationship. This book, therefore, covers topics on business strategies of VSPs, original content production trends, trans-media stories telling cases, practitioner insights, and audience behavior. 

Reviews

“The development of video-streaming platforms in the West has been much discussed, but this remarkable book examines their impact, as well as the challenges they pose in China. What this book achieves is the examination of a series of detailed case studies charting indigenous companies and how they have navigated advanced streaming technologies in China. The book’s comprehensive discussion of Chinese streaming television is of great value to both Western and non-Western scholars in the field, as well as anyone interested in how television and streaming have been developed beyond companies such as Netflix” — Dr. Max Sexton, Research Fellow, University of the West of England.

“Video-streaming platforms, mist theater, bullet screen, AI scriptwriting … . This edited volume covers some of the latest and most popular topics of Chinese television studies. It is highly informative and thought provoking. I recommend it to anyone interested in Chinese television in the digital age” — Professor Xihe Chen (Ph.D., Ohio State University), Director of the Editing Committee of Film Theory Research, Executive Director of Chinese Film Criticism Academic Society.

Author Information

Xiaying Xu received his Ph.D. in communication from the University of Macau in 2016.

Hui Liu is Professor of School of Media and Communication at Shenzhen University, visiting scholar in the Producer Program of School of Theatre Film and Television in University of California, Los Angeles (2015)

Series

Anthem Series on Television Studies

Table of Contents

Introduction Xiaying Xu; Chapter 1. Webisode Distribution and Globalization Strategies of Video-Streaming Platforms: Taking iQIYI as an Example Zhixia Mo and Hui Liu; Chapter 2. The Production of High-Quality Homemade Short Dramas on Chinese Networks: The Example of iQIYI’s Mist Theater Jia Xian and Qinqin Ren; Chapter 3. What Are They Bullet-Screening About? A Content Analysis of Bullet Screen Comments about Crime Crackdown (2021) Xiaying Xu and Qingyuan Zhao; Chapter 4. Content, Platforms and Distribution: Challenges and Prospect in the Field of Webisode Productions Wei Jiang and Pengcheng Zhou; Notes on Contributors; Index

Links

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