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More and more Chinese people are tuning in to local programs, many based on overseas shows
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It is getting difficult for TV entertainment programs in China to secure a high rating easily as they did in the 1980s.
In July last year, however, Zhejiang Satellite TV broadcast The Voice of China. The talent show was an instant hit and became one of the nation's hottest topics of 2012. Singers who competed on the show became overnight sensations, with promising careers ahead of them.
In January, Hunan Satellite TV launched its own talent show, I'm a Singer. The show has helped once popular Chinese singers gain newfound recognition and topped the Friday TV ratings.
Producers have cashed in on the shows. The price for a commercial or advertisement for the second season of The Voice of China, to be broadcast in July, costs 1.02 million yuan ($164,600; 126,200 euros) for 15 seconds; a commercial cost 150,000 yuan for the same amount of time in the first season. The show's naming rights alone cost 200 million yuan.
Within a month since the premiere of I'm a Singer, the cost of a 15-second commercial jumped by 50 percent.
The success of The Voice of China and I'm a Singer is an encouragement to all TV program producers. A question looms: How have these programs have stood up among fierce competition?
The Voice of China originates from The Voice of Holland. The show's premiere in the Netherlands in 2010 drew more than 3 million viewers. In December 2010, NBC, the American television network, bought the rights to do a similar show in the US, where it has since become enormously popular.
The music talent show is broadcast in more than 50 countries and regions around the world, each with its own version. I'm a Singer was bought from MBC, the South Korean television network, which ran the program Our Sunday Night: I Am a Singer. The show premiered in South Korea in 2011 with an overwhelming 8.6 percent TV rating.
Importing overseas TV programs into China is nothing new. Since the 1980s, foreign shows have been copied in China. In the early 1990s, China broke out with a batch of TV sitcoms, such as Stories from the Editorial Board and I Love My Family. They are regarded as the earliest successful copies of foreign TV shows. I Love My Family is taken from the American classic All in the Family of the 1970s.
In 1996, China Central Television launched a talk show called Tell the Truth, nearly capturing the entire nation and which borrowed heavily from The Oprah Winfrey Show.
During the 1990s, China mostly imitated foreign TV programs, which led to a series of problems. Chinese producers didn't learn the intricacies of producing and promoting shows. They also didn't grasp what made shows successful. More importantly, they didn't respect the creative concepts of foreign shows, which often left them bumping into copyright protection measures. Beginning from the late 1990s, China's TV industry became more globalized. Coupled with the nation's increasing economic strength, the Chinese TV industry began working with foreign counterparts.
In 1998, CCTV launched Lucky 52, a quiz show purchased from the British TV show GoBingo, although CCTV removed the gambling content present in the British original. The show cost CCTV 400,000 pounds ($609,770; 467,990 euros), a high price at the time. Because of its success in China, in 2000 CCTV bought the British show Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, and turned it into the successful Happy Dictionary in China.