Subscribe to free Email Newsletter

 
  Info>View
 
 
 

China's video portals catch audiences in web

2014-06-03 13:53:51

(China Daily) By Han Bingbin

 

Video website iQIYI produces the drama series The Useless Brothers. Provided to China Daily

So its more cost-effective for video websites to produce their own programs, a task even more urgent after traditional broadcaster Hunan TV launched a new-media platform called Mango TV to carry its own shows.

The notion that Internet-produced series can be widely accepted by Chinese audiences gained credence with Diors Man, a Sohu.com production that parodies pop culture and topical social issues with cheeky humor. The show's three seasons have been viewed more than 700 million times.

After adopting a "dream works" strategy in 2013, Sohu will reportedly invest twice as much this year and aims to raise the view counts of its self-made content fourfold. The content will include full-length plays and reality shows made by local talent and top South Korean production teams.

Youku Tudou said it will invest 300 million yuan ($48 million) in making its own programs. Tencent Video is planning joint efforts with the country's top production companies to adapt the most popular Web fiction into 500 episodes of Internet plays.

Statistics from industry consultancy EntGroup show China's major video websites are expected to produce 1,500 to 1,700 episodes of self-made dramas this year, an increase of 45 percent over 2013. Yet the quality of most Chinese Internet productions is hardly compelling.

We Recommend:

Versailles celebrates Sino-French friendship 72 Hours in Xi'an Celebrating heritage
1 2 3 4 5



8.03K

 

 


 
Print
Save