HeadInTheClouds:
Is this a good move do you reckon? I always see liuliang as a young person game, and while he's hardly old, in the world of entertainment where youth is king, I think his age will work against him. By this age, liulangs are looking to shift gears and pivot into more "serious" work.
Artistically, it's an iffy move -- could be good in that the work chases him instead of him chasing work (and hey no more need to do the tedious audition grind) and therefore more work means more chances to get his acting skills seen and known. Could be a bad move in that if he continues to do more romantic idol dramas he will eventually be pigeonholed as that and industry people will forget that he's a legitimately good actor who can do and excel in serious work and won't be thinking of potentially casting him when those kinds of jobs come up.
Commercially, it's absolutely a good move. It will set him up for life financially and give him stability. It's not even the tv and film projects, it's the endorsement contracts he will get just by being him and having a fandom large enough and with lots of money to buy anything he pushes. Look at Zhang Wanyi -- started as a critical darling in several critically acclaimed roles but he's chasing liuliang status by very consciously pivoting towards idol dramas (although he has continued to do some non-idol dramas too), he wants the money and stability.
For TJC's particular situation, I think liuliang status was not really something he actively chased (although his critics will disagree, but I've been there since 2017 and never once did I feel like he was trying to become a liuliang, he just seemed to be trying to do as many roles as he could get if they were interesting to him), but it organically -- as organically as becoming a traffic star can be -- happened to him with his first two ML roles becoming back to back hits. His fandom has exploded since UtS and now with LYF, it's gone on a scale from 5 to 5 million in such a short time that longtime fans and him too, I think, can barely catch a breath. And of course I'm thrilled for him and for the fandom, however one thing I am worried about is that as his fandom has exploded, it has become toxic very quickly. I am only talking about his fandom in China, I can't speak to his international fans because I think that's a smaller fandom and it seems to me, so far, a more sensible one. It's as though this explosion of new fans are trying to prove their passion and dedication to him by acting excessively in every way they can. It's like they think just because they were ignorant of his existence for the first five or so years of his acting career, they need to make up for that all at once and constantly.
In the past two years, his studio has put out two very comprehensive notices outlining in detail his expectations for how fans should behave in public spaces and what is acceptable and unacceptable. Since 2017, he has never once had to do this, but in the past two years he has had to put out two notices like that. The fandom needs to step back and do some reflection, their actions have put their own safety and his at risk, and their obsessive affection has sometimes become so toxic that they are damaging themselves and him. They are not at the level of some other extremely toxic monolithic fandoms like 紫米 or xfx, but they are really only about 2 years into a path of potentially becoming a major fandom so they really need to, as the saying goes, check themselves before they wreck themselves because ultimately it's their idol who pays the heaviest price and I do not want to see that happen to him especially when it's not something he actively chased after in the first place.
How cheery...sigh
Happy Holidays everyone!