This review may contain spoilers
Drama Review: When High-Gloss Marketing Devours the Soul
t is cruel to witness talented actresses like Zhang Ruonan being burned out in such a manipulative construct. Having read the original novel and followed the leaked script content, trailers, stills, and Reuters, the narrative bankruptcy of this project becomes immediately apparent. The drama sells us a story from an era where emancipation was non-existent, wrapped in "Hamilton aesthetics." The plot is the usual indictment: An indebted producer meets her former classmate – wealthy and "handsome." According to the script, that is all the qualification a modern woman needs for the love of her life.We are served penthouses, high-end fashion, and romantic trips to Mohe. The plot is merely a vehicle to stumble from one kissing or bed scene to the next, garnished with cliché-ridden tragic moments. The grand finale? A proposal at Disneyland – fitting for the Chinese middle class, who will likely be paying it off in 100-year installments.
Yet, the real drama happens behind the scenes. CP (couple pairing) marketing began before shooting even started to whip the "CP freaks" into a frenzy – a desperate bid for survival for iQIYI and their tanking stock prices. The leads were dragged to every gala, and "leaked" high-definition set videos ensured the mandatory parasocial hook. However, the atmosphere on set was anything but harmonious: it was severely poisoned after the fans of her co-star, Wang Anyu, instigated a smear campaign against Zhang Ruonan following a minor mistake on set . The fact that the fan camps were already trading insults before filming even began—arguing over whose name should be billed first—highlights the sheer absurdity of the situation.
It is shameful for the Chinese entertainment industry to engage in such dehumanizing marketing. It fosters toxic parasocial relationships and brutalizes an audience that believes it must "protect" its idols from imaginary enemies.
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