It is really nice of you to help us for free!!
Just a few questions for you (I suppose you are a fan of C-dramas):
1. Which country do you come from?
2. Why do you like watching C-dramas?
3. What genres of C-dramas do you like?
4. What are your favorite C-dramas? (no more than 3)
5. What aspect do you think C-dramas can improve?
6. Does it change your opinions towards China after watching C-dramas? And if yes, could you specify the changes?
Thanks for your participation!!
I will also answer the questions here too.
1. United States
2. Some of the prettiest people I have ever seen were in Chinese dramas. I also gravitate towards easy to watch and relaxing dramas, and there are plenty of them to find.
3. Since you ask for top three dramas, I will give my top three genres. I used the list on this site. Romance, Comedy, and Fantasy.
4. I am pretty sure about my top two of No Secrets and Shining For One Thing. The third probably changes depending on when I am asked, but today I will say Love Between Fairy and Devil. I did just finish it a few days ago, so it is fresh in my mind.
5. Just a few thoughts. For the Chinese drama industry in general, getting dramas out quicker would be an improvement. For the actual nuts and bolts of a drama, I think shortening most dramas would improve them. As for marketing towards English speaking viewers, I think that is obvious. More subtitles, and better subtitles.
6. You save the tough question for last. Obviously watching Chinese dramas has made me more interested the entire process, so I research things. My opinion is that China should have more confidence in Chinese viewers to decide what they want to watch. It is a broad question and I cannot help but to return a broad answer. As far as changes, I think the biggest difference is knowledge gained about the Chinese people in general. If Chinese viewers like the dramas that air, then they are not much different from me. The stories that are told through Chinese dramas are not that different from ones you find anywhere else further cementing the idea that we are more alike than different.
I tried my best to answer them in a formal, but friendly way. The answers should be taken as a starting point, and not some finished or concrete answer.
1. Iceland
2. , It's very unique, and the etiquette and customs are interesting. Don't see this in other countries dramas.
3. I primarily watch historical period dramas, xianxia, wuxia, fantasy, palace dramas, and such. Comedy, romance, fantasy, etc. are what I like.
4. Ashes of Love, Eternal Love, Ever Night.
5. Improvement of the "ugliness". I mean the grittiness of reality. The cdramas (historical) I've watched feel very sterile, fake. The roads are clean even though there are horses (horse shit should be everywhere). The beggars don't look real, only have a smudge of coal on their face and rag clothes (often clean). Everybody wearing very clean clothes. The walls and structures seem freshly built and all in the same style and decor. And if there's a scene inside a woodworkers house, there is no saw on the ground, the work table has no scratches or cuts, looks unused. The general aesthetics look very sterilized.
I could name more things, but I'll let this suffice since the other things can probably not be changed!
6. As I mostly (90%) watch historical dramas, I understand better the history of China, the customs.
As for the opinion being changed, I think you need to ask more specifically. I've learned more, but I can't think of a certain opinion I had of China before I started watching cdrama and being changed today. Then again, I didn't have a lot of opinions about China before.
I filled out your survey. Chinese TV dramas have become the favorite form of entertainment for me and my husband. I never thought it would be possible that anything could overtake American movies, which are so well done and which used to be our favorite form of entertainment.
First, have you tried asking people on Chinese-forums.com to complete your survey? It has a cross-section of people from all over the world. A large number of them watch Chinese TV dramas. People there tend to be much more helpful than people on other websites, too. So, you might get more responses from there than here.
I think you could have asked some other questions. Your questions seem to be geared towards assuming that people think lesser of China in almost every way. I may be wrong, but it just seems that way to me. There are plenty of people who think lesser of China, like its government. But, in other ways, they may learn things, like Chinese people being more filial and respectful of elders than Americans by default. This is just an example and may not be an aspect that everyone agrees with. So, don’t get angry with me!
A better example might be the great Chinese food. There are hot-pot restaurants in America that are far better than fast-food Chinese restaurants in America. So, an example question might be, “Is there anything about Chinese culture that you’ve learned that might be better than your culture?” (American food pales in comparison with Chinese food, as well as French food, Italian food, etc.)
Another question that might be insightful is “Why do you like Chinese TV dramas? For me, it’s more wholesome. There’s more “feel good” in Chinese TV dramas than American movies. There are more “good people” in Chinese TV dramas than American movies.
One of the survey’s questions is “Which aspect do you think C-dramas can improve? (choose one or more).” I chose two: Subtitles and Special Effects, By special effects, I mean blood and bruises. It isn't hard to make them look more realistic, is it?
For subtitles, it isn’t all that hard to upgrade subtitles. Just improving the timing alone would go a long way. And, it’s fairly quick and easy to do, especially using software, such as the free Subtitle Edit software.
Chinese TV companies simply start a subtitle when a person starts talking and then stop the subtitle when the person stops talking. This works for Chinese subtitles. But, in general, this is too fast for comfortably reading English words in subtitles. More time needs to be given. There are documents available online that talk about basing timing on English characters per second.
You can find Netflix’s guideline for subtitles online. You can also look around Viki and find their approach. In general, their subtitles are a minimum of 1 second, and they add at least 1 sec after a person stops talking. It’s a simple and easy approach. Netflix has a better approach that takes longer to complete. But, in the grand scheme of subtitling, it’s a drop in the bucket of effort, especially with good software.
Beyond that, translators try to come up with concise translations to fit timing that is based on people starting-and-stopping talking. It takes time to think of concise translations. It’s much easier to just write accurate translations and use longer timing based on English characters per second! Maybe a young Chinese entrepreneur can start a business that does something like this. I’d be happy to give them my scheme for free. I’m retired and translate subtitles as a hobby.
MTH123:have you tried asking people on Chinese-forums.com to complete your survey?
It is a regret that we haven't done that for we didn't know this website. Thanks for telling us! (it is difficult for us to know how people from other countries get to know about China~)
MTH123:I think you could have asked some other questions. Your questions seem to be geared towards assuming that people think lesser of China in almost every way. I may be wrong, but it just seems that way to me. There are plenty of people who think lesser of China, like its government. But, in other ways, they may learn things, like Chinese people being more filial and respectful of elders than Americans by default. This is just an example and may not be an aspect that everyone agrees with. So, don’t get angry with me!
Your advice does help! Actually, it is just that we really don't know anything about people from other countries view China these days so we have conducted this survey.
We do appreciate your answer! Having someone that has critical ideas about these questions to give a response is more than expected!
My honest opinion about cdrama is, it could probably become very popular across the world, but it's growth and development is stunted and prevented by Chinese government policies. You see this in pretty much every aspect of cdrama.
I don't watch contemporary cdrama, because there's too much of propaganda, but historical cdrama is much better, which is probably why majority of the popular cdrama globally are historical.
I often wonder, what Chinese culture would look like if not for regulations and such.
Korea has a similar culture, but (South Korea) has much more creative freedoms. Just that small difference means that S-Korea (50 million people) is much larger globally in entertainment than 1400 million people are.
So, I imagine what would China be capable of if the freedoms were the same as in S-Korea.
1. Which country do you come from?
United States
2. Why do you like watching C-dramas?
They make the best historical dramas; beautiful designs (sets and costumes) and amazing story-telling
3. What genres of C-dramas do you like?
Historicals
4. What are your favorite C-dramas? (no more than 3)
The Untamed, Ten Miles of Peach Blossoms, Nirvana in Fire
5. What aspect do you think C-dramas can improve?
Remove the ban on all lgbtq+ dramas (HUGE lover of the bl genre)
6. Does it change your opinions towards China after watching C-dramas? And if yes, could you specify the changes?
Not really. I can separate the issues going on with China ie their policies and the arts they produce. If anything, I just do not watch their dramas as much as other countries.