{"id":1876,"date":"2010-10-23T20:16:58","date_gmt":"2010-10-24T03:16:58","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/2010\/10\/23\/english\/"},"modified":"2010-10-23T20:16:58","modified_gmt":"2010-10-24T03:16:58","slug":"english","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/2010\/10\/23\/english\/","title":{"rendered":"\u7f51\u53cb\u8bc4\u8bba\uff1a\u4e00\u4f4d\u5916\u56fd\u7559\u5b66\u751f\u773c\u4e2d\u7684\u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b\uff08English)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p align=\"center\"><strong><span style=\"font-size: large;\">\u4e00\u4f4d\u5916\u56fd\u7559\u5b66\u751f\u773c\u4e2d\u7684\u7535\u89c6\u5267\u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"center\">\u6765\u6e90\uff1aBen Ross&#8217; Blog\u00a0 \u4f5c\u8005\uff1aBenjamin Ross\u00a0 2010\u5e7404\u67085\u65e5&#8211;5\u670827\u65e5<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" class=\" size-full wp-image-1875\" src=\"http:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-content\/uploads\/2010\/10\/66.bachinese.com_pic_ben_ross.jpg\" border=\"0\" width=\"113\" height=\"131\" \/><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"font-size: x-small;\">Ben Ross<\/span><\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"font-size: medium;\">Getting Started on \u8717\u5c45<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>After finishing Fen Dou and taking a short break from Chinese television    shows, I am now 11 episodes into a new series, Wo Ju (\u8717\u5c45). Broadcast in 2009,    Wo Ju has been the most popular and controversial series to come from Mainland    China in some time. Due to its controversial subject matter, Beijing TV pulled    the plug on Wu Ju ten episodes in, and Shanghai moved it from prime time to a    late night time slot. Many people (myself included) have thus taken to the    Chinese Internets to watch the series in its entirety.<\/p>\n<p>I am currently 11 episodes into Wo Ju, and the following is a brief synopsis    and analysis of what has gone down so far. (There are some minor spoilers    coming, so if you don\u2019t want to know the result of the first 11 episodes, I\u2019d    suggest you stop reading here.)<\/p>\n<p> Wo Ju begins with a couple, Su Chun and Hai Ping, who both grew up in rural    China, have recently graduated from top tier universities and moved to    Jiangzhou, a fictional Chinese city reminiscent of Shanghai. They live in a    tiny studio apartment and work low-level, white collar jobs, providing just    enough income to scrape by. Yet they are happy just to be together, content    that they are \u201cmaking it\u201d in the big city.<\/p>\n<p>The story then flashes several years into the future. Su Chun and Hai Ping are    still in the same studio apartment living the same post-college lifestyle. In    the interim however, two major changes have occurred. First, Hai Ping\u2019s sister    Hai Zao, seven years her junior, has also graduated college, and at Hai Ping\u2019s    encouragement is looking for a job in Jiangzhou. Secondly, Hai Ping is now    pregnant, further compounding the stress of living in a cramped studio    apartment.<\/p>\n<p>Hai Zao soon finds a job as well as a boyfriend (Xiao Bei), and begins her own    life in Jiangzhou. Once their baby (Rang Rang) is born, Su Chun and Hai Ping    face the spatial limitations and inconveniences of raising a child in a studio    apartment. While visiting Jiangzhou, Hai Ping\u2019s mother is appalled at their    living conditions and convinces Hai Ping to allow her to take Rang Rang back    to the village. The plan is for Rang Rang is to be raised in the village until    Su Chun and Hai Ping can afford to purchase a condo. Hai Ping is reluctant to    give up Rang Rang (Su Chun is indifferent), but realizes there is no better    option.<\/p>\n<p>Again we flash forward several years and Su Chun and Hai Ping travel back to    their home village where Hai Ping spends every moment with her beloved    daughter, now a toddler. However, she is discouraged to find that Rang Rang    hardly regards her as more than a stranger, having been raised her entire life    by her grandparents. This brings Hai Ping to a sudden realization. She and Su    Chun must no longer delay home ownership. For the sake of keeping their family    together, they need a condo, and they need it now! But the problem is that    neither she nor Su Chun have enough money for a down payment. This problem is    continually exacerbated as real estate prices escalate.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, Hai Zao has been doing very well for herself, both at work and in    her personal life with Xiao Bei with whom she is now cohabitating. But as an    attractive, young female Hai Zao must deal with \u966a\u9152, an annoyance common in the    Chinese business world for young women like her. \u966a\u9152 refers to accompanying her    boss to face-garnering business meetings (over meals, on the golf course,    etc.) for the sole purpose of drinking and socializing with his potential    business partners. Hai Zao despises this aspect of her work and even    contemplates quitting her job. Ironically though, through these social    engagements she strikes up a seemingly innocuous relationship with one of her    boss\u2019 business partners, Song Si Ming, a wealthy married, businessman in his    forties (for point of reference, Hai Zao is still only a few years out of    college).<\/p>\n<p>Su Chun and Hai Ping meanwhile continue to struggle with the financial    realities which subject them to living in a cramped studio apartment and    subsisting on instant noodles. They still cannot afford a down payment for a    condo, and Hai Zao, who credits all her success and good fortune to the help    and guidance of her older sister, feels compelled to rectify the situation.    The issue comes up in casual conversation between Hai Zao and Song Si Ming,    and Song Si Ming cordially offers to loan Hai Zao the money for Hai Ping\u2019s    down payment. It is apparent, but not spoken, at this point that Song Si Ming    has an interest in Hai Zao which extends beyond platonic and business    relations. It is also apparent that he has something which Hai Zao, or more    specifically Hai Zao\u2019s sister Hai Ping needs, cash. Thus we have the setup for    a situation which has to potential to become quite juicy.<\/p>\n<p>Up to this point, I can already tell that by all measures that Wo Ju is a show    of much higher quality than Fen Dou. The acting is better, the production    level is of relatively high quality (I haven\u2019t seen a single overhead mic    yet), and the story line is much more realistic. (The plot of Fen Dou was    about as plausible as your average Harry Potter flick). But what I like most    about Wo Ju so far is that it showcases real problems and conflicts which are    regularly encountered by Chinese urbanites, such as corruption, infidelity,    and the housing bubble. It portrays them in a realistic light, and without    cheesy miracle fixes and crackpot story lines to undermine the plot\u2019s    integrity. I still have 24 episodes left, so I\u2019m sure there is much more    action ahead. I\u2019ll try to keep everybody posted.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/getting-started-on-\u8717\u5c45\/2010\/04\/05\/\"> http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/getting-started-on-\u8717\u5c45\/2010\/04\/05\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p> <strong><span style=\"font-size: medium;\">Meet the Cast of \u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I\u2019m now a little over 2\/3 through   \u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b and it is shaping up to be a truly captivating series. \u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b is not    fast moving, nor action packed. The plot develops at an unforced, natural    pace, relying little on sensationalism or action. Instead, \u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b\u2019s strength its    complex and dynamic characters\u2026whom I would like to introduce below.<\/p>\n<p>There    is no one central character in \u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b, but if I had to approximate who figures    most prominently in the plot it would be Hai Ping. Hai Ping    is in her late 20\u2019s (possibly early 30\u2019s) and lives with her husband Su Chun    in a tiny apartment in Jiangzhou, the fictional city where \u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b takes place.    She is a graduate of a top tier university but is currently working in a dead    end office administrative job.<\/p>\n<p>Hai Ping\u2019s tragic flaw is in her greed, although this manifests itself in    what she wants for her family, not for herself per se. Namely she wants to buy    a condo. The driving force behind this is her daughter Rang Rang. Since    apartment is too small and their expenses tight, Rang Rang is being raised in    their hometown by Hai Ping\u2019s parents. Once a condo is purchased, the plan is    for Rang Rang to return to her parents.<\/p>\n<p>Hai Ping\u2019s husband Su Chun is your typical Chinese Zhang    San (John Doe). He has a danwei job as a designer which provides a modest    income, drinks and smokes in moderation, is faithful to Hai Ping, but also    does nothing to stand out as an exceptional husband or father. This is not    good enough for Hai Ping, and she frequently berates him on account of his    mediocrity.<\/p>\n<p>Hai Ping\u2019s sister Hai Zao has also moved to Jiangzhou upon    graduation from college. Hai Ping too works an office job in Jiangzhou and    lives with her boyfriend Xiao Bei. Seven years younger, Hai Zao is na\u00efve,    immature, and inexperienced compared to her older sister whom she frequently    turns to as role model and advisor. Hai Zao\u2019s has deep admiration and feeling    of gratitude towards Hai Ping, which turns out to be her own tragic flaw.<\/p>\n<p>Hai Zao is prettier than Hai Ping and has attracted the attention of Song    Si Ming, a married, wealthy, government official in his 40\u2019s. The casual work    relationship between the two evolves into a full-fledged affair, which the two    manage to keep secret from their respective partners for some time. Hai Zao    thus remains trapped in between two separate lives, her legitimate boyfriend    Xiao Bei, and her sugardaddy Song.<\/p>\n<p>Xiao Bei is Hai Zao&#8217;s boyfriend (and also my favorite    character thus far). Like Su Chun he holds a steady job and is not    independently wealthy. However, unlike Su Chun, he knows how to please women.    Whether it\u2019s cooking her dinner, taking her out window shopping, or sending    cute instant messages to Hai Zao (whom he calls \u201cLittle Pig\u201d) during the work    day, Xiao Bei always knows how to make Hai Zao smile. Additionally, when it    comes to serious matters such as finances or major decisions, Xiao Bei always    has a prescience which seems behind his years. In short, he is excellent    husband material\u2026which is maybe why he is getting the short end of the stick?    Xiao Bei is also perceptive and intelligent and it is seemingly only a matter    of time until he finds out about his girlfriend\u2019s affair.<\/p>\n<p>Song Si Ming is not the bullheaded, chain smoking,    pleather man-purse toting, tinted window Audi driving, alpha male   know-it-all Chinese bureaucrat that we all love to hate. He is    well-mannered, soft spoken, doesn\u2019t smoke, and has yet to be belligerently    drunk on camera. Outwardly he treats others with respect and has the    calm demeanor which would seem to make him an ideal family man. At face value,    Song is likeable guy, one who seems to have retained a sense of humbleness    regardless of his immense financial resources. Song seems to have everything a    man could want, good job, beautiful wife, healthy kid, etc. Yet as he looks at    himself in the mirror one morning, he realizes how old he has become. With all    his money and success, he still feels a void in his life\u2014a void which can only    be filled by the object of a new obsession, Hai Zao. This proves to be his    downward spiral as his obsession with Hai Zao tears him from his family and    sends him on a mad quest for control and power. Cognizant of Hai Zao\u2019s    connection to her sister, on multiple occasions Song uses his money and power    to bail Hai Ping and Su Chun out of otherwise formidable situations.    Ironically though, it is often Hai Ping, not Hai Zao who is uncomfortable with    this tacit arrangement.<\/p>\n<p>Thus we have the bulk of the cast. There are several other minor    characters, but the majority of the plot focuses on these key individuals.    I\u2019ll try to keep posting as I finish up the show. The deeper I get, the    juicier it becomes.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/meet-the-cast-of-\u8717\u5c45\/2010\/04\/27\/\"> http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/meet-the-cast-of-\u8717\u5c45\/2010\/04\/27\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"font-size: medium;\">Just finished \u8717\u5c45\u2026and Other Observations on Chinese  Television<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>I just finished \u8717\u5c45. And rather than spending multiple days to write a  be-all-end-all overly-protracted blog post, which often hampers the progress and  content of this blog, I\u2019m going to try to keep my thoughts short and sweet as I  blog my reactions to the show.<\/p>\n<p>Watching \u8717\u5c45 was one of the most rewarding China related experiences I have  had in a while. For anyone willing to allocate a significant chunk of time to  improve their language ability and understanding of modern-day China, I highly  recommend \u8717\u5c45. Counting pauses, re-watches, and time for looking up words, I\u2019d  estimate it is around a 50-75 hour time commitment to get through the whole  thing.<\/p>\n<p>After finishing the show, my internal reactions felt as if I had just  finished reading a long novel, rather than watching a television show. To be  sure, much of this is due to the theme and character development of \u8717\u5c45, but it  is also due to a particular characteristic of Chinese television show  production.<\/p>\n<p> TV series in China are generally not broken into seasons. Instead the entire  show is filmed as one block, often thirty of forty episodes long. The  disadvantage in this is that bad shows get a full run, rather than being  canceled after a season or two. The advantage though is that it enables  producers to plan out the entirety of the show all at once, rather than season  by season. \u8717\u5c45 takes particular advantage of this fact. There are very few  plotlines which are self-contained in a single episode, and the climax of the  show occurs at the very end. Since there are no season breaks, it is unnecessary  to build in extra climaxes at points where broadcasting would drop off for  several months.<\/p>\n<p>Thus, \u8717\u5c45\u2019s 35 episodes, each lasting exactly 42.5 minutes are essentially a  single long play movie, clocking in at just over 24 hours in length. The end of  one episode often cuts off mid-scene leading directly into the next. Thus,  watching \u8717\u5c45 is like reading a novel, in that one can pick up and leave off at  arbitrary points, rather than taking each episode as a single unit.<\/p>\n<p>Owing to this characteristic of the Chinese television industry, the  producers of \u8717\u5c45 were not subject to the constraints of creating superfluous  plotlines and climaxes. Instead, it allowed them to develop the story in a more  natural fashion, along the lines of how a writer pens a novel. This presents a  contrast to American TV shows, which even if they continue episode to episode  (i.e. Lost, Sopranos), they still must be broken down into seasons with some  resolve at the end.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/just-finished-\u8717\u5c45-and-other-observations-on-chinese-tv\/2010\/05\/09\/\"> http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/just-finished-\u8717\u5c45-and-other-observations-on-chinese-tv\/2010\/05\/09\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"font-size: medium;\">The Ending of \u8717\u5c45<\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Ok, so if you want to watch \u8717\u5c45, and you\u2019d rather not find out the ending, I  suggest you stop reading this post. But for readers who don\u2019t plan to watch the  show and are instead relying on me to spill the beans, here goes.<\/p>\n<p>So a major turning point happens about 2\/3 of the way through the series when  Xiao Bei finds out about Song Si Ming and Hai Zao. After much crying, bickering,  and screaming, Xiao Bei agrees to take her back, although says he can\u2019t  guarantee that he will forget everything. The one condition is that she must  never see Song Si Ming again. One slip up and Xiao Bei says he\u2019ll leave. Xiao  Bei is clearly shell-shocked by the knowledge that his girlfriend was cheating  on him with a guy almost twice his age, but as time progress he slowly reverts  back to his old self.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile Hai Ping and Su Chun find themselves in a bit of a pickle as Su  Chun is arrested for stealing designs from his work unit. (This was done in  order to make money off them to appease his materialistic wife). Through a  seemingly inexplicable chain of events and guanxi, Su Chun who had been facing  several years of jail time is set free. Originally Hai Ping is led to believe  that it is Mark (an American whom she has been tutoring in Chinese) is behind  the dropped charges. Later she discovers that it was the work of Song Si Ming.<\/p>\n<p>Hai Zao and Xiao Bei\u2019s relationship gradually reverts back to normalcy until  one day when Xiao Bei finds a text message on Hai Zao\u2019s phone from Song Si Ming.  The message is old, from before Xiao Bei\u2019s discovery, but he is incensed at the  fact Hai Zao had not deleted it. Xiao Bei walks out, and other than a brief  flashback, this is the last we see of him in the series.<\/p>\n<p>Hai Zao immediately flees to Song Si Ming. Song has an apartment for Hai Zao  to move into and more or less takes her in as his concubine. Hai Zao stops  showing up to work, and spends most of her days sitting around reading magazines  and killing time waiting for Song to return. Song finds himself balancing his  life between Hai Zao, his work, and his wife and daughter who become  increasingly impatient with his constant absence.<\/p>\n<p>While Song seems to be handling his personal life with ease, his situation at  work becomes increasingly stressful as he finds himself involved with some  sketchy real estate deals. It\u2019s at this time he also is being investigated on  corruption charges (this is the area where of the show where I had some  difficulty figuring out the details, so if anyone would like to fill in the  cracks, please be my guest).<\/p>\n<p>The crescendo of \u8717\u5c45 begins when Hai Zao reveals to Song that she is pregnant.  While Hai Zao\u2019s reaction is to get an abortion, Song insists on her keeping the  baby and she finally agrees. At the same time, Song\u2019s wife, who is entirely  cognizant of her husband\u2019s extracurricular activities, demands a divorce, to  which Song will not comply. As the stress at home and at work builds, Song takes  a bank passbook with 5 million RMB and gives it to Hai Zao for safekeeping. He  tells her that if anybody tries to take it from her, do not give it up.<\/p>\n<p>When Song\u2019s wife (we never learn her real name) finds out about the money,  she pays a visit to Hai Zao. She demands the passbook, and when Hai Zao refuses  to give it up, a skirmish breaks out. The altercation leaves Hai Zao passed out  on the floor with her maid rushing inside believing that she is dead.<\/p>\n<p> Later we find out that Hai Zao is ok, however her unborn child has been killed  in the fight. Meanwhile, Song is at his corruption hearing when he receives an  urgent call about the situation. He rushes to the hospital and en route his car  is struck by oncoming traffic, killing him instantly.<\/p>\n<p>We then flash forward three months. Hai Zao is in bed being spoon fed by her  mother and refusing to talk. (Apparently she has not said a word since the day  she lost her baby and Song Si Ming.) Hai Ping takes her for a walk and in a  soliloquy lasting about 8 minutes, summarizes everything she has learned from  the preceding events. Ultimately it had been Hai Ping\u2019s greed which had caused  the events leading to Hai Zao\u2019s unfortunate circumstance, and the speech touches  on these ideas as well as several positive notes on chasing dreams. (If anybody  has a transcription, it would be worth posting, since this essentially sums up  the message of the series.)<\/p>\n<p>After her speech, Hai Ping receives a call from Mark who asks to see her  immediately. Mark reveals to Hai Ping that before Song had died he had wanted to  give a new life to Hai Zao and their baby, and had arranged for them to go to  the United States. Mark also tells Hai Ping that he wants to invest money in her  to open a Chinese school for foreigners in Jiangzhou. This had been Hai Ping\u2019s  dream she had alluded to in previous episodes, but for brevity\u2019s sake I had not  mentioned in past posts. In the last two scenes we see Hai Zao at the airport  being sent off to the US and then a frame of Hai Ping in front of her new  school.<\/p>\n<p>\u8717\u5c45 is a deep series, and I would be lying if I denied having any emotional  investment in the show. You knew it had to end with a bang, but I really did not  expect such tragedy. I also did not expect much hope to come from the  unfortunate chain of events. Everything is still sinking in, and I\u2019m going to  try to post a few more analytical thoughts in the days to come. As Chinese is  not my native language, and as I have yet to go through the online plot  summaries, there may be several inaccuracies in my description of the show.  Please feel free to make corrections where necessary.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/the-ending-of-%E8%9C%97%E5%B1%85\/2010\/05\/14\/\"> http:\/\/benross.net\/wordpress\/the-ending-of-\u8717\u5c45\/2010\/05\/14\/<\/a><\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u4e00\u4f4d\u5916\u56fd\u7559\u5b66\u751f\u773c\u4e2d\u7684\u7535\u89c6\u5267\u300a\u8717\u5c45\u300b \u6765\u6e90\uff1aBen Ross&#8217; Blog\u00a0 \u4f5c\u8005\uff1aBenjamin  [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":1875,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[20],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1876"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1876"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1876\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/1875"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1876"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1876"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/bachinese.com\/66\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1876"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}