For the last decade or so, Hollywood’s aim in China was to work with Washington and Beijing to expand the industry’s access to the market by opening up the quota for foreign films and making sure its movies got through the censors.
That goal, however, has lost some relevance as the Chinese entertainment market has evolved. The biggest challenge for American studios is no longer whether their films are selected under the revenue-sharing program or avoid getting banned for depicting Winnie the Pooh, according to experts; it’s whether Chinese audiences actually want to see the movies that get in.
Никой не познава Си Дзинпин, за него няма биография, няма и информация
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Meet the Inaugural Class of Axxess Scholars at UT Dallas
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Across the world, people bid Trump ‘good riddance’ [Los Angeles Times :: BC-INAUGURATION-GLOBAL-REACT:LA]
In Sydney, Australia, Lucy Sunman crawled out of bed at 3 a.m. so she could watch the inauguration of President Joe Biden live.
“The chilling effect of the Trump presidency has impacted us around the world,” said Sunman, a 36-year-old lawyer. “I cannot wait for some stability to be restored.”
In Seoul, 70-year-old Park Sang-ki sat in his cramped printing shop across the street from the U.S. Embassy reading online news reports about Donald Trump’s departure from the White House.
“America was supposed to be an advanced nation, gentlemanlike,” said Park. “Trump, he was like a gang boss.”
FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA
Protesters storm the Capitol and halt a joint session of the 117th Congress, Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C. (Kent Nishimura/Los Angeles Times/TNS)
‘This is not America’: World gapes in horror at pro-Trump attack on Capitol
By Shashank Bengali, Kate Linthicum and Erik Kirschbaum, Los Angeles Times, (TNS)
SINGAPORE For four years, the world has watched with surprise, horror and in some places glee as President Donald Trump battered one democratic norm after another, exposing the so-called leader of the free world as just another troubled and deeply divided nation.
Still, the planet was little prepared for the stunning scenes Wednesday, when a pro-Trump mob, some flying Confederate flags, stormed the U.S. Capitol to disrupt a congressional vote certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s electoral victory.