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时间:2024-05-20

编辑/楼吟

China has developed a virtual anchor to deliver the news

By Helen Regan, CNN

Hong Kong (CNN Business)—News anchors,beware. The robots are coming for your jobs, too.

China's state news agency has debuted a virtual anchor designed to be able to deliver the news 24 hours a day.

Xinhua unveiled its "artificial intelligence news anchor" Wednesday at an internet conference in the eastern city of Wuzhen.

"Hello, you are watching English news program.I am AI news anchor in Beijing," the computergenerated host announced in a robotic voice at that start of its English-language broadcast.

e $874 million in China alone — the secondhighest gross in a single market of all time after“The Force Awakens.” Directed by and starring Wu Jing, the action film came with a provocative poster showing Wu’s character giving the middle finger with an “I fight for China” patch affixed to his uniform. Under that lewd gesture is a tagline:“Anyone who offends China, no matter how remote, must be exterminated.”

“Wolf Warrior 2” hasn’t held its box-office record for long, and neither did its predecessors. When“The Mermaid” was released in early 2016,for instance, it quickly became China’s most successful film of all time. Its financial impact proved more memorable than the movie itself:A romantic fairy tale with a heavy-handed environmental message and distracting CGI, it traded in slapstick humor and surprisingly graphic man-on-mermaid violence that did little to advance its loveydovey underpinnings.

It’ll take a lot to dethrone “Wolf Warrior 2,” but recent history suggests its days are numbered. That these records are being set and broken at such a rapid pace is clear evidence that the Chinese box office is a force to be reckoned with; the question now is how much longer it can continue to grow before inevitably plateauing.

There’s more than audience taste at work, of course. China regulates the number of foreign films that can play in theaters at any given time. As of 2016, there are more screens in China than there are in America, and box-office revenues have increased 144 percent there since 2012. (America has seen a six percent increase in the same period, though it obviously started out much higher.)

Thirteen of the 20 highest-grossing movies in Chinese history are domestic productions; the top four — “Wolf Warrior 2,” “Operation Red Sea,” “Detective Chinatown 2,” and “The Mermaid” — were all released within the last two years. The foreign films that do perform well are a mixed bunch, from two“Transformers” and “Fast and Furious” entries apiece to “Zootopia,” “Avengers:Age of Ultron,” and, oddly enough, “Warcraft” (which made a paltry $47 million in America compared to its $213 million take in China).

In China, the ideals of the American Dream are paling into insignificance as the country’s self-styled Chinese Dream produces the growing wealth and status of large numbers of people while promulgating different values: collective effort,patriotism, and self-sacrifice for the cause of national rejuvenation.

For obvious reasons, these films have done a better job of capturing the popular imagination in China than Hollywood exports. What they haven’t yet done is replicate that success abroad. China may soon be the world’s biggest market, but it’s still only one market.

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