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If You Are The One: The Hottest TV Show in China
Posted on May 19th, 2010 4 commentsThe young man had a simple question: “Would you often come riding with me on my bike?” It’s the kind of line that worked for many suitors in China, the kingdom of bicycles, during its austere decades under Chairman Mao. But Ma Nuo (马诺), a Beijing model, seeks loftier transport and wealthier dates.
Even if a date went bad, “I’d rather cry in a BMW” was her giggling, withering rejection, watched by millions on China’s top-rated TV entertainment show. Material girls such as Ma, 22, have rocketed If You Are the One (Fei Cheng Wu Rao, Don’t Disturb If Not Sincere, 非诚勿扰 in Chinese) and its rival dating show, Take Me Out (wo men yue hui ba, 我们约会吧 in Chinese) to the summit of Chinese television fame.
The programs, which both first aired in January, have generated discussion about money worship among China’s younger generation. Publicity-generating scandals include allegations of fake contestants and nude photos, posted online, of one contestant Yan Fengjiao (闫凤娇), who says she was coerced.
They also highlight how a perpetual human struggle, finding the right mate, presses harder than ever in the world’s most populous nation.
Audiences have been intrigued by the guests’ outspoken remarks and the occasional arguments that break out.
Flashpoints include issues such as household chores, whether a wedded couple should live with the husband’s parents, if car and house ownership matters more than love, and whether or not a career should be sacrificed for love.
The 23-year-old male contestant Liu Yunchao (刘云超 ), claiming to be an “affluent second generation”, boasted about his 6 million yuan ($878,000) bank balance and three sports cars, but his wealth and arrogance was condemned and he was voted off the show. Liu later defended himself by saying he was being honest, while many of the girls were just being deceptive.
“The show is as dramatic as a TV soap opera,” says Liu Tingting, a married office worker in Beijing and regular viewer of the show.
“It reaches one climax after another every two or three minutes. It features a potpourri of hot topics such as mortgage slaves, the income gap between the rich and poor, and being single, which constantly prick people’s nerves.”
The shows’ popularity is easy to explain, says Tian Fanjiang, CEO of baihe.com, a matchmaking website. “There are 180 million single people in China,” Tian says. “They and their parents are all worried about the marriage problem.”
By the standards of the USA — which brought the world the hookups of The Bachelor and the smackdowns of Jersey Shore— China’s twice-weekly, hour-long hit shows can appear tame. For Chinese viewers, they have proved riveting, turning traditional matchmaking on its head and celebrating instant celebrity.
After more than 20 episodes of If You Are the One, Ma Yimi (马伊咪), 22, a music student, finally agreed to a date: a long-haired graffiti artist. The elegantly dressed Ma was as controversial, and popular, as Ma Nuo because she was cruel to male contestants and took so long to choose one.
Although dating programs have aired for almost two decades here, they didn’t look like this, where a glamorous and often intimidating lineup of 24 women can dismiss the male hopefuls, who appear singly, with the push of a button or a blunt critique of their appearance, attitude and accomplishments. If a man survives three rounds, he gets to choose his date.
“In the old shows, people just introduced themselves, and there was little mutual choice,” says Wang Gang, who produces If You Are the One for Jiangsu Satellite TV. Wang says his show offers confrontation, nerves and suspense. “Our style is new, and the mass audience has got bored of singing and dancing programs.”
That’s a not-so-subtle dig at the last big thing on Chinese television, Super Girl (chao ji nu cheng, 超级女声 in Chinese), the American Idol knockoff produced by Hunan Satellite TV, which also makes Take Me Out, licensed from British firm Fremantle.
“The Chinese family is unique in the world, as we have a one-child policy,” says Take Me Out producer Liu Lei, “but parents attach great importance to carrying on the family name, so marriage is a big issue.”
Liu insists that the money-worship of some contestants does not reflect mainstream Chinese society, but she concedes, “Many girls really love rich men.”
A wealthy catch
Matchmakers are rushing to cash in at matchmaking fairs and other events.
Fifteen thousand women applied for a chance to date a wealthy man at an event May 1 organized by matchmaking website jiayuan.com, says Zhang Guoyu, director of the company’s Southwest China branch. In June, 50 of them will meet the men who paid $14,650 for the service.
Most people misunderstand the rich, says Zhang, whose company supplies contestants to Take Me Out. “They may be very successful in business, but they are very lonely when they get home,” he says.
Money worshipers and their brash targets help draw viewers, but producer Wang nominates a modest contestant as his favorite for a stirring, Susan Boyle-like moment. Vocal teacher Lu Yuanlong (陆元龙) “is not good–looking,” Wang says. “Your belly is terrifying” was one contestant’s reaction.
(Vocal teacher Lu Yuanlong sings Nessun Dorma from Puccini’s opera Turandot at 4:32)All the women switched off their lights except the one who, unknown to her, Lu had selected. Then Lu took a microphone and brought the house down with a stunning operatic aria.
“They are a perfect couple and are still together,” Wang says.
No TV show can fully reflect social reality, says Yin Hong, a Chinese television scholar at Beijing’s Tsinghua Univeristy. He prefers If You Are the One because “It’s more controversial.” Why so popular? “China’s social environment is changing, as people dare to express their private life and love values in public,” he says.
3 responses to “If You Are The One: The Hottest TV Show in China”

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Fans of the popular dating show If You Are the One (Fei Cheng Wu Rao) will have noticed some big changes in the format when it aired last weekend.
Gone were the usual barbs from female contestants aimed at the men attempting to win their affection. There was also far less talk about people’s wealth and family background.
Instead, the hosts highlighted the contestants’ volunteer work and positive attitudes toward life and love. Producers at Jiangsu TV, which broadcasts the show by satellite, also introduced a counselor named Huang Han, a psychology professor at the provincial Party school, to give relationship advice.
Although a huge departure for a show known for its controversial and at times confrontational style, the changes came as little surprise following the notice last month from the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT) that banned “fake participants, morally provoking hosts and comments that allude to sex” in television dating shows.
The new rules sent shockwaves through the industry. Producers at Zhejiang TV even opted to cancel their matchmaking show, Run For Love (Wei Ai Xiang Qian Chong), which aired for the last time on June 15.
Since If You Are the One and Hunan TV’s Take Me Out (Wo Men Yuehui Ba) hit the airwaves in January this year, they have raked in fans by the millions and swept the prime-time ratings.The format is simple. In every episode of If You Are the One, a panel of 24 women “looking for love” grills a man on his life and aspirations. If a woman likes him, they get to go on a date. Although slightly different, each matchmaking show follows the same theme.
However, as many questions before the SARFT ban were about a man’s wealth and family background, contestants have been regularly dubbed “materialist gold diggers” by Chinese media commentators and netizens.
Ma Nuo, a 22-year-old Beijing model, was accused in the press of being “vicious” and “money-driven” after she said during one episode that she “would rather weep in a BMW” than take a romantic spin on the back of one contestant’s bicycle.
Of course, the controversy attracted only more viewers, leading to some raising concerns that television producers encourage, or even manufacture, such outlandish comments.
Fierce competition could also be a key factor fueling some of the outrageous on-screen behavior.
Although contestants see dating shows as a chance at instant fame (men only appear on If You Are the One for one episode but the women can be on the panel for weeks before they find a date), it is producers that are under the most pressure to attract all the attention they can get.
Along with domestic rivals, the fact that subtitled versions of popular Western dramas, reality shows and documentaries are available across the Internet and are particularly popular with young people means the battle for a share of the Chinese audience is intense.
To stay ahead, television chiefs have been learning from successful shows in the West. For example, Happy Girls (formerly Super Girls), a talent contest on Hunan TV, is a copy of American Idol. But with the format also came the sensationalism.
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Criminal lawyer in LA October 20th, 2010 at 16:26
Great blog!! You should start many more. I love all the info provided. I will stay tuned
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冯小刚新片《非诚勿扰2》葛优的求婚剧照曝光.

长城上夕阳下,葛优单膝跪地,手举钻戒,舒淇笑脸相迎。据悉,这场求婚戏剧组连续拍摄了两天,《非诚勿扰2》将于12月22日上映。
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RICK C. July 3rd, 2010 at 23:59
“I’d rather cry in a BMW than ride a bicycle while laughing,” Beijing fashion model Ma Nuo told a poor and unemployed bachelor who offered her a bicycle ride on the stage of China’s most popular reality dating TV show “If You Are the One” (Fecheng Wurao, 非诚勿扰).
“If You Are the One” is a Chinese television phenomenon, one of many popular matchmaking shows on which young people seek mates amid ribald jokes from the host and occasional racy comments from guests. Hunan Satellite TV started airing “Let’s Go on a Date” (Women Yuhui Ba, 我们约会吧), Zhejiang Satellite TV has “Go for Love” (Wei Ai Xiang Qian Chong, 为爱向前冲). Audiences loved all the titillation, until last month when the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT), China’s media watchdog, issued the guidelines amid concern over racy dating programmes that have taken the nation by storm, forbidding TV stations from fabricating guests on their programmes and promoting bad moral values. Participants in matchmaking shows on television will now have to undergo stricter screening procedures and be cautious before mouthing venturous remarks.

A couple made in heaven… if the price is right
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Ding Luo July 7th, 2010 at 09:43