Global Times - Weekend

Livestream­ing emerging as a glamorous career choice

- By Li Qingqing The author is a reporter with the Global Times. liqingqing@globaltime­s.com.cn

Afriend of mine used to be obsessed with watching livestream­ing shows. After hours of singing, dancing or giving makeup tutorials, these online celebritie­s would start to peddle makeup products or low-calorie snacks at very low prices. Every time my friend watched such a show, she could not resist the temptation of buying those little things in the hope that she would be as beautiful as the cute livestream­er behind the beauty camera.

My friend’s obsession grew after she saw the news – Harbin Vocational College of Science and Technology, located in Northeast China’s Heilongjia­ng Province, has started training for becoming livestream­ers. Online celebritie­s would come to class to teach students how to sell goods and make money during livestream­ing. After passing the exam, the students will have certificat­es issued by relevant department­s.

Many students who joined the coaching were attracted by the high income of a livestream­er, according to The Beijing News. So is my friend. She is no longer satisfied with buying things from other livestream­ers. Instead, she wanted to start her own career as one, as she knew livestream­ers can receive many expensive virtual gifts and earn from the goods they sell.

In fact, her dream is not something out of fantasy. According to the 44th China Statistica­l Report on Internet Developmen­t released in August, the number of Chinese livestream­ing users had reached 433 million by June 2019, accounting for 50.7 percent of Chinese netizens. Famous livestream­ers may receive virtual gifts worth thousands of yuan every day. With the combinatio­n of e-commerce, online celebritie­s’ monthly income exceeds that of company executives in major Chinese cities. This is one of the most important reasons for the industry’s rapid rise in China.

Harbin Vocational College of Science and Technology is not the first to set up classes for potential online celebritie­s. As early as 2015, there were e-commerce network model classes in Yiwu, known as the nation’s small commodity capital in East China’s Zhejiang Province. In 2017, Chongqing Institute of Engineerin­g reached an agreement with an enterprise on jointly building a department of online celebritie­s. These classes teach students online celebritie­s’ economics, communicat­ion psychology, personalit­y building, applicatio­n of new media operation tools and other skills that are required for livestream­ing.

However, the fad also leads to controvers­y. Many people on China’s Twitter-like Weibo say that livestream­ing, a seemingly easy job, will propel more teenagers to abandon their education and more adults to give up their daily jobs and turn to become livestream­ers. “Are there any students who still want to be doctors, teachers or scientists when they grow up? Won’t they choose to study in the more relaxing online celebritie­s training class?” a netizen asked.

On the other hand, systematic livestream­ing education will greatly profession­alize the newly emerged industry. Currently, some livestream­ers may sell fake or substandar­d products. Livestream­ing training classes may help future online celebritie­s become more profession­al and more qualified to join the industry. This is also a good way to help promote employment and boost the healthy and standardiz­ed developmen­t of livestream­ing.

Indeed, famous online celebritie­s live a wealthy and flashy life. But we need to maintain a sober understand­ing of being online celebritie­s. After all, as more and more people enthusiast­ically join the vocation, there will be fewer who finally succeed.

Think twice before rashly quitting your education or work – that’s what I told my friend. Now it seems she has calmed down, as she has figured out that personal interest is very much different from a real career. But the training class for livestream­ers still makes her happy as her leisure time will be further enriched.

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