China Daily

Livestream­s offer web celebs life dreams

- Erik Nilsson Second Thoughts Contact the writer at erik_nilsson@chinadaily.com.cn

I hurled skulls and axes at towers. They exploded. Boom! Bang! Blam! Within three minutes, 20,000 people were watching.

Viewers sent me several missiles. One even gave me a plane.

Only later did I learn the rockets are worth 100 yuan ($14.50), and a plane is 500 yuan.

They also fielded questions and shot live comments, called danmu, or “bullet words”, in Chinese.

“Do you like Wuhan’s food?” (I do.)

“Do you speak Wuhan dialect?” (I don’t.)

“The foreign guy’s Chinese is perfect!” (It isn’t.) “Very exciting!” (It was.) It was my first experience livestream­ing.

I was hosting a documentar­y in Hubei’s provincial capital, Wuhan, and was visiting the headquarte­rs of Douyu, one of the country’s largest livestream­ing sites.

I joined a show hosted by a young woman who plays video games all day, while viewers send her money in the form of virtual gifts. That’s her job. Seriously. (It’s my childhood dream come true.)

Douyu is a giant in livestream­ed gaming but has also branched out to feature shows in which people, for instance, cook, apply makeup and go shopping.

The company, like the industry,is young in every sense.

Employees average age is 24. So, the sector they lead was in its infancy when they were in high school.

Even the headquarte­rs’ layout reflects youthful vitality.

Meetings are held while rocking in swings wrapped with fake vines that dangle from the ceiling, or over foosball or pool tables.

There’s a virtual-reality console for staffers who want to take a break from gaming for fans on PCs for profit to instead game in VR with colleagues for fun.

This approach to work may be unconventi­onal — but it’s working.

Tencent purchased a 20 percent stake in the company last summer for $226 million.

Indeed, the emergent sector is roaring forward.

Livestream­ing celebritie­s — that is, figures whose sudden fame comes entirely from their shows — earned 58 billion yuan last year. That’s 14 billion yuan more than the box office in 2015, China Business Network reports.

As of June, the China Internet Network Informatio­n Center estimates that the country’s livestream­ing app users surpassed 325 million.

Last year, a platform was founded every three days on average, internet research company iResearch reports.

But such brisk developmen­t has sired growing pains.

Authoritie­s shutdown thousands of accounts for inappropri­ate content last year.

The Beijing Cyberspace Administra­tion investigat­ed three livestream­ing sites — toutiao.com, huoshanzhi­bo.com and huajiao.com — this month. Some publishers had streamed illegal content, including pornograph­y, and may face criminal charges.

Internet regulators have said Apple is next in their sights. Law enforcemen­t recently met with the company. And the cyberspace administra­tion, the Beijing Public Security Bureau and the Beijing Cultural Market Administra­tive Law Enforcemen­t Team announced plans to jointly summon Apple representa­tives soon.

Of course, any disruptive technology with soaring growth will experience turbulence between birth and maturity. The ungainline­ss of adolescenc­e will pass.

And while there are bad apples, most streams simply show people doing mundane things such as homework, makeup and shopping.

And, sometimes, throwing exploding skulls and axes at towers.

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