2 posts tagged “beijing”
In the winter of 2003, Microsoft held a contest to collect videos on innovation from the college students all around the world. The grand prize is a free trip to Brazil and US$5000 for the team, and the deadline is May 1st, 2004. (You can see a Windows logo at the end the opening animation. ^_^ )
My friend Martin forwarded the contest page to me, and without hesitating, we joined in. After several months' preparing, writing, filming, and editing, we finished and uploaded it to Microsoft's website on the last day of April, 2004.
What happened then? A big surprise. On May 1st, one Microsoft technical guy sent an email to me and told me that, the .rar file cannot be extracted correctly. And what's more, it was too late to upload it again.
Though the dream of a free trip to Brazil has never come true, we are still proud of this video. It was made by some guys who didn't major in film in the campus days.
Fortunately, half a year later, we won a grand prize for this Video in a contest sponsored by Intel. The award was a Sony laptop and some coolest digital stuffs back to the days.
And you know what, the biggest 'surprise' during the days we made this video was that, the pretty American girl in the video, Jessica Davis, had been a rhythmic gymnast and 1996 Olympian. When Martin and I invited her to join our project, we only knew that she's a foreign student in the university to study Chinese.
Ok, I have to stop my 'verbal pollution' right now. Please enjoy the video, folks.
What would you suppose to see when opening an envelope with a familiar trademark on the front? A well-printed promoting paperback for the Spring Festival shopping season? Maybe. A fancy invitation to the company's cocktail party? Possibly. But for most Chinese reporters, no matter on whose press conference they got a commercial envelope, it always equals to a Hongbao (Red Package in Mandarine), the most important source of their afterhours income.
How much money has been enclosed by the PR persons? No legible standards. But the amount depends on the scale of the company who hold the press conference, essentiality of the product or project which will be released, status of the speechmaker who attends the conference, and sometimes, type of the media which the reporter is serving for - as you know, a Hollywood Paparazzi, a Silicon Valley Reporter and a Wall Street Journalist are always treated as three totally different careers.
Based on these inexplicable factors, the amount of money in Red Packages ranges from 200 to 500 yuan (USD 25.00 - 62.50), and the average is 300 yuan. It seems not a big deal. But if a reporter keeps the pace of attending more than 20 press conferences per month, the situation will be dramaticly changed. The ordinary monthly salary for a newcome reporter in Beijing is no more than 3000 yuan, but a familiar face on the press conference would earn from the companies 2 to 3 times much as they get paid by the media.
The most interesting story about Red Packages I've heard is about an intern reporter from a national daily newspaper who threw two envelopes she received on a press conference directly to a trash can, unaware of what else could have been put into them besides the boring company backgrounds. When she discovered the truth soon after coming back to office and chitchated with her colleagues, she rushed back for the gold immediatly.
Nowadays, Red-Package reports almost fills every newspaper in mainland China. I don't know how the PR agency build relationships with reporters in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and the western countries. But in The Hospital, a Taiwan TV series aired in the autumn 2006, the surgeon played by Leon Dai asked his assistant to "prepare some little gifts for our reporter friends".
Maybe it's the best way to push reporters to copy and paste the PR releases on the newspapers, however, for the reporters who work for the newspapers that don't allow any kind of news release or so-called "soft advertisement" being published, receiving a Red Package would turn out to be a beginning of nightmares. The phone calls, emails, instant messages and instand messages from PR persons to remind you of the article will badly mess your work and daily life.
In the first days of every Chinese lunar year, aged people always hand Red Packages to their grandsons and granddaughters and make some wishes for them like "learn harder and get better grade for the future". When the reporters receive Red Packages from the PR persons, they would probably see a sentence "work harder and make more money for the company" on the meaningful smiling faces.