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    China Daily Website

    National image lights up Times Square

    Updated: 2011-01-19 08:22
    By Chen Weihua in New York and Li Lianxing and Duan Yan in Beijing ( China Daily)

    Long-term vision

    Analysts in China have in the main responded positively to the Times Square billboard promo, as well as wider plans to promote a truer image of China abroad.

    "Advertising is a crucial platform to let people know about (a brand)," said Huang Shengmin, dean of China University of Communication's school of advertising. "This project is a milestone to signal that China is now open to embrace the world."

    National image lights up Times Square

    Launching the campaign to coincide with Hu's visit to the US was "a very smart choice", he said, adding: "It is difficult to evaluate what extent these commercials and the documentary will promote China's new image, but one thing is for sure: it's a long-term project."

    This is not the first time China has produced advertisements to air overseas. In 2009, the Ministry of Commerce made a 30-second short about Chinese companies working with foreign partners to produce quality products. That film was also broadcast on CNN.

    However, experts say the timing of the latest effort is vital, as it comes roughly just two months after US midterm candidates ran a series of "China-bashing" advertisements to push their agendas against their rivals and the White House administration.

    One of the campaigns featured a Chinese professor teaching a class of laughing students in a dystopian future in which China rules the global economy, while others simply accused political rivals of attempting to take US jobs to China.

    "It is important to promote China in the US, especially during a time when Chinese and Americans have a huge perception gap," said Niu Xinchun, a US studies specialist at China Institute of Contemporary International Relations.

    "Many Americans, for example, think China's rise is taking away US jobs, and there were lots of negative views about China during the midterms. So it's important for both sides to facilitate communication through mass media and among its peoples."

    Last week, the Pew Research Center published a study that found 20 percent of Americans see China as a global threat, while 22 percent feel the country is an adversary. Yet, the same research also showed that 58 percent believe it is "very important" to build stronger ties between China and the US.

    A survey of Chinese residents jointly conducted by China Daily and Horizon Research Consultancy Group, also published last week, revealed that the number who view Beijing's ties with Washington as "very important" has doubled in the past year, while most believe relations will remain stable or improve despite recent turbulence.

    "These commercials are pretty good and are catered to Western viewers and ideas," added Niu. "I think it's a good idea. It's time to improve (China's) image in the West."

    However, YuGuoming, vice-dean of Renmin University of China's school of journalism, said he feels the country would be better served by efforts to foster a culture of understanding, rather than simply relying on advertising campaigns.

    Yu suggested the first thing should be to help people overseas to understand that the Chinese people "are not monsters" by promoting shared values.

    Regarding the anti-Chinese midterm campaigns, he added: "US politicians using anti-China rhetoric to attract voters is nothing new. (Chinese people) shouldn't take these campaigns too seriously. Most politicians are rational in their dealings with China once they're elected, so we don't need to care too much about them playing political games during elections."

    View from the street

    Initial reactions to the "China Experience" display in Times Square and the CNN spots was mixed among tourists and New Yorkers on Monday.

    "It's a very good effort," said businessman J. Robert Burgoyne after watching the 30-second promo on television. However, he suggested the advertisement should be more entertaining.

    "My thoughts would be to definitely use footage of children, preferably Chinese and Western children doing something together, like dancing or (playing) sports," he said. "After the kids, I would use futuristic images, like the fast trains in China and the ultra-modern buildings."

    Lane Luangxay, a student from Binghamton in the state of New York, who was traveling with a classmate, said he felt the "China Experience" showed "how much China has progressed over the years".

    Meanwhile, Jay Ordan, a tourist from Atlanta, Georgia, enjoying a long weekend in the Big Apple, said the "photography is beautiful and presentation is very nice", but added that the commercial's message could be subtler.

    It suggests "the best of that and the best of everything else", he said. "If you tone down a little bit, everyone will get the point."

    Wang Ying in Shanghai contributed to this story.

     

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