|
BEIJING, May 16 (Xinhuanet) -- There was a survey that showed a high
percentage of young Americans got their daily dose of news from late-night talk
shows such as "Late Night with David Letterman." This was quite a shock to media
experts.
China does not have an equivalent television show that offers
satirized versions of news stories. But a growing population is getting their
daily screenful of jokes from their cellular phones. As a matter of fact, the
screen of the cellphone, small as it is, is turning into a battleground where
some of China's emerging creative talents duke it out to attract public
attention, reap a nice profit, and, in the process, "make 'em laugh" as Donald
O'Connor would sing.
¡¡¡¡Fifth medium
Pundits call short message services (SMS) "the fifth medium," presumably
after print, radio, television and the Internet.
Cheng Mei, a professor of journalism at Renmin University of China, calls
it an exaggeration, but there is no denying that this is fast becoming a unique
yet vital tool for communication.
A survey in February revealed that an average SMS user sends 14.9 messages
and receives 15.5 every week.
In aggregate, as many as 150-200 billion short messages were sent last year
throughout the nation, making up about half of the world's total. This was up
from 1 billion in 2000, 18.9 billion in 2001 and 90 billion in 2002.
The exponential growth was further accentuated by special occasions, such
as the annual Spring Festival and last year's SARS (severe acute respiratory
syndromes) outbreak, when a torrent of greetings jammed the airwaves, causing
intermittent deadlocks.
For example, China Mobile alone sent 7.8 billion messages during the big
holiday from Chinese New Year eve to the seventh day when the holiday ended.
With the average charge of 10 cents for each message sent, last year
telecom and Internet firms racked up a neat 15-20 billion yuan (US$1.8-2.4
billion) in total revenue. Since much of the cost is sunk in fixed assets, this
has added a great deal to their bottom lines.
There is no sign that the trend is slowing down. There are about 200
million cellphone users and 80 million Internet users in the country. About 20
per cent of the SMS business comes from the Internet. For portal sites like
Sina, Sohu and Netease, about one-third of their revenue is generated from this
business.
So, what are SMS users getting through their forever changing but always
trendy cellphones - besides news snippets, weather reports, stock quotes and all
the "How are you" salutations and remembrances?
To be precise, 51 per cent of respondents cited jokes as the most common
SMS content in a recent survey. Not bad at all as a separate category. Compare
it with greetings at 66 per cent, random chatting at 60 per cent and talking
serious business at 59 per cent.
Young people are crazy about SMS communication. As many as 95 per cent of
this demographic group prefer it to any other means. That makes thumb-tip
pressing almost a fashion statement. An elderly gentleman sighs: "I've only
recently learned to surf the Net and use email, and the young crowd have already
moved to a new platform."
¡¡¡¡SMS scribes
The abundance of SMS output is leading to a lot of redundancy. So many
people forward their favourite messages by group mail that one may receive the
same messages several times. "I got some 200 New Year greetings, many of them
identical," recalls a Fudan University student surnamed Zeng.
"I got a sore thumb from deleting all of them. In the end, Happy New Year
sounded totally cliched and insincere."
Li, a 20-something who works at a multinational firm in Shanghai, offers
his explanation: "People are busier nowadays.
The scope of communication is broadening, yet our time is getting more
precious. That's why we need expressions that are fast, short yet with a
personal touch."
That is where commercial production of SMS comes into play. Like Hallmark
Cards, Inc, some telecom and Internet firms in China have hired professional
writers to churn out more polished messages that fit a variety of moods and
occasions.
It is estimated that Beijing has over 100 short message writers, the
highest number of wordsmiths for this particular purpose, and Shanghai has about
half of that.
Some of them are full-time employees, but most are "special contributors"
who are paid by how much they can write and how popular their messages turn out
to be.
For example, anyone can join Sohu's short message scribe club. After paying
2.5 yuan, or 30 US cents, to register, one gets a personal code and can post his
or her contributions.
Whenever a message is "bought," the writer gets a quarter of the proceeds,
presumably 2.5 RMB cents on average. Multiply 2.5 cents by thousands and you've
got a pretty well-paid job going.
Some companies have designed very complicated pay scales, with the writer's
take varying according to different brackets of user popularity for each
message. Overall, media experts put the monthly income of a full-time short
message writer at 4,000-5,000 yuan (US$483-604). Some star writers earn much
more because their compositions tend to attract the highest number of customers.
Well-paid job
Su Renyu works for Guangzhou-based Tom.com as a short message scribbler.
His biggest dream is to produce messages that are so catchy that they are turned
into slogans for the masses.
The 28-year-old has worked on his craft for two years. Some of his earlier
pieces have become sort of classics, such as this lottery winning notice:
"Congratulations on winning our grand prize. Please pick it up at a bank near
you. And please don't forget to bring your gun and your mask."
Su says the main strengths required in a short message writer are a strong
sense of humour and an acute awareness of trends. In terms of writing style,
brevity is not only the soul of wit, but an absolute must.
The maximum number of Chinese characters for one message is 70. "Actually
60 is the optimum length," said Su. Readers have little patience for thumbing
down several screens before they get to the punchline.
This is like asking Dave Barry to write in haiku style.
While many professional short message writers complain about the lack of
copyright protection, as their creations are often plagiarized by other firms,
Su is quite philosophical about it.
"A good message is a product of collective wisdom. It goes through constant
refining when it whizzes from one person to another. There can be infinite
variations."
In a mad pursuit of originality, some people have resorted to adult-themed
witticisms.
Since this kind of content is not allowed in any other medium, the
cellphone screen, with its private viewing, has become an ideal platform to get
provocative and even "down and dirty."
The real threat, however, is scams shrouded in award notices and other
enticements. Harassment and commercial spamming are other kinds of things that
people hate about SMS.
"SMS should bring benefit to the society, not harm it," comments Guan
Xinping, professor of sociology at Nankai University. "It should respect an
individual's privacy.
So, a short message writer must have a sense of responsibility when
producing messages for public consumption." There are media reports of laws and
regulations in the drafting stage that will set some standards for this
profession.
But people also caution that the unique creativity in the area must not be
stifled in the process.
Quick. We need an equivalent of "Don't throw out the baby with the bath
water." |