Vloggers ride wave of interest in rural themes
Livestreamers help spread reach of e-commerce, intangible heritage and cultural diversions. Li Lei reports.
Rural-themed content is making waves across major Chinese short video apps such as Kuaishou, Douyin and Xiaohongshu.
A five-minute clip on Xiaohongshu showing butchered cattle bones being turned into delicate mahjong tiles by a farmer-craftsman using only homemade tools has garnered 83,000 likes and 2,500 comments.
An influencer from a rural part of Sichuan province has acquired tens of thousands of followers on multiple video streaming websites by vlogging her journeys between remote villages while carrying a giant bamboo basket. Her adventures — mostly ending with purchases of farm produce from elderly farmers at roadside vegetable markets — are usually full of heartwarming personal tales.
Popular culture has long favored stories about deeper-pocketed urbanites, while rural life was largely absent from films and television sitcoms until recently.
A 2019-21 survey by Endata, a data analysis company, showed that only about 5 percent of domestic TV sitcoms were based on rural themes during that period. But that was already an improvement following a gradual increase as part of a national campaign to curb rural poverty and revitalize the countryside over the past decade.