Are China’s TV dramas obsessed with beauty? An industry regulator thinks so
China's National Radio and Television Administration is pushing for changes in TV drama production, urging streaming platforms and production companies to prioritize quality storytelling and acting skills over actors' physical appearance and popularity metrics. The call for "healthy aesthetics" was issued during a conference on Thursday, attended by major streaming services like iQIYI, Tencent Video, and Youku, along with production companies such as Daylight Entertainment and Huace TV.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedChina's National Radio and Television Administration is pushing for changes in TV drama production, urging streaming platforms and production companies to prioritize quality storytelling and acting skills over actors' physical appearance and popularity metrics. The call for "healthy aesthetics" was issued during a conference on Thursday, attended by major streaming services like iQIYI, Tencent Video, and Youku, along with production companies such as Daylight Entertainment and Huace TV. The regulator criticized the industry's "appearance-first" standards and reliance on "traffic-driven popularity," advocating for a shift towards content that values substance over superficial beauty. This initiative aims to address what the regulator perceives as "undesirable creative tendencies" within the Chinese TV drama industry.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedStreamers iQIYI, Mango TV, Tencent Video and Youku attended the conference.
Greater emphasis should be placed on acting skills and the quality of productions.
Efforts should be made to avoid valuing physical beauty above everything else.
The National Radio and Television Administration's drama department held a conference on “healthy aesthetics”.
China's TV drama regulators are targeting beauty-obsessed and traffic-driven programming.