Shengui Tonic Wine (lost first Chinese television advertisement; 1979): Difference between revisions
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(Almost certain now that the images are storyboards, and not fan recreations, according to the context surrounding the drawings. Fan recreations may exist in Chinese internet circles.) |
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==Status== | ==Status== | ||
The ad is completely lost | The ad is completely lost, with only storyboards remaining. Home video recording technology in 1979 China was extremely rare, possibly even nonexistent, so likely the only hope of the ad resurfacing is it residing in STV's modern-day archives. | ||
==Videos== | ==Videos== | ||
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== Images == | == Images == | ||
<gallery mode=packed heights= | <gallery mode="packed" heights="250"> | ||
File:Shengui wine print ad.jpg|A possible print ad for Shengui tonic wine, very unlikely to be a screenshot from the advertisement. | File:Shengui wine print ad.jpg|A possible print ad for Shengui tonic wine, very unlikely to be a screenshot from the advertisement. | ||
File:U9846731713127000688fm21gp0.jpg|A storyboard | File:U9846731713127000688fm21gp0.jpg|A storyboard of the commercial. Depicts the grandfather happily receiving the tonic wine. | ||
File:U41737158172085239475fm21gp0.jpg|Another | File:U41737158172085239475fm21gp0.jpg|Another portion of the storyboard. Depicts the family giving the wine to the grandfather. | ||
File:Shengui2.jpg|Another Shengui storyboard | File:Shengui2.jpg|Another Shengui storyboard of the family entering the store, lower quality. | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Revision as of 07:07, 10 June 2023
Shengui Tonic Wine (参桂养容酒, Can1 Gui4 Yang3 Rong2 Jiu3 in Hanyu Pinyin) is a Chinese tonic wine notable for being the subject of the first television advertisement ever aired on mainland Chinese television.
Background
Advertising after the 1949 Communist Revolution, besides propaganda, was nonexistent, though not officially banned[1]. Matters would change in the late 1970s when for the first time in two decades, advertisements in China began to become normalized and widespread.
This was due to the death of Mao Zedong which led to the end of the Cultural Revolution and a partial, gradual restoration of a market economy under the new paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, who took office in 1978. These reforms led to, for the first time, commercial television advertising, and the first television advertisement in Chinese history would air on 28 January 1979 on Shanghai Television. [2]
A driving force in the government relenting and allowing commercial advertising on television was the sheer burden of running so many television stations to cover the large country on tight post-Cultural Revolution budgets. Commercialization was, therefore, considered a necessary evil.
Premise
The advertisement was simple and primitive, especially compared to modern advertising standards in China and abroad. Sources and eyewitnesses agree that the advertisement lasted about 90 seconds and featured a girl and her parents going into a shop to buy a bottle of tonic wine as a gift to her grandfather, with not much else in the way of information on the ad itself.
Aftermath
The ad cast almost immediate ripples over Chinese media, with the commercial proving so controversial that it was almost pulled off the air after only thirty seconds.[3] The ad aired during the Chinese New Year, and was seen by a larger than normal audience. Many thought it was a short news story, as the concept of ads was completely foreign to those not alive before the Revolution, and confusion was rife. Nevertheless, the ad was a success, and the Shanghainese public went out in droves to purchase the wine they saw on television, despite the high price point.
Almost immediately, other Chinese television stations followed suit and began airing their own advertisements, the advertisement for Shengui wine opening the metaphorical floodgates and leading to the mostly commercial nature of modern Chinese television.
Status
The ad is completely lost, with only storyboards remaining. Home video recording technology in 1979 China was extremely rare, possibly even nonexistent, so likely the only hope of the ad resurfacing is it residing in STV's modern-day archives.