logo
Opinion - Why Hollywood is afraid of Chinese bad guys

Opinion - Why Hollywood is afraid of Chinese bad guys

Yahoo06-05-2025

Watching Hollywood films and TV shows, you might notice something missing: Chinese bad guys.
Even though China is widely acknowledged as the U.S.'s main strategic rival, we rarely see Chinese villains in our contemporary stories. Instead, we are treated to the same old nefarious Russians, Islamic terrorists, trans-national criminals and occasionally a dodgy character from a smaller country.
The reason for this is straightforward: China is a market that Hollywood covets.
In 2019, for example, the China Film Administration and box office analytics firms like EntGroup and Box Office Mojo estimated that Hollywood generated $11 billion in box office revenue, with big-budget films like 'Avengers: Endgame' and 'The Lion King' leading the way.
Those numbers slumped during the COVID-19 pandemic, but they rebounded to $7.5 billion in 2022, the last year somewhat accurate numbers are available.
The pandemic, however, is not the only reason revenue is down for Hollywood fare in China. A native film industry has developed, which the Chinese government has been careful to nurture. And the growing Chinese middle class has shown a growing preference for local stories.
Hollywood's kowtowing to China has certainly not gone unnoticed.
In October 2019, the second episode of the 23rd season of the cartoon series, South Park, titled 'Band in China' appeared and parodied this issue. The episode shows Chinese officials on the set of a movie censoring the production in real time as a real (and hilarious) send-up of Chinese censorship abroad.
The episode got positive reviews in the U.S., but it created an uproar in China, where South Park was subsequently banned.
Even though Hollywood censors itself due to Chinese pressure, China feels no pressure to avoid the portrayal of Americans as villains in its growing film industry. In films like 'The Founding of a Republic,' 'The Great National Revival' or 'Cliff Walkers,' Americans are portrayed as nefarious forces in Chinese history.
In films with more contemporary storylines like 'Operation Red Sea,' where Americans are shown as terrorists, or 'Skyfire,' where Westerners are depicted as nefarious and consumed by greed, the Chinese show a willingness not seen in Hollywood to more accurately represent their country's current view of the world.
The hypocrisy of China effectively censoring American entertainment, while skewering Americans on its own entertainment, is consistent with the other elements of Chinese policy. For example, every major American social media company is banned in China, but efforts to do so with TikTok in the U.S. have elicited outrage in China.
Lamenting the lack of Chinese villains in entertainment doesn't mean I'm suggesting that we need cartoonish Chinese bad guys crudely depicted for low-brow entertainment or jingoism. But art should depict the world as it is. Although blockbuster movies are not necessarily intended to educate, they are a platform for our culture to understand its adversaries.
For instance, the Bond thriller 'From Russia with Love' played a small role in America's understanding of the struggle we were engaged in with the Soviet Union.
Censoring our entertainment out of misplaced deference to China leaves our society less knowledgeable about the challenges we face from that country — one of the main reasons China has surely enjoyed the leverage it has held on Hollywood.
Many Americans know on some level that we are engaged in a struggle with China for global primacy that will play out over many decades. But I would estimate that the portion of society that understands the broad outlines of that struggle is much lower than during the Cold War, when Hollywood produced plenty of content portraying that struggle.
The storylines for fascinating entertainment are certainly there. Over the last several decades, the Chinese have been engaged in an unprecedented campaign of industrial espionage, which I have seen clearly in my work in corporate security, and which would make for riveting and complex thrillers.
The Chinese have been engaged in high-stakes brinksmanship against American allies in the South China Sea and have supported Houthi efforts to target American military assets. Chinese support for Russia's war against Ukraine, it's establishment of illegal 'police stations' in U.S. cities to spy and stifle dissidents, as well as its Orwellian repression of its Uyghur population are just some of the robust storylines that could be mined for riveting entertainment while also educating Americans about our leading adversary.
It's worth noting that if you talk to Hollywood executives, they quickly acknowledge their position with China. John Sipher, a former senior CIA official and now CEO of Spycraft Entertainment, has heard similar things for years.
'We are encouraged by producers to find other bad guys. I haven't yet encountered anyone willing to consider exploring characters from Chinese intelligence or paramilitary groups,' he told me in an interview.
These producers and executives will point out that their concerns aren't limited to losing the lucrative Chinese market. There have been large amounts of Chinese investments in producing content in recent years, and Hollywood executives are reluctant to lose such valuable funding.
It's also because Hollywood remembers that damaging and embarrassing 2014 hack of Sony Pictures Entertainment by the North Koreans, who were unhappy about how the movie 'The Interview' portrayed their country and its leader. The fallout from that incident lingers in Hollywood, and no studio wants to be the target of a major cyberattack by the Chinese, who have strong capabilities in this area.
But with the Trump tariffs and trade war with China seemingly in full swing, China has announced it will curtail the import of American films. On Sunday, Trump announced 100 percent tariffs on foreign movies on his social media network, saying Hollywood is dying a 'very fast death.'
With the Chinese market now off-limits for Hollywood, will the industry find its voice when it comes to depicting the Chinese?
I suspect not, at least not right away. The Chinese could make a deal with the U.S. on tariffs and Hollywood could go back to salivating over the Chinese market and remain reluctant to develop accurate and complex stories depicting Chinese characters.
It's worth wondering if Hollywood can still accurately depict America as the good guys. With an administration that has abandoned democratic allies in favor of repressive, dictatorial states, the rule of law being undermined as Trump consolidates power and nativist and illiberal policies leading to people with no criminal record being snatched off American streets and sent to foreign gulags, it's getting harder to say.
Jeremy Hurewitz was a journalist based in China and is the author of ' Sell Like a Spy .' He is the Head of Interfor Academy .
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

People Are Suggesting Nicknames For Donald Trump To Call Elon Musk, And Some Of These Are REALLY Good
People Are Suggesting Nicknames For Donald Trump To Call Elon Musk, And Some Of These Are REALLY Good

Yahoo

time25 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

People Are Suggesting Nicknames For Donald Trump To Call Elon Musk, And Some Of These Are REALLY Good

Donald Trump has been known to give nicknames to the people he hates. There's Cocaine Mitch. Who could forget Tiny D? I wish he stuck with Meatball Ron, TBH. And my personal favorite, Mini Mike Bloomberg. Considering their breakup, it's fair to assume Trump will give Elon a nickname of his own, and The Lincoln Project asked people to suggest some possible nicknames. Here are some of the best ones: 1."Musk-Rat" 2."Space Baby" 3."Wee-lon" Related: This Senator's Clap Back Fully Gagged An MSNBC Anchor, And The Clip Is Going Viral 4."Eloon" 5."Space Karen" 6."Crazy Elon" 7."Elon Dust" 8."Squealing Elon" Related: This Republican Lawmaker's Embarrassing Lack Of Knowledge Of The Term "Intersex" Went Viral After He Proposed An Amendment To Cut LGBTQ+ Funding 9."Egomaniac Elon" 10."Crybaby Elon" 11."Tesla Twerp" 12."Musky Musk and the Funky Nuts" 13."Elon Bust" 14."The Martian" 15."Rocket Boy" 16."Sleaz-on" 17."Testicla" 18."Medicore Musk" 19."Elien" 20."Erratic Elon" lastly, "Manic Musk" Thoughts? Feelings? Suggestions of your own? Also in In the News: People Can't Believe This "Disgusting" Donald Trump Jr. Post About Joe Biden's Cancer Diagnosis Is Real Also in In the News: Republicans Are Calling Tim Walz "Tampon Tim," And The Backlash From Women Is Too Good Not To Share Also in In the News: "We Don't Import Food": 31 Americans Who Are Just So, So Confused About Tariffs And US Trade

YouTube overtakes streaming rivals as the go-to for TV and movies
YouTube overtakes streaming rivals as the go-to for TV and movies

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

YouTube overtakes streaming rivals as the go-to for TV and movies

Gone are the days when YouTube was just for catching up on vlogs or diving into late-night rabbit holes. Today, the platform is staking its claim in TV and film. Why you're catching the 'ick' so easily, according to science Why AI Is Making 1:1 Meetings Irrelevant Where are the wildfires in Canada? Maps pinpoint the location of fires and air-quality threats from smoke According to a new survey conducted by Looper Insights between April 16 and 25, 66% of consumers discover TV or film content via YouTube. For 61%, it's already part of their regular streaming habits, and for 34%, it's a main source for TV and film content, as reported by Media Play News. This shift isn't surprising. In April, the Google-owned platform captured a record 12.4% share of all TV viewing. And it's not just rival streamers who should be concerned. For three consecutive months, YouTube has ranked as the No. 1 distributor of television content, according to Nielsen. Media executives are taking notice. Among the 65 surveyed, 84% view YouTube as a viable platform for launching long-form content, and 30% are actively considering it for upcoming releases. In Q1 2025, more Americans watched YouTube on TV screens than on mobile devices—a first. Meeting audiences in the living room, media companies have begun uploading premium content directly to the platform. Earlier this year, Warner Bros. quietly released more than 30 full-length films on YouTube, free to watch. Yet as YouTube continues its rise, creators face critical decisions. Some, like Ms Rachel, have signed licensing deals with Netflix. MrBeast (aka Jimmy Donaldson), YouTube's most-subscribed creator, brought Beast Games to the small screen via Prime Video. Still, many fans would rather their favorite YouTubers stay where they started. More than half (54%) of respondents said YouTubers feel more authentic and better suited to the platform that launched their careers. Meanwhile, nearly three-quarters (74%) of executives noted that creator-led shows often underperform on platforms like Netflix and Prime, citing poor audience migration and an overreliance on follower counts. The good news: The YouTube takeover is already in full swing—so creators may not need to go anywhere at all. This post originally appeared at to get the Fast Company newsletter:

Naive American tourist hilariously falls for ‘genius' London restaurant prank: ‘Talk about a mis-steak'
Naive American tourist hilariously falls for ‘genius' London restaurant prank: ‘Talk about a mis-steak'

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Naive American tourist hilariously falls for ‘genius' London restaurant prank: ‘Talk about a mis-steak'

This American tourist got served — in more ways than one. Liam Nelson, a New York comedian in London for a gig, thought he'd sniffed out a hidden culinary standout when he stumbled across glowing online reviews for Angus Steakhouse in Leicester Square. But what did he actually find? A side of steak with a supersized helping of British sarcasm. 'I went on Reddit, every single response was Angus Steakhouse in Leicester Square,' Nelson said in a June 1 TikTok video, captioned 'Talk about a mis-steak…,' which quickly racked up over 127,000 views. 'I thought maybe this is a little hole-in-the-wall area next to all these shops, like a secret hidden gem.' Turns out, he was the latest victim of a long-running British prank — London Redditors have been 'love bombing' tourist-trap chains like Angus with five-star reviews to keep real foodies away from the city's actual best eateries, as reported by The Daily Mail. 'I found an article about how London Reddit has tried to send tourists to Angus Steakhouse to preserve the good steakhouses for themselves — genius,' he said in his nearly six-minute clip. 'I have never seen Reddit all agree on a restaurant before,' Nelson added. 'And they all had these glowing reviews … Some voice in the back of my head was saying 'this is wrong, this is not normal' and I ignored it.' Not exactly a red flag he picked up on — until it was too late. The joint, he soon discovered, was actually 'loud,' 'chaotic' and came with a 'giant neon sign.' A New York funnyman thought he found a sizzling hidden gem in London — until a juicy twist at Angus Steakhouse left a bad taste. WD Stock Photos – Then came the gray slab of steak. 'It was bad. I tried the creamed spinach — worse than frozen somehow. London Reddit, that is one for you, zero for me.' Fellow TikTokkers had a field day with the viral video. 'As a London Redditor who actively takes part in this joke; I'm not sorry,' one user gloated beneath Nelson's clip. Another added, 'Hahaha I'm glad it actually got someone,' while someone else summed it up with, 'WE GOT ONE.' Others offered redemption suggestions in the comments section: 'Go Flat Iron, it's in Covent Garden, affordable decent steak,' and 'Next time you're in London, get a steak at the Guinea Grill Pub in Mayfair! Incredible steakhouse.' Turns out, Nelson got played — locals have been flooding tourist-trap chains like Angus with five-star reviews in a cheeky bid to steer foodies far from the real gems. Tiktok/liamnelsoncomedy The whole beefy debacle comes amid rising tension between real reviews and fake raves — a trend The Post has covered before. Earlier this year, a Florida restaurant tried — and failed — to sue a customer over a one-star review. Irene Eng, a prolific Yelp and TripAdvisor reviewer, was slapped with a defamation lawsuit by Hales Blackbrick, a Chinese eatery in Tampa, after calling its spare ribs 'dry' and its coffee 'lukewarm — a Cardinal sin!!' The suit was tossed in February, with the judge siding with Eng's First Amendment rights. 'I'm 1,000% for freedom of speech — you can say whatever you want,' chef Richard Hales later told the Tampa Bay Times. 'We're not thin-skinned, we're just humans.' Still, the great steak debate rages on. And for now, Nelson's just hoping his next meal won't be medium-rare — or medium-roasted by the internet.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store