Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - All crosstalk teahouses in Tianjin are not allowed to show videos, claiming to protect crosstalk. Do you agree?

All crosstalk teahouses in Tianjin are not allowed to show videos, claiming to protect crosstalk. Do you agree?

Not all Tianjin crosstalk teahouses are not allowed to record, which mainly depends on the negotiation between the venue and the actors.

In earlier years, video recording was not allowed. One is the traditional atmosphere of teahouse crosstalk. Teahouse crosstalk is an extremely small entertainment activity, relying on the audience to go back and forth. They buy tickets to listen to jokes because they can't be heard on TV and radio tapes. If people record them and copy them for sale, these viewers will easily lose.

Second, I am afraid that my peers will "lick the leaves", that is, steal your works and splice them into their own paragraphs. If the thief's acting skills are better than yours, your creation will be in vain.

If you argue with the other party, the other party has a lot of fans, then you will be called "Mr. X is hot in my house."

In fact, the creator is aware of copyright, which is a very important thing and the source of maintaining the creator's motivation. Only by insisting on originality can the whole industry have a future. If you are speculators who plagiarize from small books and assemble and disassemble them after returning to China, then these speculators are particularly good at marketing hype, and they can easily turn your labor achievements into his "originality". Then, when the real creators are suppressed by speculators and give up their creation completely, and speculators have nowhere to copy, then the industry really plays with eggs.

In addition, the overall cultural level of the cross talk industry is low, and few people can create it. At that time, Xu Deliang, the best writer of Deyun Society, was able to independently create jokes that were neither obscene nor immoral, but also funny. Such people are rare in the whole crosstalk industry. Now, most young actors tear down old jokes and add some new ones. Just creating such a broken bag can make those actors lose more than half their blood, not to mention giving up their lives in order to create a complete work. If you steal it, you'll kill them.

Now, not only Tenshindon Teahouse, but also Shang Yan of Deyun Society began to ban video recording last year, because Youku bought the video rights of Deyun Society's performance, so-called meal shooting and editing were taken off the internet, and small theaters will also start to ban video recording one after another. On the one hand, Youku bought the copyright from Deyun, and wanted to divert the network users to its own website, so it was forbidden to take photos and redistribute them. On the other hand, several major events happened, all because of video editing, so it was also an act of Deyun Society to protect itself.

To sum up, banning video recording is not a bad thing. The audience who used to eat and drink for nothing and felt particularly domineering should also adapt to the arrival of the era of full payment. Whether buying tickets to the teahouse to listen to crosstalk or paying members to idolize Youku, it is protecting crosstalk or protecting the interests of crosstalk actors.