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China's pledge to stop respecting American IP-- and in particular copyright for hollywood movies-- is possibly the only silver lining of this tarrif business. The american entertainment industry is a juggernaut, but that comes at the cost of making sanitized slop consumable by the maximum possible audience. On the liberal end of the table, no one is willing to make movies that really push the boundaries of sex and culture-norm violation (gay people holding hands is the tamest shit ever), and on the conservative end of the table we similarly don't have anyone willing to push the boundaries of violence and jingoism. Plus, completely giving up on IP law is the first step in actually re-industrializing the united states. The whole point of IP law is to create monopolies, and monopolies are intrinsically inefficient-- so the western world's respect for IP law is a massive albatross around our neck. In a world without IP law the only thing we lose is the class of parasitic middlemen that can make a living on the bullshit legal fiction that ideas are an asset.
That's going to be the case for mainstream entertainment pretty much no matter what by definition of being "mainstream entertainment". They're not aiming to be that challenging, they're aiming to appeal to mass markets. Mainstream entertainment isn't going to stop being slop if China stops watching because the average American is still a slop consumer to begin with, yet alone the below average Americans that still have money to spend on the Netflix subscriptions and theater tickets. If anything a lot of modern mainstream media is arguably better compared to the slop of Dance Moms and Real Housewives and Kardashians and Honey BooBoo and shitty reality television from just a decade or two ago.
You want stuff that pushes boundaries you go to the smaller films that actually try to find niche audiences, not the Marvel Movies or Nostalgic Cash-in Remake Of Children's Franchise.
I'd certainly agree we go too far with respecting IP and copyright laws, like Mickey should definitely have been in the public domain way earlier than he was. But if you don't have any protection from copycats then that seems like an issue too. Why spend resources creating new things, especially the risky boundary pushing stuff you wish for, if people can just use any successful thing you make without permission, or at the very least compensation?
Without any protections it seems like success will be defined even more by name recognition and marketing skills rather than genuine creative talent.
Also if you've ever consumed standard Chinese entertainment products they're hardly immune from slop creation.
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