This was an unrestrained, incredibly lively dynasty, and everyone in the world loved peonies. He Weifang, whose childhood was Mu Dan, was born as the daughter of a merchant. Because of her frail health, she had no choice but to marry into a noble and meritorious family to sheer back luck and sickness — the Liu family. But life after marriage was unsatisyfing. Her husband's fickle nature and her stubbornness could not mix in the end, and finally, they decided to divorce. After leaving her husband's house, Mu Dan strived for independance, and set up a barren garden by herself. Using her unique technique of cultivating rare peonies, she created her own planting industry, and gained fame in the capital.
A show that gathers 33 male contestants from eight major domestic professional sports colleges and national and provincial teams. With an average age of 22, they not only have a tall figure and handsome complexion, but they also possess both ability and charm in sports.
The show takes the teenagers as the starting point, showing the audience an unprecedented road to sports competition. The Generation Z athletes will overcome all obstacles in the arena, and will also burst into brilliant energy with sweat, attitude, tenacity and competitive spirit of unyielding.
In 2008 and 2010, Hunan Satellite Television produced the Chinese version of 1 vs. 100, which has the same name as the Hong Kong version, called 以一敌百. The first season was aired between March 5 and July 31, 2008 and the second season was premiered on April 15, 2010 and ended on December 23, 2010. The host was Wang Han in season 1 and Ren Jun in season 2.
Closing in on 30 years of age, Qian Duo Duo is a workaholic and the youngest marketing director at her company. Just as she was about to be promoted to an even higher position, the job was taken by Xu Fei, a wealthy trainee from overseas. Having hit a bottleneck in her career and with her mother continuing to breathe down her neck to get married, Duo Duo is at a crossroad in her life. Should she continue to wait or settle for an ordinary marriage?
The X Factor: Ji Qing Chang Xiang was a Chinese version of the reality talent show The X Factor. It was broadcast on Liaoning Television in 2011 and 2012. The broadcasting rights in China were later purchased by Hunan Television as The X Factor: Zhongguo Zui Qiang Yin in 2013.
The first season debuted on 28 July 2011. Judges were Angie Chai Chih-ping, Aduo and Chen Yufan, and it was hosted by Da Zuo and Shao Wenjie. In the final live show held on 30 September 2011, the winner was Li Shangshang.
Palace II, also known as Gong II, Gong Suo Zhu Lian, and Palace: The Locked Beaded Curtain, is a Chinese television series written and produced by Yu Zheng and directed by Lee Wai-chu. Palace II is a sequel to the 2011 television series Palace. Filming for Palace II wrapped up on 13 October 2011, and the series was first broadcast on HBS on 20 January 2012 in mainland China. Yang Mi and Feng Shaofeng, both leading characters from Palace, makes brief cameo appearances in the first and last episodes.
The X Factor: Zhongguo Zui Qiang Yin is a Chinese version of the reality talent show The X Factor and it is broadcast on Hunan Television.
The first season debuted on April 19, 2013 and hosted by Zhu Dan and He Jiong. Eason Chan Yik-shun, Lo Ta-yu, Zheng Jun, Zhang Ziyi are the judges.
Ye Mo, the leader of the Cult of Eternal Paradise, who has terrorised the martial arts world for many years, is finally slain by a group of martial arts heroes. However, ten years later, the shadow of evil forces still lingers, and the seemingly peaceful martial arts world surges with dark undercurrents.
Originally a recluse, the morally ambiguous Tang Li Ci becomes involved in a murder case and is entangled in a deadly conspiracy aimed at destroying the martial arts community.
The Legend of Yang Guifei, also known as The Secret History of Concubine Yang, is a Chinese television series loosely based on the romance between Consort Yang Yuhuan and Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty. The series was directed by You Xiaogang and starred Yin Tao and Anthony Wong as the couple. It was first broadcast on Hunan Satellite TV from April to May 2010.
A Date With Luyu is a popular Chinese television talk show that airs on Phoenix Television. Because the show emulates the success and format of The Oprah Winfrey Show, its host and creator, Chen Luyu, has been called "China's Oprah". The show includes a studio audience of about 300. The show covers a wide range of issues: interviewees range from artists and musicians such as Li Yundi, business leaders such as Robin Li, diplomatic figures such as Gary Locke academics such as Prof Michael Dobson and sports figures such as Shane Battier. She is also willing to address controversial subjects.
It is noted that some interviews are conducted in English, with Chinese subtitles, as was the cases when Lu Yu interviewed Wentworth Miller, Nick Vujicic, and Hillary Clinton with Timothy Geithner. Audience members are required to understand English in these instances, because Lu Yu has warned about problems with interviews being done entirely in a single language, i.e. Mandarin Chinese
Luyu averages 140 million viewers per show
Blossoming Flowers also known as Super Flowers Girl was an annual national Chinese singing contest for female contestants, organized by Qinghai Satellite Television between 2010. It was generally described as the Qinghai version of Super Girl and becoming another popular entertainment shows in the country. The singing contest will have air its second season in March 2011.
Super Boy or Happy Boy was a Chinese singing contest for male contestants, organized by Hunan Satellite Television in 2007, as a spin-off of its popular "Super Girl" series. It's a talent show which aims at uncovering talented tomorrow new male stars.
Super Girl or Super Voice Girls was a Chinese singing contest for female contestants, organized by Hunan Satellite Television between 2004 and 2006. The show's official name was Mengniu Yoghurt Super Girl Contest until 2009 it was known as BBK Music Phone Super Girl Contest, after the company that sponsored the series. It was generally described as the unofficial mainland Chinese version of the global television franchise Pop Idol and became one the most popular entertainment shows in the country. Despite Super Girl's major popularity and success, the show was heavily criticised by Liu Zhongde, a member of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. He essentially claimed Super Girl was poison for the youth.
The program was relaunched in 2009. The Chinese title was changed to 快乐女声 though the English title remains unchanged. In 2011, the Chinese government banned Super Girl from airing, claiming the program to be too long. The State Administration of Radio, Film and Televisio