产品展示
  • 奔驰smart车身贴 拉花 改装专用车贴纸 整车贴 汽车贴纸 包邮
  • 适用日产轩逸逍客骐达阳光骊威天籁汽车前门后门音响喇叭无损升级
  • 保养配件专用于09-21款福特猛禽f150空调格空气格机油格汽车保养
  • 长城哈弗h9后雾灯总成 哈佛H9 后保险杠灯 后左右尾灯汽车配件
  • 保养配件专用于09-21款福特猛禽f150空调格空气格机油格汽车保养
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

新闻中心

North Korea accuses South Korean entertainment industry of helping Netflix

2024-05-21 00:27:01      点击:260
A scene from Netflix's smash hit series,<strong></strong> 'Squid Game' / Courtesy of Netflix
A scene from Netflix's smash hit series, "Squid Game" / Courtesy of Netflix

North Korea accused the South Korean entertainment industry on Sunday of working in favor of U.S. companies, such as Netflix, through "unfair" deals.

The North's propaganda outlet, Meari, said South Korean entertainment firms have turned to Netflix to improve their margins amid a business slump caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

It did not mention the South Korean-made hit Netflix series "Squid Game," but the article follows recent controversy in South Korea over the way the U.S. streaming giant makes deals.

"Numerous South Korean works, including films and TV series, are being shown on Netflix and earning billions of dollars, but the South Korean film production companies only receive about 10 percent of their production cost," Meari said, describing the arrangement as an "unfair contract."

"They are only filling the stomachs of American companies," it said.

The outlet also claimed that a growing number of South Koreans are upset that their cultural works are being reduced to money-making machines for U.S. firms.

Critics say that Netflix deals are designed so that the company pays for a work's production, overseas marketing and dubbing, but offers no incentives to producers in the event that the work becomes a hit.

North Korean propaganda outlets have recently reported on "Squid Game" in a negative light, focusing on the violence and capitalist society depicted in the series. (Yonhap)


Seoul to attend UN Security Council meeting on NK's ICBM launch: source
Biden makes little headway with Pyongyang, still willing to make progress: experts