In the field of Chinese**, every moment on the stage is a confrontation between art and reality.
However, in these imperfect moments, we observe that audiences have completely different perceptions and reactions to different types of artists. What does this mean?
In the Chinese-speaking world, the mistakes of some artists on stage are considered cute flaws, and even become special memories between them and their fans.
For example, Jacky Cheung forgot the lyrics, Wu Bai asked the audience to sing on his behalf, and Jay Chou improvised to revise the lyrics, all of which are manifestations of the audience's tolerance and understanding. However, why did the audience show such a strong reaction to ***'s lip-syncing?
This is not just about lip-syncing, but on a deeper level, it involves deep trust and communication between artists and audiences. ** has always won hearts with its sincere and touching image, but this time the controversy has undoubtedly stirred up strong expectations from the audience for their integrity. The artist's attitude and handling techniques greatly influenced the audience's reaction.
In my opinion, this event reveals the audience's sincere yearning for the artist. People are more inclined to forgive artists who have the courage to face and admit their mistakes, rather than those who choose to hide the truth and are unwilling to admit their mistakes. The central question is not whether they are lip-syncing, but how they are dealing with the issue.
In today's entertainment industry, audiences' expectations have gone beyond superficial glamour, and they are pursuing a deeper level of humanity and sincerity. For artists, it's not their performance on stage that matters, it's their sincerity and straightforwardness that really matters.
The winter gods of hand-slapping**
On this stage full of diversity, only sincere emotions can become the strongest protection for artists.