[Interviewer: Can money get you everything?]
[Link: Absolutely.]
[Interviewer: Even a healthy body?]
[Link: I'm stronger than the world boxing champion.]
[Interviewer: And the top women?]
[Link: To them, I'm the sun. They compete just to bask in my light.]
[Interviewer: And true love?]
[Link: …Enough. This is Hollywood. You're asking me about true love? Get him out of here.]
In 1978, Xu Jinyan, a government-sponsored student studying abroad, was robbed as soon as he got off the plane.
After being knocked unconscious, he was taken to the hospital by ambulance and owed a lot of money.
In order to pay off his debts, Xu Jinyan published "The Pursuit of Happyness", "Basic Instinct", "The Shawshank Redemption", "Schindler's List", "Harry Potter" and "The English Patient" one by one. In the blink of an eye, he became the most sought-after and famous writer in America.
After The Pursuit of Happyness, Basic Instinct, The Shawshank Redemption and Schindler's List were acquired by Hollywood for sky-high screenwriting fees.
Classic movies such as Once Upon a Time in America, Forrest Gump, The Truman Show, Home Alone, Titanic, etc. have been brought to the big screen of this world in advance.
When One Hundred Years of Solitude was published, Xu Jinyan looked back and found that he was actually hailed as the last great American writer.
No system + no space + daily life
An ordinary Korean entertainment novel, with ambiguity, friendship, family affection, and love!
The beaches of America are full of blonde sweethearts.
Traveling to the parallel universe of America in 1992, it's an entertainment desert. There's no Lord of the Rings, no Terminator.
Zhou Qingshan started his business by plagiarizing literature and built his business empire.
In 1998, the protagonist stormed through Hollywood with the most insane business model on the internet. From Oscar-winning actress Charlize Theron to Latin diva Shakira, all the beauties of Hollywood were gathered. Watch how the protagonist made his mark in Hollywood.
The protagonist travels back in time and becomes the heir to a video store driven bankrupt by Blockbuster. His father is crushed to death by capital, his executives are leaving en masse, and the bank is barging in to collect debts. Faced with a store full of unsold tapes, he launches an unlimited free rental plan, which is met with widespread online ridicule. Three months later, when the Nasdaq skyrockets and the protagonist uses the tens of millions he's reaped from the stock market to launch a social platform for moviegoers, the Blockbuster president shouts on television, "This is industry suicide!"
When everyone thought the protagonist was just going to be the next Netflix, he turned around and bought a bankrupt studio, bet on newcomer Christopher Nolan at the Edinburgh Film Festival, and created a 10,000-fold return with the pseudo-documentary "The Blair Witch Project." The Wall Street Journal published a photo of the protagonist holding the "Harry Potter" copyright on its front page, saying: "This madman has bought the entire future of Hollywood!"
From the streaming revolution to IP monopoly, from being blocked by the six major film studios to being forced to beg for cooperation on their knees. When the Oscars announced the protagonist's name, those who once mocked him as a "video store kid" now trembled and shouted out that name: the new godfather of Hollywood capital.