Global Times: Super Japanese fan of Bing Dwen Dwen talks to designer amid mascot mania overseas
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BEIJING, Feb. 10, 2022 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
"I am so excited!" The super Japanese fan of Bing Dwen Dwen, the panda-shaped
mascot of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games, Gido Tsujioka, got a special
gift from Cao Xue, head of the Beijing 2022 mascot design team, a cartoon of
himself and Bing Dwen Dwen during his online talk with Cao on Tuesday.
For the past week, Tsujioka, an announcer from Japan's NTV, has become a hit on
Chinese social media for his love of Bing Dwen Dwen and earned himself a new
name "Gido Dwen Dwen" after a sequence of videos of Tsujioka went viral on
Chinese social media, which showed how Tsujioka, during live news, "showed off"
his collection of Bing Dwen Dwen badges, met Bing Dwen Dwen and excitedly
promoted Bing Dwen Dwen to the Japanese audience.
Having a conversation with Bing Dwen Dwen's designer is one of Tsujioka's
wishes, he said in an interview with the Global Times last week. And with the
coordination of the Global Times, his wish came true on Tuesday.
During the conversation, Cao unveiled many details on how Bing Dwen Dwen had
been designed, including that it is from the image of a panda cub and how they
kept confidentiality during designing.
He said that Bing Dwen Dwen is a panda cub inside an ice shell stylized as a
sports helmet, making the animal appear more athletic. The idea of a series of
colored floating lines around its head resembling tracks on an ice rink came
from the National Speed Skating Oval, known as the "Ice Ribbon."
Also, resembling an astronaut in a space suit, Bing Dwen Dwen is designed to be
a winter sports expert coming from the future, representing a perfect blend of
winter sports and modern technology. The ice shell also leaves space for
various future designs.
Having the opportunity to learn how Bing Dwen Dwen had been created made
Tsujioka excited and during the conversation, he was amazed by stories behind
the cute mascot and asked many questions.
In response to whether other animals had been taken into consideration when
designing the mascot, Cao said that the team had tried a Siberian tiger, elk
and other animals but finally chose a panda as it has earned love globally. And
to make the image of Bing Dwen Dwen cuter, they made the eyes, nose and mouth
more centralized.
To exchange details of the design and maintain confidentiality, Cao and his
team flew back and forth between Guangzhou and Beijing 21 times in seven
months.
"We designers are not athletes, but by joining the designing of the mascot, we
felt the spirit of an athlete!"
At the end of the online conversation with Cao, Tsujioka asked Cao whether he
can draw a cartoon with him and Bing Dwen Dwen when it is convenient. Without
any hesitation, Cao agreed and finished the drawing on site. In minutes, the
image of Tsujioka appeared with a big smile on his face and holding Bing Dwen
Dwen in his hand and bearing excitement.
"Tsujioka said he was touched by Bing Dwen Dwen, and we are touched by his love
for Bing Dwen Dwen… this is also what we want to convey by designing Bing Dwen
Dwen - to share love and happiness and the spirit of the Olympics with more
people," Cao told the Global Times after his talk with Tsujioka. Seeing
Tsujioka and so many people like his design of Bing Dwen Dwen makes him feel
happy and excited.
Sales of Bing Dwen Dwen have surged not only in China but overseas. For
example, on a Japanese second-hand trading website, Bing Dwen Dwens have either
been marked up or sold out.
In some of Beijing's shopping areas, hundreds of people lined up for four to
five hours in the cold just to get the panda-featuring mascot souvenirs, and
sales of the clothes that appeared at the opening ceremony also surged.
At 1 pm on Sunday, a 300-meter line was moving slowly in front of a licensed
flagship merchandise store on Wangfujing pedestrian street in Beijing to buy
souvenirs, particularly the mascot. Some people even brought chairs for the
long line.
"I have been waiting in line for nearly four hours and I came for Bing Dwen
Dwen," a shopper told the Global Times, adding that she came to buy the
souvenirs to celebrate the first gold medal won by Team China in short track
speedskating on Saturday.
"I think people want to get souvenirs and other items for the Winter Olympic
Games, and I'm here to buy for my wife's relatives in Shanghai," a foreign
national waiting on line told the Global Times.
"We've been told that there's a big variety of things, and I think the most
popular one may be the mascot Bing Dwen Dwen, and the one for the Paralympic
Games (Shuey Rhon Rhon) as well," he said.
According to the flagship store on Saturday, daily sales of Beijing 2022
merchandise hit a record high of nearly 3 million yuan ($470,000) on Friday,
the day of the opening ceremony. Amid robust sales and long lines, the store
implemented restrictions on the number of purchases by individual consumers and
encouraged consumers to avoid peak hours.
Bing Dwen Dwen has topped Chinese social media after the opening ceremony. As
of 5 pm on Sunday, the topic "Bing Dwen Dwen" had attracted 2.15 billion views
on Sina Weibo.
Among all the hot searches across China during the Spring Festival holidays on
JD.com, a major e-commerce platform, searches for Bing Dwen Dwen accounted for
90 percent, the company told the Global Times on Sunday. More than 10 million
users had searched for the mascot on the platform.
Responding to hot demand for the mascot, Zhao Weidong, a spokesman for the
Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee, told a press conference on Sunday that
officials are coordinating with relevant parties to increase the supply of Bing
Dwen Dwen items, and the tight supply of the souvenirs came as manufacturing
plants remained shut for the week-long Spring Festival holidays.
Nantong Jinfenghuang Crafts Toy Manufacturing Co, based in East China's Jiangsu
Province, one of the three producers of mascot souvenirs, said there is no
stock in the plant and the company will resume production starting from
Tuesday, media reports said.
"Shoppers' enthusiasm for mascot souvenirs surpassed that in 2008. I have never
seen a mascot toy that was out of stock," Zhang Qing, CEO of Key Solution
Sports Co, a consulting firm for the sports industry in China, told the Global
Times.
The Beijing 2022 event came during the Spring Festival holidays, when Chinese
people tend to send gifts and buy new clothes and that provided an opportunity
for the marketing of Olympic merchandise, Zhang noted.
Take the Beijing 2008 Olympic Games as an example, Olympic-related products
generated revenue of $160 million, the Chengdu Economic Daily reported.
Shanxi Securities estimated the revenue of licensed souvenir products alone
will surpass 2.5 billion yuan during the Beijing 2022 Games.
In addition to mascot souvenirs, down jackets and tiger-shaped hats and shoes
worn by attendees at the opening ceremony have also gained popularity in China.
The Lunar New Year is the Year of the Tiger.
Chinese sportswear brand Anta saw its down jacket sales up 203 percent from
Friday night to Saturday noon compared with the same period last year on
JD.com.
An Anta down jacket worn by International Olympic Committee President Thomas
Bach at the opening ceremony also gained widespread popularity on JD.com, with
growing inquiries, according to customer service representatives from the
platform.
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202202/1251850.shtml
Source: Global Times
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