Chinese culture has a long history. As a treasure, the idioms carry rich connotations and the wisdom of the ancients, showing us vivid and vivid pictures of life. From "one porridge and one meal", we can taste the simplicity and truth of life; in "living and working in peace and contentment", we can feel people's yearning and pursuit of a better life; in "chess, calligraphy and painting", we can appreciate the leisure and leisure of elegance. "The fireworks on earth are the most touching of the hearts of ordinary people." Today, let us enter the third issue of "Idioms Exploring China". In the life outlined by the idioms, we will find a wisp of fireworks on earth and seek a peaceful and peaceful life.
1. Appreciation between the elite and the masses:
Feel the wonderful fate of life and idioms in the details
Idioms are highly concise, and this characteristic destined to be a civilization born in fireworks. The idioms mentioned in the third episode of "Idioms Exploring China" cover multiple aspects such as "clothing", "makeup", "diet", "opera", and "medicine". These seemingly fine corners are pieced together into life and constitute an important part of the idiom world.
In the program, Gu Jinling, a junior high school student from Beijing, vividly showed the "idioms in dance" in his graceful dance posture.
Ye Xiao and Huang Yuehan from the West Lake Women's Patrol vividly described "idioms in the West Lake".
Academician Wang Wei even revealed the lipstick production method from 3,500 years ago to us on the spot.
The "vulgar" in the fine life and the "elegance" of idiom culture have found a wonderful fate at this moment, complementing each other on the stage, bringing us an aesthetic feast. The audience can also appreciate the mystery of idioms in a relaxed atmosphere, and feel the spiritual pulse of Chinese civilization in the fusion of history and reality.
2. Fireworks in the world:
Savor the taste of life in opera and food
Life should focus on the present, and yearn for poetry and the distance. In the ancient world, "food, clothing, housing and transportation" is the reality of the present, while opera is the extremely precious "poetry and distance" in daily life. The third episode of "Idioms Exploring China" creatively added elements of opera and food on the basis of maintaining the previous program sessions. The interpretation of the Peking Opera "Sanchakou" (excerpt) allows us to see the accurate description of the character dress and martial arts movements in opera by idioms; simple ingredients such as winter melon, scallops, beef tongues, and even the most common steamed buns all perfectly interpret the profound connotation of "eating without getting tired of fine food and fine meat"; "smooth sailing", "one word and nine tripods", "returning the jade to Zhao" and other "idioms" are the perfect fusion of people's hope for life and the idioms. The fireworks in the idioms are more flavorful, and they also make the program collide with a different kind of brilliance.
3. Integration of digital intelligence:
Technology and art realize two-way rush
Idioms are an exploration of the charm of language, a trace of cultural roots, and a spiritual journey across time and space. "Idioms Exploring China" actively embraces new technologies, and uses AI technology to restore villages and houses that belong to that era in the story of "Meng's Mother Three Movement", and cooperates with the real-life role to tell the story of Meng's Mother Three Movement, so that familiar stories can be presented to the audience in a new form.
In the subsequent stories of "Hanging the pot to save the world", "Dong Feng Huanxie", and "Tiger guarding the apricot forest", we use AI to generate a fully virtual sitcom. In just a few minutes of sitcom, we saw Meng's mother's sincere love for her son, and also felt the kindness of Fei Changfang and Dong Feng's doctors. We encountered a virtual and reality, cold and hot encounter in the program. This is not only a feast of idiom culture, but also a profound experience of the warmth and depth of Chinese traditional culture.
Food, rice, oil, salt, sauce, vinegar and tea, the fireworks on earth are as bright as flowers. In ordinary times day after day, ordinary life scenes weave the colorful idiom culture, build our warm memories of past years, and build a cultural bridge connecting ancient and modern times. "Idioms Exploring China" third issue "Fireworks on the World" sincerely invites you to chew the taste of the world in your idioms.
"Idioms Exploring China" 6 episodes broadcast
February 7 (the tenth day of the first lunar month) to February 12 (the fifteenth day of the first lunar month)
CCTV-1 17:20
February 8 (the eleventh day of the first lunar month) to February 13 (the eleventh day of the first lunar month)
CCTV-10 20:30