• 2 months ago
Women are at the forefront of China's increasingly vibrant wine scene, spurring innovation at every stage of the production process.
Transcript
00:00In East Helan Mountain, we have a saying that I can share with you.
00:08All the women in Ningxia are working and brewing wine.
00:14All the men are drinking with their leaders.
00:30In Ningxia, we have a saying that I can share with you.
00:34All the women in Ningxia are working and brewing wine.
00:38All the men in Ningxia are drinking with their leaders.
00:42In East Helan Mountain, we have a saying that I can share with you.
00:46All the women in Ningxia are working and brewing wine.
00:50All the men in Ningxia are drinking with their leaders.
00:54In East Helan Mountain, we have a saying that I can share with you.
00:58This is the yellow.
01:04And you can see it's nearly the color.
01:08You can see it's red.
01:11And then...
01:21In China, first of all,
01:24the modern wine industry started in 1980.
01:31At that time, the proportion of women in the industry was relatively small.
01:38Around 2000,
01:41there were a group of women who went abroad to study.
01:49After they finished their studies, they returned to China.
01:52At that time, the wine industry in China started to rise.
01:58The development was relatively fast.
02:01And the position or position
02:04provided more positions and positions for winemakers.
02:08Traditional and then really funky with the pink.
02:12Oh my goodness.
02:14This is very indicative of the new style.
02:23I think that the West, the wine industry is very much dominated by male
02:29because it's a traditional industry.
02:31It's passed from father to son in historical wineries.
02:35And even when people set up wineries,
02:37they're generally male and it's an expression of, you know,
02:41power and control and creating something.
02:44For China, wine is not a traditional industry.
02:48And it is a very safe sphere to open a company in if you're a woman.

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