Wei Xing — the founder of Chinese startup Pear Video (梨视频), which produces more than a thousand viral news clips a day — doesn’t fear rapid change.
In almost two decades in Chinese media, he’s moved from working at newspapers in Shanghai to setting up some of the most innovative digital media outlets in China: The Paper — which is overseen by Shanghai United Media Group, a conglomerate owned by the Chinese Communist Party, but has touched on some controversial topics — and its English-language sibling Sixth Tone.
Not content with working only on text-focused ventures, Wei launched Pear Video in 2016. With a cash injection of more than $15 million from China Media Capital and a reported Series A funding round of nearly $100 million, Pear now claims it’s China’s leading short news video platform, generating around 500 million daily views. (The publicly traded unit of People’s Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, was an early investor.) The platform isn’t profitable, but it’s starting to earn revenue through preroll ads and sponsored videos for brands.
Distributed through the platforms of Chinese tech giants Sina, Tencent, and Baidu (the latter two are also investors), Pear’s 1,500 daily videos attract not only young Chinese urbanites, but also some older and more rural residents. The company relies on a country-wide network of 30,000 videographers — none of whom are full-time journalists with Pear — based out of “every province, small city, and in the countryside.”
Below is a conversation with Wei Xing about how he adjusted to the technological revolution in China, how the editorial process at Pear works at such a scale, and how his news ventures try to survive in a tightly state-controlled media industry. The conversation has been lightly edited for clarity.
In 2014, we launched The Paper, a model that worked quite well. It gained a lot of influence at that time, when Xi Jinping was launching his anti-corruption campaign. We gave quite a lot of coverage to corruption cases, like the Ling Jihua one.
The foreign media was interested in some of The Paper’s reports. We thought: Why can’t we establish an English media outlet ourselves? That’s how we first had the original thoughts about Sixth Tone. But the English media is very strong, so we were thinking: How can we be different?
We decided to focus on the forgotten topics that happen in China. For us, it is easier to travel around China, and we didn’t want to be another China Daily, another NYT. We wanted to report about common people involved in uncommon stories.
Another reason is that before. I was always doing text mostly. I had never tried TV or video. I wanted to try something different. And the background was that China’s audience is changing — young people are using their smartphones more and more. So in 2016, I left Sixth Tone and built Pear Video from scratch during six months, with some colleagues from The Paper.
But we also find videos online. We monitor videos that are uploaded on social media. We have some people who check the content uploaded by citizens, and if we think it is interesting we will contact that person. In China, if you upload a video, according to the regulations, you have to put your ID, so we can trace that person back. But the offline channel is the main source of content.
Our videographers are not full-time journalists. Every day, we are recruiting new videographers, but they aren’t just anyone. We don’t think that would be reliable.
The second step is taken by our verifying team, which is made up of 20 people, each of whom must verify at least 25 videos a day in order to meet their production schedule. They do cross-checking with social media. They do interviews, call local governments, local witnesses. They monitor Weibo, WeChat. And we also use some AI basic tools to verify the news through an existing database.
But not all the videos need the same process. For example, if it’s breaking news, we will of course give it priority and deal with it first.
Our focus is not much on politics or macroeconomic topics, in the line of Sixth Tone. For two reasons: Most of these topics are not suitable to be covered by short-form news videos, because they are relatively boring. Not so many people want to watch them. And the second reason is that we are focused on the forgotten stories, the people stories, which are almost forgotten by the mainstream media.
In many cases, we are quicker than the traditional media.
Half an hour after last year’s earthquake, which happened around 9:30 p.m., we had the first video about it, because we had the videographer there. Three or four hours later, we had more than 100 videos about the earthquake. I don’t think traditional media could do it.
But it’s not only young people who like to watch videos — older people like it too. And not only the people who are living in Shanghai or Beijing, but also people who live in the countryside, because it is difficult for them to read a very long article.
Our main revenue comes from advertisements of two kinds. The first one is native ads, solutions for brands. We make the ads for them, and also we distribute the content for them. Another kind is just some very short advertisement previews before the video.
But we try to combine both things, like in our fact-checking system. I don’t think technology itself could resolve this; we still need to apply the classic journalism concepts to verify the content.
A version of this interview was first published in Splice Newsroom.