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cover of episode Trump's potential blockbuster tariffs on foreign films

Trump's potential blockbuster tariffs on foreign films

2025/5/5
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Marketplace Morning Report

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L
Leanna Byrne
M
Mariko Oi
O
Olivia Hutchinson
P
Peter Rayburn
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Leanna Byrne: 我报道了特朗普计划对外国电影征收100%的关税,业内人士认为这将导致票价上涨,并可能引发贸易报复。这是一个重大的贸易争端升级。 Mariko Oi: 特朗普的100%关税提案对电影产业的影响巨大,特别是对日本、韩国、澳大利亚和新西兰等国的电影产业。关税的具体实施方式和影响范围尚不明确,这给许多国家带来了不确定性。许多国家通过提供税收优惠等方式吸引电影制作,如果特朗普的关税政策实施,这些国家的电影产业将面临巨大挑战。特朗普将外国电影制作视为国家安全威胁,并试图以此来振兴美国电影产业。 Olivia Hutchinson: 我介绍了Skype的背景和停运原因。Skype曾经是全球最受欢迎的应用程序之一,但由于竞争加剧以及微软Teams平台的崛起,最终停止运营。 Peter Rayburn: 我讨论了Skype的声音设计,我们力求营造一种人性化的沟通感觉,而不是冰冷的机器感。 Leanna Byrne: 特朗普政府计划对外国电影征收100%的关税,这将对全球电影产业产生重大影响。这一举动被视为贸易保护主义的体现,可能引发其他国家的报复性措施。 Mariko Oi: 这一政策的不确定性给许多国家带来了挑战。具体来说,关税的实施细节尚不明确,例如,它是否适用于在美国拍摄但由外国公司制作的电影?这给依赖电影产业的国家带来了巨大的不确定性,并可能导致投资减少和就业机会流失。此外,许多国家为了吸引电影制作,提供了税收优惠等政策,特朗普的关税政策将直接影响这些政策的有效性。 Olivia Hutchinson: Skype的停运反映了科技行业竞争的激烈程度。尽管Skype曾经风靡一时,但它最终未能抵挡住新兴竞争对手的冲击。这提醒我们,即使是曾经的巨头,也需要不断创新和适应市场变化才能生存。 Peter Rayburn: Skype的声音设计是一个成功的案例,它体现了如何通过声音设计来提升用户体验。我们通过精心设计的声音,创造了一种友好、易于使用的沟通氛围,这对于一个成功的通信平台至关重要。

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Trump says he's going to slap blockbuster tariffs on foreign films. Good morning. This is the Marketplace Morning Report. And we're live from the BBC World Service. I'm Leanna Byrne. Thanks for tuning in.

Donald Trump is turning up the tariff dial and this time he's got his sights set on the silver screen. On Truth Social last night, the president threatened a 100% levy on any movie produced outside the US. Industry groups say the plan could push ticket prices higher and spark trade retaliation. The BBC's Mariko Oi is following this one. Hello. Hello. So I presume international reaction hasn't been so positive about this one.

No, not really. But also, a lot of people are wondering how this is going to work. Obviously, 100% tariffs is a huge number. And if it's implemented in a way that some people are assuming, it could be quite significant, especially for movie industries in Japan, South Korea, also Australia, New Zealand, because we're talking about

that have been made outside of the United States. So we don't know whether this applies to American production companies making movies but filming abroad in places like Australia and New Zealand, or is this also going to apply to Japanese, South Korean, Chinese movies that are trying to enter Hollywood as well? So we've heard from governments of Australia and New Zealand basically speaking out for their own filming industries while

Well, there has been quite a lot of local media coverage, as you can imagine, about this announcement. But what we don't know is how this is going to work, because obviously the movie industry is not exactly like cars being imported into the United States. So how these tariffs would work, we still don't know the details. Yeah, there is a lot of unknowns. But the thing is, a lot of countries around the world have promoted themselves as destinations to come and film. Hungary, for example, my homeland, Ireland as well, give tax.

breaks. I mean, that's quite difficult, isn't it, for a lot of those countries if this does come in? Yes, absolutely. And I think that's why we've heard from various governments already in response to Mr. Trump's announcement. I mean, the language that Mr. Trump used is also very strongest

Well, he's basically calling it a national security threat, that there has been this effort to attract movies, studios to make those films outside of the United States. And he's kind of treating it as a very, very serious threat that Mr. Trump talked about even before returning to the White House. You know, if you remember, he appointed those three film stars as the ambassadors for Hollywood, trying to promote and making it great again, in his words. Of course,

America's filming industry is still huge. You know, its revenue is still huge. But the numbers do suggest that film and production have actually gone down in the last couple of years. And that's what Mr. Trump is trying to address. OK, the BBC's Mariko Oi, thank you so much for joining us on Marketplace. Thank you. Now let's do the numbers.

Here's a number for you on that last story. According to movie industry research firm ProdPro, US production spending totaled $14.5 billion last year, down by 26% since 2022. Meanwhile, oil prices dropped sharply as OPEC Plus unexpectedly boosted production.

And in the Maldives and the Indian Ocean, a multi-billion dollar deal aims to turn the tourism paradise into a major financial hub. The government signed an $8.8 billion development agreement with a Dubai-based firm backed by Qatari Investment.

as part of its drive to diversify beyond tourism and stabilise its economy. Now, Skype was once one of the world's most popular applications, but it will officially stop operating today, although Skype for Business will continue. The BBC's Olivia Hutchinson has been looking into the platform's background.

Founded in 2003 by Swedish and Danish developers, Skype quickly disrupted the landline industry with its free audio and video calls, making the company a household name boasting hundreds of millions of users.

When Microsoft bought the platform in 2011 for $8.5 billion, the service had around 150 million monthly users. But by 2020, that number had fallen to roughly 23 million, despite a brief resurgence during the pandemic.

So why the demise? It's all about competition and the fact that Microsoft's other video calling platform Teams has been going from strength to strength in recent years. So after more than 20 years Skype is no more. Microsoft says that existing users will be able to log into the Teams app and have their message history, group chats and contacts all automatically available without having to create another account or they can choose to export their data instead.

Olivia Hutchinson with that report. Now we heard some of the very recognisable sounds of Skype there and the BBC's Davina Gupta has been speaking to music composer Peter Rayburn about how they came up with it all. The greeting makes a kind of which is an attempt at a creature to say the word Skype who can't quite talk. It's just an opening of a door or opening of a kind of communication portal sound. Again, friendly, a

awake and inviting we kind of created a whole set of language for for skype it was everything from like error tones if the calls were being dropped a lot in the in the beginning so we had to create a an error tone that felt not like a kind of failure but like an attempt at getting it right if you talk about the ring what is it can you sing it to me do you remember it

The ting, ting, ting, the one that and then it sort of poops. Everything was made up from these source materials. It was just this kind of like it was like a jam. How many instrumental layers went into creating that? At least 12 for it to not feel like a electronic instrument.

Try to focus on the fact that this is people who are communicating and not machines. But you had to use some digital sounds, isn't it? Yeah, I mean, you have to use digital plugins and ways of blending things, but there's no synthetic sounds in there. That was Peter Rayburn speaking to Davina Gupta. And that's it from the Marketplace Morning Report from the BBC World Service. I'm Leanna Byrne. Have a great day. Thanks for listening.

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