
Return to 1998 and Become the Best Actor
About This Novel
In his previous life, he worked as a bit player in Hollywood for more than 20 years. He was reborn in 1998. With the help of two series of novels, he changed his destiny, and then returned to China to become the best actor.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 17d ago
When the boss writes a book
Please check the information! In 2000, Shahe Town was an industrial zone, and there was no so-called No. 1 Villa group. It would be around 2010, and you, with hundreds of millions of dollars in capital, would return to China just to become an actor? Do you know the prices during that period? Almost 2 billion RMB in cash, brother, how much was 2 billion in cash in 2000? Even many companies with tens of billions now may not necessarily have that much cash. With such a big capital, if you start a company and invest in the film and television industry, you will be a big boss, and you will be an actor when you come back? Do you have to start as a young actor?
Quite funny,
The protagonist took tens of thousands of dollars from his mother to go abroad in his previous life, and returned to China twice in more than 20 years. In other words, he met his parents twice in more than 20 years, and then he was reborn and made money. The first thing he did was to find a young director to connect with him and let him become an actor. Later, the filming was completed. When it came to the Chinese New Year, he and a girl celebrated the Chinese New Year together. Ever since returning to China, filming, and then the Chinese New Year, I had never thought that the protagonist had parents, right? It wasn't until Chapter 40 that I called home. Oh my god, can such a white-eyed wolf be the protagonist? I've looked at over a hundred catalogs and I haven't been back since I returned to China. It's amazing.
I thought it was a good Chinese entertainment drama
It turned out to be poisoning! Bullshit
The poison is gone
I really wanted to smash my phone when I saw it, what the hell.
The writing is so-so. First of all, except for private holdings and the like, basically your shares cannot be hidden. There is also the name of the investment company, which is too immersive. Also, the name Marvel has long been associated with Marvel Comics. The logic of the book was wrong at the beginning. It should be that I wrote 2 novels, each of which sold about 10 million copies, with a royalty of 6-10 points. You can earn about 20 to 30 million US dollars, but how can you sell hundreds of millions of copies! Then you spent all your money buying Apple stock to avoid taxes. Then you first authorize the first film of your novel Twilight to be made into a movie and get cash + a share of the global box office. How can you authorize the rest at once in the future? Then you can use the royalties from these movies to invest in Tencent and Baidu around 2001. Alibaba has basically no hope, and there is no need to set up a family fund for investment. You can directly establish a wholly-owned Capital Today company in Hong Kong, and then invest in sub-risks. Then the rest develops normally. But in domestic film companies, you have given away too much. You must retain at least 35% of the shares after the listing, otherwise there is no point in continuing.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 17d ago
When the boss writes a book
Please check the information! In 2000, Shahe Town was an industrial zone, and there was no so-called No. 1 Villa group. It would be around 2010, and you, with hundreds of millions of dollars in capital, would return to China just to become an actor? Do you know the prices during that period? Almost 2 billion RMB in cash, brother, how much was 2 billion in cash in 2000? Even many companies with tens of billions now may not necessarily have that much cash. With such a big capital, if you start a company and invest in the film and television industry, you will be a big boss, and you will be an actor when you come back? Do you have to start as a young actor?
Quite funny,
The protagonist took tens of thousands of dollars from his mother to go abroad in his previous life, and returned to China twice in more than 20 years. In other words, he met his parents twice in more than 20 years, and then he was reborn and made money. The first thing he did was to find a young director to connect with him and let him become an actor. Later, the filming was completed. When it came to the Chinese New Year, he and a girl celebrated the Chinese New Year together. Ever since returning to China, filming, and then the Chinese New Year, I had never thought that the protagonist had parents, right? It wasn't until Chapter 40 that I called home. Oh my god, can such a white-eyed wolf be the protagonist? I've looked at over a hundred catalogs and I haven't been back since I returned to China. It's amazing.
I thought it was a good Chinese entertainment drama
It turned out to be poisoning! Bullshit
The poison is gone
I really wanted to smash my phone when I saw it, what the hell.
The writing is so-so. First of all, except for private holdings and the like, basically your shares cannot be hidden. There is also the name of the investment company, which is too immersive. Also, the name Marvel has long been associated with Marvel Comics. The logic of the book was wrong at the beginning. It should be that I wrote 2 novels, each of which sold about 10 million copies, with a royalty of 6-10 points. You can earn about 20 to 30 million US dollars, but how can you sell hundreds of millions of copies! Then you spent all your money buying Apple stock to avoid taxes. Then you first authorize the first film of your novel Twilight to be made into a movie and get cash + a share of the global box office. How can you authorize the rest at once in the future? Then you can use the royalties from these movies to invest in Tencent and Baidu around 2001. Alibaba has basically no hope, and there is no need to set up a family fund for investment. You can directly establish a wholly-owned Capital Today company in Hong Kong, and then invest in sub-risks. Then the rest develops normally. But in domestic film companies, you have given away too much. You must retain at least 35% of the shares after the listing, otherwise there is no point in continuing.









