Wave Makers

Wave Makers (Chinese: 人選之人—造浪者) is a 2023 Taiwanese political drama television series written by Chien Li-ying and Yan Shi-ji and directed by Lin Chun-yang. The series stars Hsieh Ying-xuan, Jag Huang, Gingle Wang, Leon Dai, and Buffy Chen. The drama follows the lives of the political campaign staff of a fictional Taiwanese political party during the runup to a presidential election. Domestic Taiwanese political issues such as workplace sexual harassment, death penalty, immigration, same-sex marriage, and environmental issues are explored.

Wave Makers
Promotional poster
Traditional Chinese人選之人—造浪者
Simplified Chinese人选之人—造浪者
Hanyu PinyinRén Xuǎn Zhī Rén Zào Làng Zhě
Hokkien POJJîn-soán ê Lâng: Chō-lōng-chiá
GenreDrama
Political drama
Written byChien Li-ying
Yan Shi-ji
Directed byLin Chun-yang
StarringHsieh Ying-xuan
Jag Huang
Gingle Wang
Leon Dai
Buffy Chen
Ending theme"得意的一天 A no is a no" by Leo Wang & Chen Hsien-ching
Country of originTaiwan
Original languagesMandarin
Taiwanese Hokkien
Taiwanese Hakka
English
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8
Production
Production locationTaiwan
Production companiesDaMou Entertainment
Public Television Service
Original release
NetworkNetflix
Release28 April 2023 (2023-04-28) (Netflix)
28 October 2023 (2023-10-28) (PTS)[citation needed]

Produced by DaMou Entertainment and Public Television Service, Wave Makers premiered worldwide on Netflix on April 28, 2023.[1][2]

Plot

Wen-fang Weng is the assistant director of the Justice Party public relations campaign of presidential candidate Yueh-chen Lin, who seeks to oust the incumbent president. The daughter of an influential legislator in the same party, Weng lost her re-election for councilor of her district when she defended herself against a homophobic supporter of her father who verbally attacked her when he saw her kissing her wife, and afterwards refused to apologize to him. Chia-ching Chen, whose workaholism on the campaign has jeopardized his marriage, supervises the team of campaign staff working to elect Yueh-chen.

The current president seeking re-election, Ling-hsien Sun, announces that her running mate will be Chang-tse Chao, but rumors begin to surface of Chao's trysts with a current staffer. One of his previous trysts was with his former student and assistant, Ya-ching Chang, who now works for the Justice Party on Yueh-chen's campaign. Chang tries to keep her past affair with Chao a secret, while also trying to convince him to return the nude photos her took of her when they were together. Chang becomes embroiled in a workplace sexual harassment case at the Justice Party, and with the support of Weng and Chen tries to navigate the unfolding case as male supervisors want to keep the incident under wraps.

Cast

Main

Recurring

  • Tammy Darshana Lai [zh] as Yueh-chen Lin
  • Aviis Zhong as Chu Li-ya
  • Yi-Ling Liao [zh] as Yang Ya-ting

Reception

James Marsh of the South China Morning Post observed that Wave Makers's cast and story is predominantly female, including both presidential candidates. Regarding the political issues touched on the story, Marsh writes that "despite the show's tendency to oversimplify hot-button political issues and then amplify them to a ridiculous degree in the name of drama, Wave Makers succeeds in creating an engaging landscape populated by characters that we genuinely care about."[3]

Chieh-Ting Yeh of the University of Nottingham Taiwan Studies Institute notes the absence of relations with Mainland China as an issue during the political campaign depicted in the show, despite being one of the most important topics in Taiwanese politics today. "In 'Wave Makers', policy towards a foreign country is not an existential issue and does not overshadow all the other important issues from the public square. Rival politicians can debate immigration and environmental policies, fend off student protesters, and even dig up each other's scandals without worrying about what anyone in Beijing or Washington says. Having an election where no matter who wins, a woman with gravitas will become president is not bad," Yeh writes.[4]

Sarah Musnicky from But Why Tho? wrote that while Wave Makers touches on several important political issues, it doesn't spend enough time to dive deeply into them. " Ironically, this reflects political debate topics in a way, with how we never truly get to the crux of the issues. We touch upon them and then move onto the next topic voters are interested in." Instead, Musnicky writes, "the real heart and soul of the series is in its characters."[5]

Wave Makers received 14 Golden Bell Award nominations.[6]

Awards and nominations

YearAwardCategoryNominee(s)ResultRef.
2023Asia Contents Awards & Global OTT AwardsBest OTT OriginalWave MakersNominated[7]
Best Supporting ActressBuffy ChenNominated
Rising Star of the YearWon[8]
58th Golden Bell AwardsBest Miniseries or Television FilmWave MakersWon[9]
Best Directing for a Miniseries or Television FilmLin Chun-yangWon
Best Visual Effects for a Drama SeriesTu Weiting, Yuan Changshou, Jiang Weihong, Fan Jieyu, Ye YilingWon
Best Theme Song"A No is a No" – Leo Wang, Chen Hsien-ching, Li Quanzhe, Tang JieWon
Best Leading Actress in a Miniseries or Television FilmGingle WangNominated
Best Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Television FilmPu Hsueh-liangNominated
Leon DaiNominated
Best Supporting Actress in a Miniseries or Television FilmTsai Hsuan-yenNominated
Lai Pei-hsiaNominated
Best Editing for a Drama SeriesShi BohanNominated
Best Cinematography for a Drama SeriesJian Youtao and Wang LiangjunNominated
Best Writing for a Miniseries or Television FilmChien Li-ying and Yan Shi-jiNominated
Best Art and Design for a Drama SeriesFang Xuzhong and Luo WenjingNominated
Best Score for a Drama SeriesHou ZhijianNominated

Impact

Wave Makers brought increased attention to sexual harassment in Taiwanese society and set of a round of grappling with the issue.[10][11] Allegations have been made against figures in the political, economic, and artistic spheres.[12] Taiwan has long had a culture of silence and shame surrounding sexual assault.[13] Exiled Chinese human rights activist Teng Biao apologized after allegations against him were made public.[14]

After the series was aired, a former party staffer for Taiwan's Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) posted on social media about how she experienced sexual harassments at the workplace but her supervisor tried to dissuade her from pursuing the case. The party staffer referenced Wave Makers in her social media post.[15][12] Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen apologized twice for the allegations made against members of her party, the DPP, and promised that changes would be made both in party policy and culture.[16]

Although Wave Makers is censored on the Chinese review aggregator Douban, the show was the focus of online discussion in mainland China regarding Taiwanese politics and its differences from China.[17]

References