2. Cultural and artistic exchange planning, management consulting, business information consulting (except brokerage), stage art modeling planning, corporate image planning, marketing planning, corporate graphic design and production, conference services, exhibition services, etiquette services, photography services, sales of clothing, shoes and hats, furniture, toys, daily necessities, wood products and plastic products.
3. Design, produce, represent, publish all kinds of advertisements, plan cultural and artistic exchanges (except brokers), conference services, exhibition services, graphic design and production, and sell toys, craft gifts and electronic products.
4. Cultural and artistic exchange planning, business information consulting, enterprise management consulting (except brokerage), conference services, exhibition services, corporate image planning, stage art modeling planning, marketing planning, graphic design and production, and the production and design of various advertisements.
Extended data:
"Cultural industry" is a concept initiated by Adorno and Hawke Hamo in Dialectics of Enlightenment (1947). They particularly emphasized: "The cultural industry must be strictly separated from mass culture. The cultural industry casts old familiar things into new characteristics. In its branches, those products that are suitable for mass consumption and those that largely determine consumption characteristics are produced more or less as planned.
Some branches have the same structure, or at least communicate with each other. They are placed in a system, and there is almost no difference. All this is possible through technical means and centralization of economy and management. "It should be said that the large-scale development of the cultural industry makes the aesthetic commodity attribute obvious, which makes the aesthetic production and consumption show a large-scale effect.
Cultural industry, the term appeared at the beginning of the 20th century. It first appeared in the book Dialectics of Enlightenment, co-authored by Hawke Hammer and Adorno. Its English name is Culture Industry, which can be translated into both cultural industries and cultural industries. As a special cultural form and special economic form, cultural industry affects people's grasp of the essence of cultural industry, and different countries have different understandings of cultural industry from different angles.
UNESCO defines cultural industry as a series of activities that produce, copy, store and distribute cultural products and services according to industrial standards. It is defined from the perspective of industrial standardized production, circulation, distribution, consumption and re-consumption of cultural products.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-cultural industry