Wu Mu looked at the talent manager candidate introduced by Yan Yongmei before him.
It was a middle-aged man, probably in his late thirties or early forties, with dark skin, a robust figure, and an expression that was slightly formal and stern.
Wu Mu wasn't angry when he bluntly said he wasn't optimistic about him.
He was a bystander and he wasn't optimistic either; the number of people who had risen from actors to capitalists within the industry was few and far between. Furthermore, they were all old-timers who had been famous for twenty or thirty years.
For a young idol like him, who seemed to have high popularity and many fans, becoming a capitalist was far off, let alone getting out from under the exploitation of capital.
His previous contract with the company had been a 30/70 split, with him taking 30% and the company taking 70%.
It was probably about the same for the other popular figures in the circle.