An hour later, the other party deleted some posts that explicitly named names, leaving up the ones that didn't. Their logic was clear: You say we're using Little Treasure for marketing? Is her name even on it? Where's the proof? Their intent was obvious—they wanted to ride on Little Treasure's popularity. After all, among the many child stars, Little Treasure was by far the most successful.
While they were waging their war of words online, their company had already contacted Second Treasure. They sincerely hoped she would agree to the joint marketing. In return, their company's artists would shoot a commercial for her, free of charge.
This just made Second Treasure laugh in annoyance. "Do you think I'm short on petty cash? Or do you think I'm lacking artists?"
The most popular actor under their young master's company was third- or fourth-tier at best. Now that a rare, promising child star had emerged, of course they had to market him aggressively.
