Image copyright AP Image caption The Golden Globe Awards are one of the biggest nights in Hollywood

When owning a huge cinema chain is not enough, why not buy the firm behind one of the film and television industry's most high-profile awards as well?

China's richest man has continued his Hollywood shopping spree - snapping up the company that runs the Golden Globes.

Dalian Wanda, run by property magnate Wang Jianlin, is paying $1bn (£800m) for Dick Clark Productions that also runs the Miss America beauty pageant and the Billboard Music Awards.

The Chinese conglomerate already controls the AMC cinema chain, the second largest in the US, as well as Legendary Entertainment , co-producer of hit films including Godzilla and The Dark Knight Rises, and has a tie-up with Sony Pictures.

Studio ambition

It seems that Mr Wang, who sits on a personal fortune of $32.1bn (£26.4bn) according to a recent rich list, really is buying up the US entertainment industry, one step at a time.

Many suspect it is just a matter of time until he gets a big chunk of one of Hollywood's big six film studios. Earlier this year he got close to buying a 49% stake in Paramount Pictures from Viacom before the deal collapsed.

Dalian Wanda said the purchase of Dick Clark Productions represented Wanda's "first step" into television production.

But long before this deal, some US politicians were already worried about China's influence in Hollywood and the US media - whether that is censoring media or producing pro-Chinese propaganda. In September, 16 members of the US Congress called for greater scrutiny of foreign investments, mentioning Dalian Wanda by name.

Soft power

Mr Wang has not shied away from his ambition to make China a dominant global force in entertainment and to bring "more Chinese elements" to the output.

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Born in 1954, Wang Jianlin served in the army between 1970 and 1986 and has been the chairman of Wanda since 1989

But he insists he is motivated by a "business perspective" rather than a political one, with China's box office takings predicted to match the US and Canada by 2018 - and to grow by around 15% each year for the next decade.

"You cannot try to just make money in the Chinese market and disregard Chinese tastes," Mr Wang said earlier this year.

But there is "soft power" at play here too - using businesses to wield cultural influence over the way China is portrayed.

Next year Legendary Entertainment, in partnership with Universal, will release Great Wall - starring Hollywood stars Matt Damon and Willem Dafoe alongside big name Chinese actor Andy Lau and boy-band idol Wang Junkai,

And crucially, it will be the first major Hollywood film, aimed at a global audience, to be set, filmed and produced in China.

What else does Dalian Wanda own ?