The Free Press Journal

China cracks down on spoofs of ‘Communist classics, heroes’

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China’s culture watchdog has slapped fines on websites that posted parodies of “Communist classics and heroes”, as the authoritie­s further restrict what people can say – or even laugh at – online.

Major video sites iQiyi and Sina were handed undisclose­d fines for “distorting or mocking” classic works, the culture ministry said, less than two weeks after new rules were issued to ban online spoofs.

The ministry did not describe the offending videos.

But another company in southwest China’s Sichuan province, Sichuan Shengshi Tianfu Media, was given “the highest fine according to law” for creating a popular parody of a revolution­ary ballad, the ministry said in a Monday statement.

“Yellow River Cantata”, a patriotic song written in 1939 encouragin­g youth to fight during the Sino-Japanese war, has inspired several humorous remakes that have chafed the authoritie­s.

One viral video this year featured employees from the Sichuan company in panda hats, lamenting delays in year-end bonuses.

China has one of the world’s most restrictiv­e internets, with a “Great Firewall” that blocks foreign social media websites such as Facebook and Twitter and censors politicall­y sensitive content.

Despite the censorship, the internet is wildly popular in China, with people turning to video parodies to mock state media or highlight pressing social issues.

But China’s media regulator — the State Administra­tion of Press, Publicatio­n, Radio, Film and Television — issued a directive on March 22 banning websites from “editing, dubbing, or adding subtitles to classic works, radio and television programmes, or original online audio-visual programmes.”

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