The Borneo Post

China regulator bans TV parodies amid content crackdown

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BEI J ING/ SHANGHAI : China’s media regulator is cracking down on video spoofs, the official Xinhua new agency reported, amid an intensifie­d crackdown on any content that is deemed to be in violation of socialist core values under President Xi Jinping.

The decision comes after Xi cemented his power at a recent meeting of parliament by having presidenti­al term limits scrapped, and the ruling Communist Party tightened its grip on the media by handing control over film, news and publishing to its powerful publicity department.

Xinhua said video sites must ban videos that “distort, mock or defame classical literary and art works”, citing a directive from the State Administra­tion of Press, Publicatio­n, Radio, Fi lm and Telev i sion on Thursday.

Reuters separately reviewed a copy of the directive, which was unusually labelled ‘extra urgent’.

Industry insiders say the sweeping crackdown on media content, which has been gaining force since last year, is having a chilling effect on content makers and distributo­rs.

“It means a lot of content makers will have to transition and make their content more serious. For ‘ extra urgent’ notice like this, you have to act immediatel­y,” said Wu Jian, a Beijing-based analyst.

“Those who don’t comply in time will immediatel­y be closed down,” Wu said.

A TV reporter’s theatrical eyeroll during a long-winded question at a Beijing news conference stole the show during China’s annual parliament session last week, exploding on Chinese social media before censors intervened.

A video o f the eyerol l became the source material for many parodies and satirical performanc­es.

Despite strict censorship, China has a fairly lively online community of bloggers, who frequently respond to breaking events with humorous – and sometimes risqu – sketches and short videos, although they often face their posts being taken down.

JustXiait, a team of Chinese parody bloggers famous for satirical dubbed- over videos from movies, said in an official microblog post that the group would voluntaril­y delete all videos “to conduct self- inspection, cleanup and improvemen­t”.

The decision is “to make the programme more in line with relevant laws and regulation­s, and to provide audience more interestin­g and wholesome programmes”, it s a id. — Reuters

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