The Guardian (USA)

China bans celebrity rankings in bid to ‘rectify chaos in the fan community’

- Helen Davidson

Chinese authoritie­s have banned online lists ranking celebritie­s by popularity, as regulators continue a drive to “clean up” fame and fandom culture.

According to regulation­s published in state media, all existing lists that rank Chinese stars must also be removed from the internet.

Only lists that rank works such as songs, films and TV shows can be published but they must reduce the emphasis on likes and comments, and instead “increase the weight of indicators like work orientatio­n and profession­al evaluation”.

In June the office of the central cyberspace affairs commission announced a two-month special operation targeting fanclub culture, known as fan quan,which it said negatively affected the mental health of children.

On Friday it said work by local authoritie­s had achieved “some results”, and there was need to now increase regulation­s.

The 10-point list “to rectify chaos in the fan community” also included an order to “strictly regulate” celebrity managers and firms running fan pages and other online activities that “cause fans to bully each other”, as well as previously flagged bans on fundraisin­g activities and participat­ion by children.

In June the commission said children were being induced to contribute to fundraisin­g or voting campaigns for celebritie­s on competitio­n programmes, that verbal abuse, online bullying and harassment and doxing were taking place, and that people were being encouraged to show off wealth and extravagan­ce. It also said public opinion was being interfered with by bots or social media trends that were hijacked to boost celebritie­s’ profiles.

The crackdown has also targeted individual celebritie­s, with a particular focus on alleged financial misconduct and politicall­y sensitive actions. It also comes amid renewed focus on allegation­s of abuse and harassment by stars including mega-celebrity Kris Wu.

On Friday regulators announced Chinese actress Zheng Shuang was fined nearly 300m RMB ($46m) for tax evasion and banned from being invited onto entertainm­ent programs, with existing ones suspended.

Actress and Fendi brand ambassador Zhao Wei also appeared to have been deplatform­ed, with her name removed from all works on major entertainm­ent platforms, including the popular Chinese TV show My Fair Princess. The reason for it is unclear.

Last week actor Zhang Zhehan was similarly punished and deplatform­ed after he visited the Yasukuni war shrine in Japan. The visit prompted China’s Associatio­n of Performing Arts to urge a public boycott of Zhang and his works, leading to a host of major brands, reportedly including Coca-Cola, Maybelline, and Clinique, to cut ties with him.

 ??  ?? China has cracked down on celebrity rankings in a bid to ‘clean up’ fan culture. Photograph: VCG/Getty Images
China has cracked down on celebrity rankings in a bid to ‘clean up’ fan culture. Photograph: VCG/Getty Images

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