China's
television watchdogs have banned the country's broadcasters from screening any
foreign programming during prime-time. (Photo: telegraph.co.uk)
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Apparently the television shows in China has become a source of irritation to a top government official, so he spoke out strongly condemning them with some very harsh words.
According to Reuters, a
senior Chinese government minister has said many of the television shows, movies
and publications produced in China each year are rubbish, and the solution is
to banish decadent themes and concentrate on uplifting social values instead. China's ruling Communist Party
exercises tight control of the media, seeing it as a valuable propaganda tool,
and has long sought to ensure content is both non-controversial and morally
correct.
Cai Fuchao, who heads the State
Administration for Press, Publication, Radio, Film and Television and is also a
deputy propaganda minister, said China produces about 600 movies, 15,000
television shows and 250,000 publications annually.
"Quality, powerful works are
still lacking, and there are only a tiny number of classic works which can
reflect the times and leave an impression on history," Cai wrote in the
influential fortnightly Communist Party magazine Qiushi, which means
"seeking truth".
"Although quantity shows the
vitality of artistic production in any historical period, it cannot hide the
fact that there is a structural problem with overproduction and the mediocre
quality of film, television and publishing creation."
Artists should stop being
"slaves to the market" and thinking that the only measure of success
is the box office, viewing figures or number of copies sold and put
"social benefit" first, he wrote in the latest issue, which reached
subscribers on Tuesday.
The government must "grasp the
correct orientation for politics, values and behaviour, and prevent the spread
of base, depressing tendencies, materialism and the worship of money", Cai
added.
Films and television shows in China
have tended to rely on somewhat staid and repetitive topics, such as heroic
revolutionaries and ancient historical dramas.
But the entertainment industry no longer depends
so heavily on government subsidies and has had to start earning its own way
with livelier offerings, especially as it tries to compete with edgier works
from Hong Kong, Taiwan and the United States, all widely available online.
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