Go Back   Novahq.net Forum > Off-Topic > General Chat
FAQ Calendar Today's Posts Search

General Chat Talk about anything that does not fit into other topics here.

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1  
Old 08-04-2005, 09:52 AM
Trojan is offline Trojan
honest toil

Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 4,792

China plans new restrictions on foreign media:

Beijing to clamp down on foreign media
By Chris Buckley International Herald Tribune

THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 2005
BEIJING China disclosed on Wednesday that it had frozen approvals for foreign satellite broadcasters entering its market and would strengthen restrictions on foreign television programs, books, newspapers and performances in an effort to exercise tighter control over the country's cultural life.

"Import of cultural products contrary to regulations will be punished according to the circumstances, and in serious cases the import license will be revoked," the rules, which were issued on Tuesday, stated. "In the near future, there will be no more approvals for setting up cultural import agencies."

Viacom, the U.S. television and entertainment conglomerate that owns MTV China, is one of three foreign broadcasters that have secured rights to broadcast to selected Chinese audiences. The other two are Star TV, owned by News Corp., and Phoenix Satellite Television, based in Hong Kong.

Other broadcasters, like CNN and BBC World, can broadcast into hotels and residential compounds used by foreigners or have joint ventures with Chinese state-run television stations.

Many multinational companies, including Time Warner and Sony, have sought deals in China.

The new rules were announced by the Propaganda Department, the Ministry of Culture and four other regulators and appeared in the Chinese press on Wednesday. They will make it more difficult for foreign companies to bring in foreign books, Internet and video games and performing acts at a time when many multinational companies are turning to China's burgeoning market for growth.

Co-productions by Chinese and foreign film and television companies will face stricter censorship, foreign magazines and newspapers can be sold only through state-controlled agencies, and imported Internet games face strengthened censorship.

"In principle, there will be no more domestic approvals for foreign satellite television channels," the rules also state, "and we will thoroughly strengthen administration of foreign broadcasters that have already set down."

Analysts and broadcasters said the rules were part of a wider effort to clamp down on foreign influence over mass culture in China.

"They're part of a broader trend in broadcasting and the cultural industry," said David Wolf, a Beijing-based expert on China's media for Burson-Marsteller, the public relations company. "They add greater clarity and specificity to rules we already know but weren't as clear."

In early July, China issued a ban on Chinese broadcasters and foreign investors' jointly operating television channels, and earlier in the year the government froze Chinese-foreign co-productions of television shows.

Wolf said the new rules were part of a "cyclical" chill on China's cultural industries, partly spurred by the promotion of a new boss at the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television, Wang Taihua, a former provincial official more attuned to increasingly conservative political winds than to industry interests. In 12 to 18 months, Chinese officials may again begin to relax their controls, he said.

The regulations may also be part of an effort to repair what one Chinese report recently called the "cultural trade deficit." In recent years, China has authorized publication of more than 12,000 foreign books in Chinese translations, but only 81 Chinese books have secured foreign publishing rights, said the report, which appeared in China Comment, a magazine run by the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Li Yifei, the China representative of Viacom, said the new rules were "basically in line" with a trend toward more hands-on regulation of broadcasters and television content. "Basically, it's trying to define what ministries are responsible for what categories of media," she said. "They're trying to communicate what their expectations are."


BEIJING China disclosed on Wednesday that it had frozen approvals for foreign satellite broadcasters entering its market and would strengthen restrictions on foreign television programs, books, newspapers and performances in an effort to exercise tighter control over the country's cultural life.

"Import of cultural products contrary to regulations will be punished according to the circumstances, and in serious cases the import license will be revoked," the rules, which were issued on Tuesday, stated. "In the near future, there will be no more approvals for setting up cultural import agencies."

Viacom, the U.S. television and entertainment conglomerate that owns MTV China, is one of three foreign broadcasters that have secured rights to broadcast to selected Chinese audiences. The other two are Star TV, owned by News Corp., and Phoenix Satellite Television, based in Hong Kong.

Other broadcasters, like CNN and BBC World, can broadcast into hotels and residential compounds used by foreigners or have joint ventures with Chinese state-run television stations.

Many multinational companies, including Time Warner and Sony, have sought deals in China.

The new rules were announced by the Propaganda Department, the Ministry of Culture and four other regulators and appeared in the Chinese press on Wednesday. They will make it more difficult for foreign companies to bring in foreign books, Internet and video games and performing acts at a time when many multinational companies are turning to China's burgeoning market for growth.

Co-productions by Chinese and foreign film and television companies will face stricter censorship, foreign magazines and newspapers can be sold only through state-controlled agencies, and imported Internet games face strengthened censorship.

"In principle, there will be no more domestic approvals for foreign satellite television channels," the rules also state, "and we will thoroughly strengthen administration of foreign broadcasters that have already set down."

Analysts and broadcasters said the rules were part of a wider effort to clamp down on foreign influence over mass culture in China.

"They're part of a broader trend in broadcasting and the cultural industry," said David Wolf, a Beijing-based expert on China's media for Burson-Marsteller, the public relations company. "They add greater clarity and specificity to rules we already know but weren't as clear."

In early July, China issued a ban on Chinese broadcasters and foreign investors' jointly operating television channels, and earlier in the year the government froze Chinese-foreign co-productions of television shows.

Wolf said the new rules were part of a "cyclical" chill on China's cultural industries, partly spurred by the promotion of a new boss at the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television, Wang Taihua, a former provincial official more attuned to increasingly conservative political winds than to industry interests. In 12 to 18 months, Chinese officials may again begin to relax their controls, he said.

The regulations may also be part of an effort to repair what one Chinese report recently called the "cultural trade deficit." In recent years, China has authorized publication of more than 12,000 foreign books in Chinese translations, but only 81 Chinese books have secured foreign publishing rights, said the report, which appeared in China Comment, a magazine run by the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Li Yifei, the China representative of Viacom, said the new rules were "basically in line" with a trend toward more hands-on regulation of broadcasters and television content. "Basically, it's trying to define what ministries are responsible for what categories of media," she said. "They're trying to communicate what their expectations are."


BEIJING China disclosed on Wednesday that it had frozen approvals for foreign satellite broadcasters entering its market and would strengthen restrictions on foreign television programs, books, newspapers and performances in an effort to exercise tighter control over the country's cultural life.

"Import of cultural products contrary to regulations will be punished according to the circumstances, and in serious cases the import license will be revoked," the rules, which were issued on Tuesday, stated. "In the near future, there will be no more approvals for setting up cultural import agencies."

Viacom, the U.S. television and entertainment conglomerate that owns MTV China, is one of three foreign broadcasters that have secured rights to broadcast to selected Chinese audiences. The other two are Star TV, owned by News Corp., and Phoenix Satellite Television, based in Hong Kong.

Other broadcasters, like CNN and BBC World, can broadcast into hotels and residential compounds used by foreigners or have joint ventures with Chinese state-run television stations.

Many multinational companies, including Time Warner and Sony, have sought deals in China.

The new rules were announced by the Propaganda Department, the Ministry of Culture and four other regulators and appeared in the Chinese press on Wednesday. They will make it more difficult for foreign companies to bring in foreign books, Internet and video games and performing acts at a time when many multinational companies are turning to China's burgeoning market for growth.

Co-productions by Chinese and foreign film and television companies will face stricter censorship, foreign magazines and newspapers can be sold only through state-controlled agencies, and imported Internet games face strengthened censorship.

"In principle, there will be no more domestic approvals for foreign satellite television channels," the rules also state, "and we will thoroughly strengthen administration of foreign broadcasters that have already set down."

Analysts and broadcasters said the rules were part of a wider effort to clamp down on foreign influence over mass culture in China.

"They're part of a broader trend in broadcasting and the cultural industry," said David Wolf, a Beijing-based expert on China's media for Burson-Marsteller, the public relations company. "They add greater clarity and specificity to rules we already know but weren't as clear."

In early July, China issued a ban on Chinese broadcasters and foreign investors' jointly operating television channels, and earlier in the year the government froze Chinese-foreign co-productions of television shows.

Wolf said the new rules were part of a "cyclical" chill on China's cultural industries, partly spurred by the promotion of a new boss at the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television, Wang Taihua, a former provincial official more attuned to increasingly conservative political winds than to industry interests. In 12 to 18 months, Chinese officials may again begin to relax their controls, he said.

The regulations may also be part of an effort to repair what one Chinese report recently called the "cultural trade deficit." In recent years, China has authorized publication of more than 12,000 foreign books in Chinese translations, but only 81 Chinese books have secured foreign publishing rights, said the report, which appeared in China Comment, a magazine run by the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Li Yifei, the China representative of Viacom, said the new rules were "basically in line" with a trend toward more hands-on regulation of broadcasters and television content. "Basically, it's trying to define what ministries are responsible for what categories of media," she said. "They're trying to communicate what their expectations are."


BEIJING China disclosed on Wednesday that it had frozen approvals for foreign satellite broadcasters entering its market and would strengthen restrictions on foreign television programs, books, newspapers and performances in an effort to exercise tighter control over the country's cultural life.

"Import of cultural products contrary to regulations will be punished according to the circumstances, and in serious cases the import license will be revoked," the rules, which were issued on Tuesday, stated. "In the near future, there will be no more approvals for setting up cultural import agencies."

Viacom, the U.S. television and entertainment conglomerate that owns MTV China, is one of three foreign broadcasters that have secured rights to broadcast to selected Chinese audiences. The other two are Star TV, owned by News Corp., and Phoenix Satellite Television, based in Hong Kong.

Other broadcasters, like CNN and BBC World, can broadcast into hotels and residential compounds used by foreigners or have joint ventures with Chinese state-run television stations.

Many multinational companies, including Time Warner and Sony, have sought deals in China.

The new rules were announced by the Propaganda Department, the Ministry of Culture and four other regulators and appeared in the Chinese press on Wednesday. They will make it more difficult for foreign companies to bring in foreign books, Internet and video games and performing acts at a time when many multinational companies are turning to China's burgeoning market for growth.

Co-productions by Chinese and foreign film and television companies will face stricter censorship, foreign magazines and newspapers can be sold only through state-controlled agencies, and imported Internet games face strengthened censorship.

"In principle, there will be no more domestic approvals for foreign satellite television channels," the rules also state, "and we will thoroughly strengthen administration of foreign broadcasters that have already set down."

Analysts and broadcasters said the rules were part of a wider effort to clamp down on foreign influence over mass culture in China.

"They're part of a broader trend in broadcasting and the cultural industry," said David Wolf, a Beijing-based expert on China's media for Burson-Marsteller, the public relations company. "They add greater clarity and specificity to rules we already know but weren't as clear."

In early July, China issued a ban on Chinese broadcasters and foreign investors' jointly operating television channels, and earlier in the year the government froze Chinese-foreign co-productions of television shows.

Wolf said the new rules were part of a "cyclical" chill on China's cultural industries, partly spurred by the promotion of a new boss at the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television, Wang Taihua, a former provincial official more attuned to increasingly conservative political winds than to industry interests. In 12 to 18 months, Chinese officials may again begin to relax their controls, he said.

The regulations may also be part of an effort to repair what one Chinese report recently called the "cultural trade deficit." In recent years, China has authorized publication of more than 12,000 foreign books in Chinese translations, but only 81 Chinese books have secured foreign publishing rights, said the report, which appeared in China Comment, a magazine run by the state-run Xinhua news agency.

Li Yifei, the China representative of Viacom, said the new rules were "basically in line" with a trend toward more hands-on regulation of broadcasters and television content. "Basically, it's trying to define what ministries are responsible for what categories of media," she said. "They're trying to communicate what their expectations are."

[Source]
----------------------------------------------------------------------

They are up to something. It is quite obvious. This is like the Japanese withholding important historical information in their new school textbooks. They are trying to keep the Chinese people from growing and changing into a World Society which is hypocritical because they just issued a joint statement with Russia on a New World Order. We are in a propganda war with China now. When will the first shot be fired? -troj
__________________
••• USMCPI SCCLNCCGNCMCMWTC •••

••• 26th MEUSOC 940311 93-95MySpace •••
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 08-06-2005, 04:54 AM
BADDOG is offline BADDOG
resigned

Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 7,050

Plain

China is a communist state no matter how much they seem to "liberalise" their economy so those in power will do all they can to prevent a negative image of their "socialist" paradise being revealed to the world.

Warm Regards
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Holiday Plans? atholon General Chat 44 12-12-2009 07:14 AM
speak many foreign language will not always work Hellfighter Humor & Jokes 3 03-25-2006 08:30 PM
Any plans for Valentines day:)???? BADDOG General Chat 30 02-15-2006 07:32 AM
Plans for armageddon... -Tigger- General Chat 30 12-28-2004 04:44 PM
Your Future Plans? -Tigger- General Chat 16 11-07-2004 05:32 AM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:15 PM.




Powered by vBulletin®