TV cleavage censorship creates big buzz abroad

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Chinese actress Fan Bingbing, who plays empress Wu Zetian.Hit dramaThe Saga of Wu Zetianhas drawn further public attention after an attempt to cut 'too revealing' shots in the 80-episode Hunan TV serial. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Chinese actress Fan Bingbing, who plays empress Wu Zetian.Hit dramaThe Saga of Wu Zetianhas drawn further public attention after an attempt to cut "too revealing" shots in the 80-episode Hunan TV serial. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Chinese authorities rule that movies and television productions should not have pornographic contents, but plunging necklines and corseted breasts do not constitute pornography. It may be a matter of taste, says the Hangzhou-based researcher.

Yin Hong, executive deputy president of the journalism and communication school of the Tsinghua University, agrees with Zhang.

He points out that the hit drama had already been controversial before the suspension, but the "arbitrary" cuts cannot mitigate the heat of the debate.

The biographic work of Wu Zetian (AD 624-705), the first and only female emperor who reigned from AD 690 to 705, had a record rating of 2.28 percent in a 50-city survey, just on the first day of its screening. But some viewers on Baidu Tieba, one of the country's largest online forums, joked that they had been drawn to the big-budget serial for the actresses' half-exposed breasts.

"If there was a debate, let the public thrash it out," says Yin. "The abrupt halt to the serial and the cuts will only attract more attention. There have been many similar situations in the past. We don't seem to learn from them."

"The drama had been criticized for its mediocre plot and coarse dialogues before the removal. But now, it has the support of many people."

Raymond Zhou, veteran film critic with China Daily, says: "It had been bad, but now it may become a good thing."

He cites the famed "Streisand effect" to show its similarity to the Chinese actress Fan Bingbing-starring drama. The effect is named after the American entertainer Barbra Streisand's attempt to suppress photographs of her residence in California but instead drew further public attention to it.

Zhou points out that ancient scrolls and documents show that during Wu's reigning dynasty, it was the custom for women to wear clothes that bared their necks and shoulders. The breasts might not have been as "squeezed" as those depicted in the drama.

But there are other experts who agree with the need for the cuts.

Wang Xudong, director of China Film Critic Society Academic, says television brings images into the living room. "It may not be good for our young to see exposed women's bodies. TV projects should have an educational influence," he says.

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