{"id":39289,"date":"2009-05-23T21:00:27","date_gmt":"2009-05-24T04:00:27","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/?p=39289"},"modified":"2009-05-23T21:03:08","modified_gmt":"2009-05-24T04:03:08","slug":"li-datong-a-modern-end-to-media-suppression","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/chinadigitaltimes.net\/2009\/05\/li-datong-a-modern-end-to-media-suppression\/","title":{"rendered":"Li Datong: A Modern End to Media Suppression"},"content":{"rendered":"
“A powerful internet \u2013 and public demand for honest reporting \u2013 is driving the state media to ever-greater levels of openness.” From the Guardian<\/a>:<\/p>\n On the night of 9 February, China Central Television’s new building suddenly caught fire. People flocked to the scene, snapped pictures and videos, as if admiring a firework show, and couldn’t wait to post them on the internet. The most appropriate word to describe how the public felt would be schadenfreude \u2013 feeling joyous at others’ misfortunes.<\/p>\n The blogger Han Han, representing the “post-80s generation” who are generally considered aloof from politics, spoke out about the reason behind this schadenfreude. He wrote in his blog: “Those who set enough fires will get burnt. CCTV as a news channel has little journalistic ethics \u2026 Distort facts, suppress culture, alter facts, cover up, aid and abet evildoers, paint a false picture of peace and prosperity \u2013 how many of these has it done over the years?”<\/p>\n