THE LESSONS OF JAIPUR
Iqbal Masud, the civil servant and critic, supported the ban on The Satanic Verses in 1989. His reason was simple: if the book remained on sale in India, Muslims would march in protest, policemen would fire upon them, some of them would die, and no book, said Masud, was worth the life of a single protester.
Read more...
MEDIAlternative: Annals of censorship: Award season edition
This time of year, entertainment awards dominate the news cycle. From last month’s Golden Globes, Screen Actors and Directors Guild Awards to Sunday evening’s telecast of the 54th Grammy Awards, it’s all celebrities all the time. Then there’s Oscar’s big night on February 26th.
Read more...
Salman Rushdie Falls Victim to Indian Intolerance: Pankaj Mishra
In 1984, criticizing George Orwell for having advocated political quietism to writers, Salman Rushdie asserted that “we are all irradiated by history, we are radioactive with history and politics.” He added: “Politics and literature… do mix, are inextricably mixed, and that… mixture has consequences.”
Read more...
The Ultimate Reality Show by James Dunnigan February 2, 2012
With the New Year the Chinese government implemented its new policy for television programming. In effect, some 70 percent of the most popular TV shows have been taken off the air (or, at the very least, out of prime time). In their place there are more uplifting or educational programs.
Read more...
MEDIAlternative: Annals of censorship – GOP Primary edition
The news media is full of it these days. The Republican presidential primaries, that is. But thanks to the short attention span of most news organizations, by the time you read this, the New Hampshire primary will be a distant memory, the Iowa caucuses ancient history.
Read more...
Former NBC Legal Exec Warns of Looming Threat to Free Speech in the U.S.
The man who served as NBC-TV’s legal counsel for 25 years warns the FCC is poised to resurrect broad censorship rules that were revoked in 1987 because of their chilling effect on both free speech and the television press.
Read more...
Malaysia’s Anti-Opposition Bloggers
Does Kuala Lumpur have a home-grown version of China’s ’50-centers?’ Is Malaysia getting its own version of China’s so-called 50-centers, the legions of Chinese bloggers who monitor websites and reply to criticism of the government for money?
Read more...
Does Piracy Cause Economic Harm? How To Think About Economic Frontiers
Lost in the discussion of internet censorship, anti-piracy measures, and the politics of the internet is a simple question: does piracy actually cause economic harm?
Read more...
BBC Apology Vindicates Sarawak Report, So What About Bakun?
BN mouthpieces, such as the Borneo Post, have been working hard to discredit the integrity of Sarawak Report and all our investigations into the corruption behind the destruction of the Borneo Rainforest and its peoples. They refer to mysterious “hidden agendas” and have quoted accusations that we are producing “baseless and mischievous” information resting on [...]
Read more...
In D.C., China builds a news hub to help polish its global image
In a downtown D.C. office building hard by a Starbucks and a busy construction site, China’s most ambitious effort to become a global power in English-language TV news is literally taking shape. For months, Chinese and American workers have been constructing a multi-floor TV studio complex on New York Avenue NW. Within a few weeks, China Central Television (CCTV) — the nation’s state-run ...
Read more...
|