Clearwisdom HomeNews & Media ReportsOpen ForumPractitioners' InsightsTruth Clarification
About Falun EmblemFalun Dafa WorldwidePersonal CultivationFa-Rectification StoriesScientific Findings
Welcome Note...
 
To Fellow Practitioners
on September 7
 
Article Selections
Cultivation Within Fa Rectification
Righteous Beliefs and Actions
Opposing Hong Kong's Enactment of Article 23
Rescue Charles Li
Prosecuting Jiang Zemin
Exposing the Crimes of Jiang Zemin
Exposing China's Cover-up of SARS
Sending Forth Righteous Thoughts
Audio: Sending Forth Righteous Thoughts Formulas
Staged Tragedy: Tiananmen Self-Immolation
Prophecies
Articles with Master's Comments
Announcements
 
Recognition & Support
Worldwide Support
Awards and Recognition
 
Photo Archive
Clearwisdom Photo Sitemap
Journey of Falun Dafa
Evidence of Persecution
 
The Persecution
772 Practitioners Killed in Persecution
SOS! Urgent Rescue
Latest News from China
Eye Witness Accounts
Solemn Declarations
Good is Rewarded, Evil Provokes Retribution
How to Help
 
Download Materials
Flyers & Handouts
Publications
Information Packages
Audio/Video
Links to Other Libraries
 
Important Links
FalunDafa.org
FalunInfo.net
PureInsight.org
ClearHarmony.net
PureAwakening.net
Falun Dafa Australia Information Centre
Rescue Our Families
SOS! Global RescueWalk
FGM TV
 
Third Party Supporters
Friends of Falun Gong
 
Contact Us
Editor
Web Team
Submissions Welcome
Daily Posting Subscription
Clearwisdom Fax
 
Search - Help
  
Advanced Search
 
The Boston Globe: Chinese news network [New Tang Dynasty TV] in U.S. finds perils of facing Beijing

Globe Correspondent, 8/24/2003

NEW YORK -- Zhong Lee, president of New Tang Dynasty Television, is dreaming about building up the "Chinese CNN." But the Chinese government may not be happy about the idea.

"We want to be number one" for the Chinese viewer, Lee said recently in the company's cramped Manhattan headquarters.

Occupying 6,000 square feet of space on the top floor of a small office building on 20th Street in Chelsea, just below Midtown, New Tang Dynasty Television, or NTDTV for its initials, has grown into a satellite network that broadcasts Western-style news and entertainment 24 hours a day in Mandarin and Cantonese to Chinese communities in the United States, Western Europe, Australia, and parts of Asia.

"The idea was to create a PBS-type station that would serve mainly overseas Chinese communities," Lee said.

The network's toughest competition may come from the Chinese government, which is known for its ability to influence media coverage in China and beyond.

"The People's Republic of China right now simply does not want to tolerate any independent TV broadcast," said Arthur Waldron, a specialist on China who is a professor at the University of Pennsylvania.

Waldron added that CCTV, China's state-run television giant that has a large viewership in the Chinese diaspora, "is now action-packed, full of soap operas, thrillers, historical dramas." However, their news programs, Waldron said, are "still hardly accurate."

CCTV's coverage of the Sept. 11 attacks motivated Lee to launch New Tang Dynasty Television. CCTV's reports about the attacks, Lee said, "had a totally different version of the story; the commentary was very sarcastic."

"We had people here who really wanted an independent TV: mostly businessmen who are both passionate about Western democracy and preserving ancient Chinese culture," he said.

Lee insists that he will report fairly about news in China, but that he will not be silent on tough issues such as corruption in the bureaucracy, the SARS virus, and the controversy between Beijing and Falun Gong, the spiritual movement that Beijing outlawed in 1999.

Lee suspects the Chinese government of putting pressure on some of New Tang Dynasty Television's business partners and of exerting influence on local community leaders to bar the network's reporters from events where Chinese officials were present.

Earlier this month, two New Tang Dynasty Television reporters filed a complaint with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination, saying the Chinese organizers had not allowed them to cover an anti-SARS benefit concert in Sudbury, an event attended by the Chinese consul general from New York.

Cindy Kexin Yu, one of the reporters, said she had been barred from entering the event because she practices Falun Gong.

[...]

Waldron said that Beijing's efforts to influence overseas Chinese media and diaspora communities are not new, and that Beijing has developed sophisticated methods to fund foreign Chinese media outlets that it supports and to make things difficult for dissenters.

"There is definitely Chinese government money channeled into diaspora journalism," Waldron said.

According to a 2001 report issued by the Jamestown Foundation, an American think tank, most of the Chinese-language media in the United States are either controlled or influenced by Beijing.

The report also suggests that anti-American sentiments in Chinese-American communities are attributable in part to government-influenced reporting "with half-truths and even gross misinformation sometimes being panned as news."

Despite the difficulties and the possibility of repercussions from China, Lee is optimistic about New Tang Dynasty Television's future.

"We expected to have some problems," he said. He added, however, but added that the political climate appears to be changing. "I was brought up in China and experienced many changes there since 1949."

http://www.boston.com/news/world/articles/2003/08/24/chinese_news_network_in_us_finds_perils_of_facing_beijing/

Posting date: 8/25/2003
Original article date: 8/24/2003
Category: News & Media Reports

 Yearly Archive  Printer Version


We welcome your comments and suggestions, please email:
feedback@clearwisdom.net


Related Articles