South Park banned in China (with a link to the episode, "Band In China")

Rembrandt Brown

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I just got around to watching episode 2 of the new season tonight and anybody who didn't know it came out a week ago would swear it was influenced by the recent NBA China controversy.




'South Park' Scrubbed From Chinese Internet After Critical Episode
10/7/2019 12:23 AM
by Patrick Brzeski , Ryan Parker
Hollywood Reporter

After the "Band in China" episode mocked Hollywood for shaping its content to please the Chinese government, Beijing has responded by deleting all clips, episodes and discussions of the Comedy Central show.

South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone probably saw this coming, and to their credit, simply didn't care.

The most recent episode of South Park, "Band in China," has been generating loads of media attention for its sharp critique of the way Hollywood tends to shape its content to avoid offending Chinese government censors in any way whatsoever.

Now, those very same government censors, in the real world, have lashed back at South Park by deleting virtually every clip, episode and online discussion of the show from Chinese streaming services, social media and even fan pages.

A cursory perusal through China's highly regulated internet landscape shows the animated series conspicuously absent everywhere it recently had a presence. A search of the Twitter-like social media service Weibo turns up not a single mention of South Park among the billions of past posts. On streaming service Youku, owned by internet giant Alibaba, all links to clips, episodes and even full seasons of the show are now dead.

And on Baidu's Tieba, China's largest online discussion platform, the threads and subthreads related to South Park are nonfunctional. If users manually type in the URL for what was formerly the South Park thread, a message appears saying that, "According to the relevant law and regulation, this section is temporarily not open."

The draconian response is par for the course for China's authoritarian government, which has even been known to aggressively censor Winnie the Pooh because some local internet users had affectionately taken to comparing Chinese president Xi Jinping to the character.

On Monday afternoon, creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone issued a statement with a faux apology about the ban.

"Like the NBA, we welcome the Chinese censors into our homes and into our hearts," the statement reads. "We too love money more than freedom and democracy. Xi doesn't look like Winnie the Pooh at all. Tune into our 300th episode this Wednesday at 10! Long live the great Communist Party of China. May the autumn's sorghum harvest be bountiful. We good now China?"

South Park's "Band in China" episode featured a pair of storylines critical of China. One involves Randy getting caught attempting to sell weed in China and getting sent to a work camp similar to those Beijing has been using in Xinjiang Province to hold as many as a million Chinese Muslims for political indoctrination. (While he's at the work camp, Randy runs into an imprisoned Winnie the Pooh.)

A second plot follows Stan, Jimmy, Kenny and Butters forming a metal band, which becomes popular and attracts the attention of a manager who wants to make a film about them. But then the script keeps changing so that the film can safely be distributed in China.

"Now I know how Hollywood writers feel," Stan says at one point while a Chinese guard watches over him and alters his work as he writes the script. Several shots are taken at Disney, including a scene where Mickey Mouse shows up to make sure all his employees (other Marvel and Disney cartoon characters) play ball with the Chinese authorities.

The episode's critique has proved especially timely in light of the controversy now swirling around the NBA. On Sunday, Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey issued a tweet expressing his solidarity with Hong Kong's pro-democracy protestors.

Although just a single tweet, from one among hundreds of NBA executives, the message sparked a deluge of criticism in China, where the Hong Kong protests have become a hot-button political issue, with Beijing's propaganda apparatus going into overdrive to shape local opinion of the movement as anarchistic and untethered to legitimate political grievances. Chinese broadcasters announced they would stop airing Rockets games, and local sponsors pulled their funds from the team.

Evidently fearing the financial implications of the Chinese backlash, the Rockets and the NBA have since disavowed Morey's comments.


Oct. 7, 11:30 a.m. Updated with statement from Trey Parker and Matt Stone.
 
A review posted Thursday morning on The AV Club only gave the episode a B the day after but this will go down as an arguable top ten episode with the real world significance and impact. It was prescient with the Daryl Morey controversy happening after it, a definite A+ episode.

South Park takes some hard shots at China as Randy grows his weed business
John Hugar
AV Club
Thursday, October 3rd, 2:00am

Over the course of its 23 seasons on the air, South Park has gained a reputation for its take-no-prisoners policy when it comes to satire. No topic is off limits, no matter how rough the consequences might be. The most memorable example of this came in 2006, and again in 2010, when South Park came close to depicting the prophet Muhammad on two occasions, only to be overruled by Comedy Central censors each time. Tonight, Trey and Matt were similarly subversive, going after another topic that is rarely mentioned in polite society: the heavy role that Chinese censorship plays in the entertainment industry, particularly the release of feature films. It’s no secret that blockbuster movies like the Avengers films have to be cleared by the Chinese government before reaching that market, and as such, there’s certain places no mainstream film can ever go. “Band In China” tackles this issue with admirable candor, resulting in an episode that ranks right up there with last year’s two-part Amazon takedown as some of the show’s most blunt, honest satire.

As in last week’s episode, Randy is looking to expand Tegridy Farms, and figures a good way to do so would be to enter the Chinese market, because hey, there’s just so many people there. Unfortunately, he fails to do any research on the country’s marijuana policies, and is quickly apprehended at the airport with a giant suitcase of weed, and sent to a Chinese prison. His obliviousness at the entire situation ranks among the episode’s funniest moments, as he is still doing his affected southern twang, and presenting himself as a Simple Country Weed Farmer while being taken away in handcuffs. It’s a bit reminiscent of King Of The Hill’s “Lupe’s Revenge,” where Peggy thinks she’s receiving a medal for returning a child home safely, when actually, she’s being arrested for kidnapping her.

While this is going on, Stan has formed a band with Jimmy, Butters, and Kenny called Crimson Dawn. There have been episodes focusing on the boys starting bands before (which the show eventually alludes to), but it’s such a winning formula that Trey and Matt can’t be blamed too much for going back to the well. This time, Stan’s anger and frustration at his father moving the family away from South Park, as well his total lack of regard for his feelings, inspires him to start a death metal band. The first scene of them performing works quite well, because at this point, no reference had been made to what music the band actually plays, so the sudden aggressive metal riffage out of nowhere is played to great comedic effect. The band wins over the same record producer who made the PC Babies stars, and since there’s no money to be made from records these days (“What are you kids, from the 90s?”), he goes straight into making a biopic. This is where the two plotlines meet, as the movie Stan attempts to write is censored by the Chinese government at all turns, to the point where he basically can’t write anything. After the randomness of “Mexican Joker,” it was refreshing to see an episode waste no time in tying its storylines together.

Imprisoned in China, Randy continues to make the case for the greatness of both weed and Tegridy, but to no avail. Here, we find out that because Randy angered the Chinese government, all the Marvel superheroes who were also trying to do business in China have been apprehended as well. Since all of these characters are now owned by Disney, this gives South Park a chance to bring back one of their most memorable characters ever, the angry, violent Mickey Mouse, who famously beat up the Jonas Brothers in “The Ring.” He’s just as aggressive this time, smacking Thor around, and calling Winnie The Pooh (who yes, actually has been banned in China) a “fat diabetic bear.” Bringing this character back brought needed levity to an episode that is often quite tense. That they actually have him play a significant role in the episode’s resolution is even more rewarding.

With few options left, Randy and Mickey team up to get what they want from the Chinese. How? By killing their arch enemies, you guessed it, Winnie The Pooh and Piglet. They set a trap of honey for the pair, and when Pooh is finally content, Randy garrotes him. With Winnie and Piglet neutralized, Randy gets what he wants, and marijuana is now not only legal in China, but supplied entirely by Tegridy Farms.

Unlike his father, Stan refuses to give into the demands of the Chinese government, and his biopic is shelved. That said, he is initially tempted to sell out in one of the episode’s funniest scenes. Reasoning that his movie will only be released in China if his band is lame and vanilla, he briefly brings back the immortal Fingerbang for a reunion, before pulling the plug at the last second. Perhaps I’m being a bit of a sucker for fan service, but the callback to a 19-year old episode in a perfectly apropos fashion worked incredibly well for me. With Randy giving into Chinese pressure, while Stan holds firm, the conflict between father and son has grown, and could prove to be the primary storyline of this season. When Stan says he’s going to write another death metal song about how much he’s come to resent his father, we know that we’re just beginning to scratch the surface here.

After a funny-but-uneven premiere, “Band In China” is a much more sure-footed episode, and one that shows Trey and Matt remain unafraid to go after a big target. It’ll be interesting to see if this episode will become as controversial as the “Cartoon Wars” saga, or if it’ll slip through the cracks. At any rate, this was a strong episode that should have anyone put off by “Mexican Joker” feeling a lot better about season 23's potential.

Stray Observations

  • “Oh yeah, I did kill Winnie The Pooh.”
  • “You’re gonna have to lower your ideals of freedom if you want to suck on the warm teat of China.”
  • This episode seems to take place at the same time as “Mexican Joker.” Towards the end, Cartman and Kyle get off the train having escaped the detention camp. I’m still not quite sure how they got out. Didn’t the guard leave before letting them out when he thought he was in the wrong flashback?
  • The Tegridy Farms-themed opening from last week is back, so I’m guessing they’ll be using it throughout the season.
 
interesting...but whose surprised.. Im just a little surprised it

aint happen a long time ago... talkin about... you americans have big penis us chinese have little penis... wha da fuck.????? bwhahahaaa south park just dont give a fuck bruh.....

I aint watch south park in a minute... right now tho the only shit Im lookin forward to in the world of animation is the return of boondocks....
 
That shit was funny as hell. South Park hasn’t lost a step. And fuck China. That part, not the cheaply made goods. If y’all reading this, I love those goods China. Keep me coming
 
It was so on point that a lot of people are going to confuse it as a reaction rather than foreshadowing.
Of course it was in reaction to the nba situation. That’s why the nba players were in it

"Band in China" is the second episode of the twenty-third season of the American animated television series South Park. The 299th episode overall of the series, it premiered on Comedy Central in the United States on October 2, 2019.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Band_in_China

On Oct. 4, Morey tweeted (and later deleted) support for the ongoing protests in Hong Kong which began in opposition of controversial legislation that would allow criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China. The protests have since expanded. The tweet read: "Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong."
sli0DiL.jpg

https://www.cbssports.com/nba/news/...hong-kong-tweet-what-it-means-for-the-league/

Don't you ever in your fucking life "of course" me. I know what the fuck I'm talking about. You should cover my 2020 BGOL subscription for wasting my time.
 
"Band in China" is the second episode of the twenty-third season of the American animated television series South Park. The 299th episode overall of the series, it premiered on Comedy Central in the United States on October 2, 2019.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Band_in_China

On Oct. 4, Morey tweeted (and later deleted) support for the ongoing protests in Hong Kong which began in opposition of controversial legislation that would allow criminal suspects to be extradited to mainland China. The protests have since expanded. The tweet read: "Fight for Freedom. Stand with Hong Kong."
sli0DiL.jpg

https://www.cbssports.com/nba/news/...hong-kong-tweet-what-it-means-for-the-league/

Don't you ever in your fucking life "of course" me. I know what the fuck I'm talking about. You should cover my 2020 BGOL subscription for wasting my time.
Lol fair enough. I ain’t paying for your damn subscription tho. That only makes it even better.

They just happened to know how present the companies they showed in it from Disney to the nba were there and how that plays out. And the part about Winnie the Pooh being banned there. But you are correct. I get the feeling, they would’ve given the nba players lines , especially James Harden who they had in it.
 
This sure does show us a lot lol. I still want my cheap goods, so I dunno what we gone do.

this controversy doesn't apply to people who buy things from China, just the people who want to sell there.

to that end creators really need to think long and hard about whether or not it's worth sacrificing their art for a potentially larger market. If you're making a PG-13 superhero movie then go ahead. You've already compromised to get the lower rating anyway.

If you're making a show like South Park where the whole brand is based on tipping sacred cows and it makes no sense at all. Kowtowing to Chinese censors means creating a show that absolutely nobody would want to watch.

As for the NBA let's be real. If China is going to pull a television deal over one
tweet from one executive then what happens when a player inevitably says something they don't approve of on a live televised interview? especially when the list of what is and isn't acceptable changes from one week to the next. let's face it, that deal is as good as dead anyway. It's just a matter of when.

the NBA is better off forgetting about China and focusing on the American base. The league will still make a crap ton of money regardless and either China comes around or they don't.
 
this controversy doesn't apply to people who buy things from China, just the people who want to sell there.

to that end creators really need to think long and hard about whether or not it's worth sacrificing their art for a potentially larger market. If you're making a PG-13 superhero movie then go ahead. You've already compromised to get the lower rating anyway.

If you're making a show like South Park where the whole brand is based on tipping sacred cows and it makes no sense at all. Kowtowing to Chinese censors means creating a show that absolutely nobody would want to watch.

As for the NBA let's be real. If China is going to pull a television deal over one
tweet from one executive then what happens when a player inevitably says something they don't approve of on a live televised interview? especially when the list of what is and isn't acceptable changes from one week to the next. let's face it, that deal is as good as dead anyway. It's just a matter of when.

the NBA is better off forgetting about China and focusing on the American base. The league will still make a crap ton of money regardless and either China comes around or they don't.

I know who it Directly effects, but the places I buy my cheap products from are those people , therefore, it effects me and you. The nba, and these other companies are just in your face issues we can laugh at.

The products you and I buy, are made by companies who do these deals in China and other parts of Asia, and that’s why we can get them so cheap. So none of us can be all like “fuck China”. We’re all benefitting and it’s coming to a head. I dunno what that means , it it’s not something that’s only “their problem”.
 
I know who it Directly effects, but the places I buy my cheap products from are those people , therefore, it effects me and you. The nba, and these other companies are just in your face issues we can laugh at.

The products you and I buy, are made by companies who do these deals in China and other parts of Asia, and that’s why we can get them so cheap. So none of us can be all like “fuck China”. We’re all benefitting and it’s coming to a head. I dunno what that means , it it’s not something that’s only “their problem”.

Maybe so, put all the Chinese government did was block NBA games in China. They didn't stop there companies from manufacturing NBA merchandise. they certainly didn't stop their companies from exporting this merchandise to eat United States. They didn't attach a "freedom tax" to it either.

this decision does absolutely nothing to make viewing an NBA game or buying it and be a product more difficult or expensive than it was last season
 
I haven't watched in years. I caught a couple of episodes a few weeks ago from just stumbling upon them. This makes me wanna go play catch up for real.

I re-watched some of last season last night. The last two episodes about Amazon are must-watch.

If you're an old school fan, last season's episodes on Mr. Hanky and especially the ManBearPig episode are also essential viewing.

(I have Hulu with no ads-- since the episodes are only 20 minutes, you can get through a whole season in 3.5 hours. The last few years have been season-long stories instead of one-off episodes, so it's easy to watch them like a movie. I don't remember seasons before last year well enough to recommend that for them but that might be worth trying for last year.)
 
I re-watched some of last season last night. The last two episodes about Amazon are must-watch.

If you're an old school fan, last season's episodes on Mr. Hanky and especially the ManBearPig episode are also essential viewing.

(I have Hulu with no ads-- since the episodes are only 20 minutes, you can get through a whole season in 3.5 hours. The last few years have been season-long stories instead of one-off episodes, so it's easy to watch them like a movie. I don't remember seasons before last year well enough to recommend that for them but that might be worth trying for last year.)
Thanks RB. I don't have Hulu but I'll see if I can view them ON DEMAND.
 
I re-watched some of last season last night. The last two episodes about Amazon are must-watch.

If you're an old school fan, last season's episodes on Mr. Hanky and especially the ManBearPig episode are also essential viewing.

(I have Hulu with no ads-- since the episodes are only 20 minutes, you can get through a whole season in 3.5 hours. The last few years have been season-long stories instead of one-off episodes, so it's easy to watch them like a movie. I don't remember seasons before last year well enough to recommend that for them but that might be worth trying for last year.)

Damn, I wish I could do it with no commercial. My subscription was included free with Spotify though
 
Damn, I wish I could do it with no commercial. My subscription was included free with Spotify though

It's only $10-12 per month. If you can't do both, I'd dump Spotify (but I listen to podcasts and just watch TV/movies; I'm not a big music person so that's a lifestyle thing).

Maybe you could get a free trial? Not sure if your Spotify access would fuck that up for you.
 
China need to get a sense of humour.

China would ban you for that suggestion.

Zedd, a high-profile DJ and music producer, has been permanently banned from China for liking a tweet from “South Park’s” official account.
On Friday, Zedd tweeted about the ban, and CNBC verified the claim with his publicist on Saturday.

“This is true, yes, but we don’t have anymore info to give you at this time,” Adam Guest, senior entertainment publicist at U.K.-based SATELLITE414 agency, told CNBC. It’s unclear at the moment whether this means that Zedd has a travel ban to China. As of Saturday, his music was still available on Chinese music streaming site QQ Music.
“South Park” stirred up controversy in the world’s second-largest economy with an episode called “Band in China” which pokes fun at the country’s strict censorship regime and ridicules American firms doing business there.
Beijing responded by heavily censoring content related to “South Park” on search engines like Baidu and other online services.
The tweet that Zedd liked on Twitter was one celebrating “South Park’s” 300th episode.

The 300th episode is called “Shots!!!” and looks to ridicule anti-vaccination supporters, or anti-vaxxers, as well as continuing its satirical take on China.
Zedd was born in Russia but grew up in Germany. The German embassy in Beijing is yet to respond to a request for comment when contacted by CNBC.
His ban comes at a time when American organizations’ dealings with China are under heavy scrutiny with several being accused of bending over backwards to meet Beijing’s demands around censorship.
It began when Daryl Morey, the general manager of the Houston Rockets NBA team, tweeted a message in support of the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong. The post was quickly deleted. The NBA first appeared to apologize for Morey’s remarks which was criticized by American lawmakers. But later, the league’s commissioner Adam Silver came out in support of Morey’s right to express his opinion. Silver’s remarks drew strong criticism from Chinese state media.
Meanwhile, Apple was in hot water with Beijing for allowing an app, which let Hong Kong protesters see the location of police, onto its App Store. Following criticism from Chinese state media, Apple took the app down.

It wasn't even a controversial tweet!

That country is fucked up...
 
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