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Episode Removed on Disney+ Hong Kong for Tiananmen Square Joke


https://gamerant.com/the-simpsons-tiananmen-square-episode-disney-plus-hong-kong/

The episode in question is number 12 from the 16th season of The Simpsons (a season with one of the highest-rated Simpsons episodes on IMDb, incidentally), first broadcast in 2005. The episode finds Homer and his family visiting the infamous Tiananmen Square in China, the site of the 1989 massacre of pro-democracy student protestors by armed troops, and come across a placard that reads, "On this site, in 1989, nothing happened." It's a satirical take on the kind of extreme censorship that the Chinese government regularly partakes in, especially in mainland China where any mention of the protest is disallowed in public discourse. The episode also has the Simpson family visit remains of the Mao Zedong, founding father of the People's Republic of China, and face off against a row of tanks, referencing an iconic photo from the uprising.

The episode's removal in Hong Kong is apparently voluntary by Disney Plus, rather than imposed. Historically, this kind of censorship has not been as pervasive as in the mainland. China has a set of censorship laws for video games, for example. But, to the worry of many, this has been changing. Hong Kong is slowly falling victim to the increasing influence of Beijing, with the legislature passing a number of bills that serve to undermine the city's former free speech laws. Last month, a new and intentionally vague law sought to ban the screening and distribution of films deemed as working against the national security interests of China, with a hefty $130,000 fine for anyone caught exhibiting such unauthorized media.

Currently, content rules for streaming services in Hong Kong are murky, but with the intentional absence of this episode of The Simpsons, for example, it seems more likely that heavier restrictions will be brought in. In October, PS Plus users in Hong Kong got a different free game from the rest of the world for reasons that remain unclear but which are thought to involve red tape.

Concerns are growing that China's infamous "Great Firewall" - their widespread internet and news censorship regime - will be engulfing Hong Kong's media soon. The worry is that the resulting self-censorship by filmmakers will heavily impede a once vibrant sector.

Still, content that seems to obviously contravene the new restrictive laws is still being hosted on streaming websites in Hong Kong, including Joe Piscatella's documentary about the pro-democracy student movement in 2014, Joshua: Teenager vs. Superpower, on Netflix. It remains to be seen how long this will stay the case.


And with the new Twitter CEO we'll be seeing more censorship soon as we shift to a more Orwellian China-esque society spurred by a certain party.

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