Home
Search:
1146 feeds
357 categories
0 articles (<24 hours)
28 registered users

Use the Mobile version
Mobile

Follow our Twitter feed

View our Linkpartners
Links

Username:
Password:

Register | Retrieve

Culture


RSS FeedsThe word `Leica` is now banned on Chinese social media after controversial `Tank Man` video
(Digital Photography Review)

 
 

19 april 2019 20:43:03

 
The word `Leica` is now banned on Chinese social media after controversial `Tank Man` video
(Digital Photography Review)
 


Leica is facing backlash in China following the publication of a video called `The Hunt` set in 1989 during, among other things, the Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests. In response to the video, Chinese social media website Weibo has banned the use of the word `Leica` -- attempts to search for content in English and Chinese using that keyword returns zero results. `The Hunt` is a fictionalized video that primarily follows a Western photojournalist who attempts to capture the Tiananmen Square protests using a Leica camera1. Though the video never explicitly mentions the protests, it features the text `Beijing, 1989,` and concludes with the iconic `Tank Man` image as a reflection in a Leica camera`s lens. The video went viral on social media in China, where a number of users have lambasted the dramatic reenactment. Soon after, Weibo banned posts containing the word `Leica` due to the video`s `violation of relevant laws and regulations or the Weibo Community Convention,` according to the South China Morning Post (SCMP). SCMP claims Leica didn`t commission and does not sanction the video, which was reportedly produced by Brazillian marketing company F/Nazca Saatchi Saatchi. The news source published a statement from Leica, which expressed regret over `any misunderstandings or false conclusions that may have been drawn` regarding the video. The controversy hits Leica amid its partnership with Chinese company Huawei and its plan to launch 20 to 30 new stores in China. Likewise, the video arrives during a particularly tense time for the Chinese government - June 4 is the 30th anniversary of the government`s deadly suppression of the pro-democracy protests. For its part, Leica has been criticized for distancing itself from the video, which has been praised by some as a poignant reminder of the pro-democracy movement and the Chinese government`s bloody response. The Communist Party of China censors the Tiananmen Square Massacre and related protests and as s ...


 
16 viewsCategory: Culture > Photography
 
Facebook now says `millions of Instagram users` had their passwords stored in plaintext
(Digital Photography Review)
Instagram is considering hiding the like counts on photos
(Digital Photography Review)
 
 
blog comments powered by Disqus


Copyright © 2008 - 2024 Indigonet Services B.V.. Contact: Tim Hulsen. Read here our privacy notice.
Other websites of Indigonet Services B.V.: Nieuws Vacatures Science Tweets Nachrichten