BEIJING (Reuters) - China has banned "sexually provocative
sounds" on television and pulled the plug on a show
reconstructing infamous crimes by women ahead of a major
Communist Party meeting next month.
The order, issued by the State Administration of Radio,
Film and Television, is the latest in a raft of measures which
have included axing reality shows featuring sex changes and
plastic surgery and banning talent contests during prime-time.
"Sexually suggestive advertisements and scenes showing how
women are influenced into a life of crime are detrimental to
society," it said in a statement posted on its Web site on
Wednesday, referring to its decision to axe "Red Question
Mark," a crime documentary.
"Commercials containing sexually provocative sounds or
tantalizing language as well as vulgar advertisements for
breast enhancement and female underwear are banned, effective
immediately," said the SARFT notice.
The watchdog also ordered an end to programs with titles
including the names of "sex-related drugs, products or medical
institutions."
A total of 1,466 advertisements worth 2 billion yuan ($246
million) in revenues had been stripped from China's airways
since August, SARFT said, citing department statistics.
Since launching a campaign to purify China's
state-controlled airways earlier in the year, the media
watchdog's edicts have gained fever pitch in recent weeks,
ahead of a meeting of the 17th Party congress, a sensitive
five-yearly meeting at which key government leaders are
appointed and national policy set for the next few years.
It earlier urged the country's increasingly freewheeling
broadcasters to forgo vulgarity and bad taste in the pursuit of
ratings in favor of providing "inspiring" content for the
masses imbued with "socialist" values.