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 Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !!

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3 participants
AuteurMessage
Bastet
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Bastet


Masculin
Nombre de messages : 909
Date d'inscription : 28/08/2006

Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! Empty
MessageSujet: Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !!   Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! EmptyVen 26 Jan - 14:30

Là je dois dire que je suis sur le cul... ils ont moins d'états d'âme quand il s'agit de fracasser des moines tibétains, de les stériliser, j'en passe et des meilleures...

Source :
Wall Street Journal (US)
25.01.07

Citation :

Pigs Get the Ax In China TV Ads, In Nod to Muslims

Porcine Prohibition Sends Marketers Scrambling;A New Year Complication
By GORDON FAIRCLOUGH and GEOFFREY A. FOWLER


SHANGHAI -- Next month, China will ring in the Year of the Pig. Nestlé SA planned to celebrate with TV ads
featuring a smiling cartoon pig. "Happy new pig year," the ads said.
This week, China Central Television, the national state-run TV network, banned Nestlé's ad -- and all images and
spoken references to the animal in commercials, including those tied to the Lunar New Year, China's biggest holiday.
The intent: to avoid offending Muslims, who consider pigs unclean. "China is a
multiethnic country," the network's ad department said in a notice sent to ad agencies
late Tuesday. "To show respect to Islam, and upon guidance from higher levels of the
government, CCTV will keep any 'pig' images off the TV screen."
Suddenly, companies reaching out to China's booming consumer market have a pig
problem. The edict has sent Nestlé and others scrambling to adapt to the last-minute
rule change, altering spots that had included pigs.
Nestlé is now figuring out what to do with its ads, says its media-buying company
MindShare, a unit of WPP Group. "We act in line with any requests that we receive from
the authorities" about the content of ads, says Francois-Xavier Perroud, a spokesman
for Nestlé.
Coca-Cola Co. says it already had plans to run two versions of its New Year ads, one
featuring a cartoon panda and the other a pig. The company says it will be using the pigfree
spot, in which a young panda tries to get home to its family for the holidays, on
CCTV. The pig ads will run on local TV in markets without significant numbers of Muslim
viewers, says a Coca-Cola spokeswoman.
The pig ban is a significant shift for a government that seldom puts the interests of minority groups ahead of those of
the broader population. China has more than 20 million Muslims, but they constitute less than 2% of its population.
For most other Chinese, the pig has powerful and positive cultural associations as one of the 12 signs of the Chinese
zodiac. Year of the Pig decorations already festoon cities and villages all over China.
Pork is the meat most widely consumed by the country's Han Chinese majority. On average, Chinese annually eat
more than 80 pounds of pork , according to United Nations statistics. At banquets in southern China, people often
roast whole pigs, decorated with blinking red lights in their eye sockets.
Tens of millions of people have been born in the year of the pig, which occurs every 12 years. People born under the
sign of the pig are believed to be happy and honest. Astrologers say this year is held to be especially auspicious for
new births.
Pigs symbolize prosperity and good fortune as well as fertility and virility. "Pigs are fat and they mean good luck,"
says Miao Saiwang, a spokesman for the Bank of China, a commercial lender. In some areas this year, the bank is
using the slogan: "Golden pigs bring good fortune."
Chinese TV's ban comes in the wake of the killing of 18 Muslims by police in the country's remote northwest earlier
this month. The government accused the men of being terrorists. Muslim activists have called for an independent
investigation.



The policy shift offers a window on the inner workings of China's governmental machinery, known for its surprise
edicts and abrupt shifts in regulation. It wasn't immediately clear whether the ban applies just to ads or to all TV
content. And some analysts said the government could still reverse itself, or offer exceptions to the ban.
Advertising-industry executives in China say senior Communist Party leaders recently told CCTV that references to
pigs should be avoided to prevent conflicts among ethnic groups. CCTV's move was then announced to advertisers
just as many were finalizing their spots for the holiday, which begins Feb. 18.
The ban could have an impact because CCTV is China's monopoly national broadcast network -- both the biggest
media company in the country and the official voice of the Communist Party. Advertisers spent $1.2 billion in 2006 on
CCTV air time because programs such as the nightly weather report regularly reach 200 million people.
The message has left advertisers and their agencies rushing to alter ads, or pull them entirely. "I am sure there will
be a lot of last-minute overtime work by the creative agencies and production houses," says Bessie Lee, the chief
executive of WPP's GroupM China unit, which manages media buying for advertisers.
Ad agencies say they aren't totally surprised by the ruling. Marketers in China often have to contend with a welter of
sometimes inconsistent government edicts as Beijing attempts to control the media and popular culture -- though few
have struck so directly as the ban on pigs.
In recent years, regulators have banned ads for breast enhancement
and reality TV shows that feature people under the age of 18. Last year
CCTV banned some ads for infant milk formula after the government
launched an initiative to encourage breast-feeding.
"This is all about the government positioning itself as the patriarchal
protector of the people," says Tom Doctoroff, the chief executive of the
North Asia operations of WPP's JWT ad agency.
Even as CCTV keeps pigs off the air, images of the animal are
proliferating in stores as well as in print ads and billboards in
anticipation of the New Year holiday. Starbucks Corp. shops in China
are selling bright red pig-shaped piggy banks emblazoned with the
chain's name, as well as stuffed-animal pigs.
Walt Disney Co., which is making a major push into China after opening a theme park in Hong Kong, is building its
marketing efforts for the year around Piglet, Winnie the Pooh's cartoon sidekick. The company says that market
research into Chinese culture and traditions led them to prioritize Piglet, who is a lesser character in other markets.
"Piglet will be Disney's most eye-catching image throughout 2007 in China," said the company in a statement before
the ban. China's postal service has also launched "Year of Piglet" stamps surrounded by images of the character.
Disney had no comment on the ban.
Pigs have often been at the center of communal violence between China's Muslim minority and the Chinese majority.
Protests ensued when a pig's head was nailed to the door of a mosque several years ago.
Tensions have flared again since security forces killed the 18 accused terrorists in an area -- the Xinjiang Uighur
Autonomous Region -- known for Muslim separatist activity. Uighurs are Turkic speaking Muslims who have long
bridled at Beijing's rule.
"After an incident like that, the government often tries to make up for it, in an overt propaganda way," says Dru
Gladney, an anthropologist at Pomona College in California, who studies China's Muslims. "But nothing in reality
changes on the ground."



China closely monitors mosques and Islamic religious schools, and the government has worked to damp Muslim
protests over issues that have prompted outcries among Muslims elsewhere, such as a Danish newspaper's
publication in 2005 of cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.
"Muslim people hate pigs and don't even mention pigs in their daily lives," says Ma Yunfu, the vice chairman of the
China Islamic Association. Mr. Ma said he hadn't been informed of the CCTV ban but views it as "a precaution."
"We don't want to see any misunderstanding like the one 12 years ago," during the last Year of the Pig, says Mr. Ma.
At that time, Mr. Ma says, some newspapers published a tale in which a pig saves the life of Muhammad. "That
aroused a lot of anger," he says.
--Sue Feng, Tang Hanting and Juying Qin
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Selina
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Selina


Féminin
Nombre de messages : 98
Localisation : Genf
Emploi : positive
Loisirs : dodo
Date d'inscription : 09/11/2006

Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !!   Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! EmptySam 27 Jan - 2:36

Crying or Very sad *pleure devant la connerie humaine*

je prend ça pour une offence personnelle beuhuleu (vivent les natifs du cochon! chinois, europeens, juifs ou musulmans dozey )
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http://www.20six.fr/selina
NinNinNekoPyon
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NinNinNekoPyon


Masculin
Nombre de messages : 953
Localisation : Paris Plage
Emploi : Ingénieur Système (ca tape, non ?)
Loisirs : 30 minutes de caca par jour
Date d'inscription : 29/08/2006

Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !!   Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! EmptyDim 28 Jan - 9:21

Boh, en même temps la Chine, hein...

*Va relire 1984*

JB


Dernière édition par le Dim 28 Jan - 20:43, édité 1 fois
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Bastet
Dependance avancée
Bastet


Masculin
Nombre de messages : 909
Date d'inscription : 28/08/2006

Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! Empty
MessageSujet: Re: Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !!   Même les chinois bannissent les cochons !! EmptyDim 28 Jan - 19:37

Justement, c'est vraiment très étonnant venant de la Chine...
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