Lady Gaga, plus Bjork and Bon Jovi, are blocked
in China after they met or expressed support for the exiled
Tibetan spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama. China recently
blacklisted Canadian star Bieber, citing bad behavior.
China's huge consumer base is a magnet for Hollywood studios to
theme park operators, but entry in the market comes with strings
attached. The country has long censored imported film and music
and is now clamping down hard on audiovisual content online.
The Recording Academy, which runs The Grammys, pledged on
Thursday in Beijing to respect China's media curbs as it plans
to launch a tour in China in 2018 featuring its award-winning
artists, or nominees, performing live shows.
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Lady Gaga has six Grammy Award wins. Bieber, a Grammy winner
nominated seven times, apologized to fans on Thursday after he
abruptly canceled the rest of his world tour and accidentally
hit a photographer with his truck.
"If there are restrictions and things in that nature, we have to
be respectful," Neil Portnow, president and chief executive of
The Recording Academy, told Reuters in Beijing.
China has launched a campaign to cleanse the entertainment
sector of content it deems inappropriate and unhealthy, a vague
term the authorities frequently use to justify censorship of
politically sensitive topics.
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"We will promote artists with a positive and healthy image," said
Steven Fock, chief executive of music events organizer Bravo
Entertainment, one of The Recording Academy's partners for the live
show tour along with China Music Vision.
At a time of slowing domestic growth, Chinese audiences have become
increasingly important to the U.S. entertainment industry. A
livestream in China last year of the Grammy Awards drew nearly 11
million viewers.
In contrast, Grammy viewership dipped slightly for the latest show
in February, from nearly 25 million last year in the United States.
In January, The Recording Academy said it would build its first
overseas Grammy Museum in China.
Portnow added he hoped curbs on some artists would be lifted
eventually, and vowed to push China to clamp down on piracy after
making progress in intellectual property protection.
(Reporting by Pei Li; Writing by Brenda Goh; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez and Neil Fullick)
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