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‘Tainted artist’ Kris Wu: karaoke bar in China fined US$1,400 for using songs and photos of ex-pop star alleged rapist

  • The Chinese government often bans songs it deems dangerous or immoral from karaoke venues but intensified its efforts last year
  • Chinese-Canadian Wu is listed as a ‘tainted artist’ in China after he was charged with rape and is currently awaiting a verdict after being tried

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A karaoke bar says it was unaware that photos and songs of fallen singer Kris Wu had been banned after a large fine was given to the venue. Photo: Handout

A karaoke lounge in southern China has been fined 10,000 yuan (US$1,400) for having images and songs of former pop superstar Kris Wu who is facing rape charges in its system, according to a business data platform.

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Authorities in Guangdong in southern China fined Huayun Entertainment League in May after an inspection the previous month found “illegal content” from Chinese-Canadian Wu who is listed as a “tainted artist”, according to a government announcement online.

The company was fined for violating a regulation banning entertainment venues from providing content that “goes against social morals or fine traditional Chinese culture”.

Former pop idol Wu was blacklisted in China after being accused by beauty industry influencer Du Meizhu of date-raping her when she was 17. Photo: Getty
Former pop idol Wu was blacklisted in China after being accused by beauty industry influencer Du Meizhu of date-raping her when she was 17. Photo: Getty

A staff member at the karaoke bar told The Paper on Thursday that it had removed the songs and images after receiving the penalty, and said it was the result of an overdue system update.

He further explained that because their lounge is in a small county, there is no trade association to alert them of the latest relevant government policies.

The Chinese government has a long-standing policy of banning songs it deems dangerous or immoral from karaoke venues but has intensified its scrutiny of song catalogues recently.

In October last year, China’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism ordered all karaoke bars and entertainment venues to remove songs that fall under the category of banned entertainment activities under a broader national regulation from 2006. It includes songs that endanger national unity, sovereignty or territorial integrity, and damage social morals.

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