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A Chinese Web site will launch Thursday what its producer describes as
the country's first show to focus on gay issues and the first with an
openly homosexual host. The
weekly, hourlong Internet TV show "Tongxing Xianglian," or "Connecting
Homosexuals," will debut Thursday on www.phoenixtv.com, producer Gang
Gang said in a phone interview with The Associated Press. The Web
site is run by the same media company that runs the Phoenix satellite
TV station. Gang said clips from the online show will be aired on the
broadcaster. Gang said while homosexuals have appeared on Chinese
TV shows, this will be the first show to focus on gay issues and the
first with an openly gay host, AIDS activist Didier Zheng. He said he hopes the Beijing-based show will improve public understanding of Chinese homosexuals. "There
are many people in China's gay community, but people don't have a deep
enough understanding about this community. This community faces a lot
of trouble and difficulties. They face a lot of pressure," Gang said. Homosexuals
were strongly persecuted after China's 1949 communist revolution,
condemned as products of decadent Western and feudal societies. Official
attitudes gradually have changed since the late 1980s, and in 2001, the
China Psychiatric Association stopped listing homosexuality as a mental
illness. The new show will explore homosexuality from legal,
parental and sociological perspectives, dealing with issues like gay
marriage, Gang said. The program will also feature a friend-matching
portion. It remains to be seen if the new show will face censorship. Though
the communist government promotes Internet use, it has also set up an
extensive surveillance and filtering system to prevent Chinese from
accessing material considered obscene or politically subversive. The
show's host, Zheng, 27, is a France-educated activist at the Chi Heng
Foundation, which works with AIDS orphans and promotes AIDS prevention. "I
hope to convey my love in caring for gays, my hopes for them to get
better recognition in society," said Zheng, a Chinese citizen who
pursued graduate studies in psychology at the Sorbonne. Gang said
he believes gays in China face less discrimination than in the West,
where criticism of homosexuals stems from Christian beliefs. "The pressure comes more from the Chinese problem of saving face," he said.
Source: AP
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