No Oscars for Hong Kong for first time since 1969

It won’t be broadcast here next month.

The Oscars will not be shown in Hong Kong for the first time in more than half a century, its local broadcaster confirmed on Monday, as doubts remained over whether Hollywood’s top awards will air in mainland China.

The ceremony has been broadcast in Hong Kong every year since 1969 by free-to-air TVB on its English language channel.

But no channel will carry next month’s awards.

“It was purely a commercial decision that we decided not to pursue the Oscars this year,” a TVB spokesperson said.

China’s censor

The decision comes after Bloomberg News reported earlier this month that China’s Communist Party propaganda department has ordered its state-controlled media to play down the awards and not show the ceremony live.

The cause is believed to be the nomination of Do Not Split, a short documentary on Hong Kong’s pro-democracy protests, as well as the four nods for Chinese-born U.S. director Chloe Zhao for Nomadland.

State media…

Exit mobile version