During political meetings in Beijing earlier this month, China made a show of its openness to foreign journalists. A closer look at its efforts to cultivate invited guests, particularly from the Global South, suggests what the government really wants is to have less experienced China reporters who arrive as tabula rasa — ready to be imprinted with the government’s message.| China Media Project
With a US Senate debate on TikTok and its national security implications on the horizon, some media have asked what signs there are that the app's parent company, ByteDance, is under the thumb of China's leadership. An abject politically-laden apology six years ago by the company's CEO cuts right through the questions.| China Media Project
The latest collaboration between the Discovery Channel and state-run media in China has been accused of whitewashing genocide in Xinjiang. Why is this American network so keen to “tell China’s story well?”| China Media Project
The phrase "telling China's story well" ((讲好中国故事)), introduced by Xi Jinping within the first year of his administration, in August 2013, encapsulates the notion that Party-state media and even quasi-private actors must work internationally to strengthen and innovate external propaganda, thereby enhancing China's "international discourse power" (国际话语权) as a key aspect of its "comprehensive national power" (综合国力).| China Media Project