Tue, 3 Mar 2026
Headlines:
Advertisement
TV regulators side-line Hong Kong comedy
Published on: Saturday, June 20, 2020
Published on: Sat, Jun 20, 2020
By: AFP
Text Size:
Text:
TV regulators side-line Hong Kong comedy
Hong Kong actors Ng Chi-sum (L) and Tsang Chi-ho are seen in a skit for ‘Headliner’ at a studio in Hong Kong.
HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s oldest political satire show will aired its final episode Friday evening, against a backdrop of pro-democracy unrest and fears that an incoming anti-subversion law will help Beijing trammel local freedoms.

The swansong show by “Headliner” also came after the government launched a review of RTHK, the public broadcaster that makes the programme, which has faced accusations from Beijing loyalists of being overly sympathetic to the opposition.

Advertisement
For the last 31 years the irreverent show has sparked government ire with its skits and often rough lampooning of public figures.

But a recent episode critical of police, following months of pro-democracy protests, has effectively ended the show, after sparking a rebuke from regulators.

SPONSORED CONTENT
Finance Minister Datuk Seri Masidi Manjun said the two projects together would add 28MWac of new power generation capacity, helping to stabilise electricity supply in Sabah.
Back in February, as the coronavirus first surfaced in Hong Kong, the programme featured a scene showing a police officer jumping out of a rubbish bin to deliver a skit about protective equipment.

At the time, local media had run reports that police had ample supplies of face masks, while residents and health care workers were scrabbling to get their hands on them.

Advertisement
The show sparked hundreds of complaints, including from the city’s police chief, and a probe by the Communications Authority.

Last month the regulator agreed with the complaints, that the skit showed “denigration and insult” towards the police, contained inaccuracies and failed to show a broad range of views.

Advertisement
In a statement, RTHK apologised and said “Headliner” would soon air its last show while it reviewed satirical programming.

That sparked criticism from rights and employee groups, which said it had caved to pressure.

“’Headliner’ is a satire and different audiences will have different reactions, so it’s unfair to ask the show to be responsible for everyone’s feelings,” Gladys Chiu, head of the RTHK Programme Staff Union, said after the decision.

On Wednesday, actors from the show were filming their final episode under hot studio lights.

“I would like to say ‘see you again’ but how can I tell such a big lie,” said Ng Chi-sum, a veteran of the show, who was dressed as a dynastic-era empress to mock Hong Kong’s deeply unpopular pro-Beijing leader Carrie Lam.

RTHK has increasingly found itself caught in the crossfire of Hong Kong’s intense political polarisation.

Modelled on Britain’s BBC, it is a public broadcaster which officially remains editorially independent of the government.

It has long been seen by the city’s pro-Beijing camp as biased towards their pro-democracy opponents, a charge the broadcaster denies.

Last month, Lam’s government announced it had appointed a task force to “review operations and management of RTHK”.

Critics fear the move is an attempt to mould RTHK into something that more closely resembles the heavily censored and relentlessly positive state broadcasters of authoritarian mainland China. 
Advertisement
Share this story
Advertisement
Advertisement
Follow Us  
Follow us              
Daily Express TV  
© Copyright 2026 Sabah Publishing House Sdn. Bhd. (Co. No. 35782-P)
close
Try 1 month for RM 18.00
Already a subscriber? Login here
Try 1 month for RM 18.00
open
Try 1 month for RM 18.00
Already a subscriber? Login here