上周日,约2000名示威者聚集在日本富士电视台门口,抗议该台播放大量韩国电视节目。据报道,此次示威活动由日本右翼民族主义团体发起,起初只有600人参加,后来迅速增加到2000人。示威人员高喊着“停止韩流”、“吊销电视台牌照”等口号。据悉,此次反韩流的导火索是日本演员高冈苍甫在其twitter上的发言,他说“再也不看富士电视台”,表示“日本人需要的是传统的日本节目”,更揶揄富士台是“韩国电视台”。
A group of 2,000 protestors held a demonstration outside of Fuji TV headquarters in Tokyo on Sunday, complaining about the station’s emphasis on Korean programming. |
A group of 2,000 protestors held a demonstration outside of Fuji TV headquarters in Tokyo on Sunday, complaining about the station’s emphasis on Korean programming, according to news reports.
Reportedly spearheaded by right-wing nationalist groups, the demonstration initially drew 600 people but swelled to 2,000.
The Dong-A Ilbo reported that participants sang the Japanese national anthem and chanted, “Long Live the Emperor!”
Protestors chanted slogans such as “Stop hallyu” and “Revoke broadcaster’s license,” with one shouting “We’ve gathered today to redeem Fuji TV from Korea’s hands.”
The anti-Korean backlash, due to a growing number of Korean dramas broadcast on Japanese TV, has gained steam in recent weeks following a controversy surrounding Japanese actor Sousuke Takaoka.
“I’ll never watch Channel 8 (Fuji TV) again,” the 29-year-old recently told fans on Twitter. “I often think it’s Korean TV. Japanese people want traditional Japanese programs.”
With news spreading that Takaoka left his management agency after criticizing Fuji TV, anti-hallyu sentiment by right-wing groups snowballed. Former Yokohama Mayor Hiroshi Nakada criticized Fuji TV, saying “I think (Takaoka’s comments) are justified. Which country’s broadcaster is Fuji?,” in condemning Fuji.
While serving as Yokohama mayor, Nakada urged public schools in the city to adopt history textbooks distorting Korea-Japan history.
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(Agencies)
Vocabulary:
hallyu: Korean wave, 韩流
(中国日报网英语点津 Helen )