Fan Bingbing: China’s Most Famous Actress Has Disappeared
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Imagine if one day Jennifer Lawrence was walking the red carpet in Los Angeles and the next she vanished completely with no word about where she was.
It might sound ludicrous, or terrifying, but it’s the reality in China, where one of the country’s most famous actresses has disappeared without a trace amid an uproar over tax evasion by celebrities.
Fan Bingbing, one of China’s highest-paid and most bankable stars, has appeared in both Chinese and Western films, including the multimillion-dollar X-Men franchise.
Across the country, her face once adorned thousands of advertisements, her star power used to sell a galaxy of luxury brands, from Cartier to Louis Vuitton. She was a regular sight at major award shows and fashion ceremonies. In 2015, Time Magazine named her China’s “most famous actress.”
But the film star hasn’t been seen in public since early June, when, according to a post on her verified social-media account, she went to visit a children’s hospital in Tibet.
In an article by state media Securities Daily on September 6, which was later deleted, the publication said Fan had been brought “under control and about to receive legal judgment.”
No official statement has been made as to Fan’s whereabouts, or any potential criminal charges against the actress.
However, in a country where top celebrities are forced to keep an inoffensive public profile to stay in the Chinese government’s good graces, people have drawn their own conclusions about the actress’ location.
“If you are a billionaire, then that is something that obviously you can enjoy to a certain extent, but you’ve got to be very, very wary that you don’t at any stage cross a red line of some sort and fall afoul of the Chinese Communist Party,” Fergus Ryan, a cyber analyst with the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, told CNN.
In 2011, the country’s best-known artist, Ai Weiwei, was detained for almost three months during which time his whereabouts were unclear. He was later released after he signed a confession authorities described as being related to tax evasion.
Yin yang contracts
Fan’s purported problems began when alleged copies of a film contract she had signed were leaked onto China’s social media in late May.
According to state tabloid Global Times, she had two different contracts, one for tax purposes saying she was paid $1.5 million (10 million yuan) and a separate, private contract for $7.5 million (50 million yuan).
It’s a practice known in China as “yin-yang contracts,” a form of tax evasion where the first, smaller contract is reported to authorities while the second, larger one is treated as tax-free income.
The man behind the leak, Chinese TV host Cui Yongyuan, apologized in June to Fan for his actions, but the same month the State Administration of Taxation of China urged investigators to look into allegations of yin-yang contracts in the country’s film industry.
Fan’s team issued a furious denial at the time but the actress hasn’t been seen in public since the dispute.
In September, China’s Beijing Normal University released a report, lauded as the first “in the world” and heavily promoted in Chinese state media, which ranked the country’s stars by their level of “social responsibility.” Fan was ranked last, with a score of 0 out of 100.
A producer with a major Chinese studio told CNN the practice of having two contracts, one of them smaller to avoid paying too much tax, was “universal” in the film industry.
He said everyone was worried following Fan’s disappearance, especially because “almost every contract has some irregularities” and won’t stand up to a serious audit.
Like other industry insiders CNN spoke to, he declined to be named due to the political sensitivity of the topic.
Scaring celebrities into line
Jonathan Landreth, former Beijing-based Asia editor for the Hollywood Reporter and longtime observer of China’s entertainment industry, told CNN the Chinese Communist Party was treading a tricky line, keen to use high-profile celebrities to sell the “Chinese Dream,” but not wanting to promote the stark income divide.
“Maybe this is just scaring folk to … start paying taxes. If someone were to get busted, then I think it would send a ripple effect to how film production goes forward in the coming years,” Landreth said.
An executive in a foreign film studio’s China office told CNN the lack of A-list celebrities in China increased the bargaining power and earnings of a lucky few — high-profile performers like Fan.
But while cracking down on them might solve other problems, she said it wouldn’t help address the fundamental lack of talent across the Chinese film and television industries.
Combined with strict ideological control, such measures act only to create a “sad situation” in China’s creative industry, she said.
The controls, though, can only go so far. The Chinese government needs the high-profile celebrities to help drive commerce, both domestically and internationally, to promote China, said Landreth.
The crackdown may in fact be intended to solve a different problem facing authorities. “It has long been an open secret that a movie budget is a great place to hide money,” said Landreth.
The Communist Party’s leadership may hope that by shining a light on celebrity tax avoidance, it could deflect attention and avoid closer public scrutiny of the rumored corruption among top government officials and their families, Landreth told CNN.
Spreading ‘positive energy’
The Chinese Communist Party has long had an uncomfortable relationship with celebrities.
In recent years, state media has called on celebrities to spread “positive energy” on the internet. The threat of career-ending trouble with authorities has led the country’s stars to pay attention to the party’s wishes.
The result is a celebrity culture that has less in common with the salacious and controversial Hollywood familiar to the Western world. In China, celebrities often try to keep their reputations’ positive and inoffensive.
Australian analyst Ryan said when he lived in China, he worked with the publicity team for Chinese actress and singer Li Bingbing.
He encouraged Li to become more involved with environmental causes, including the United Nations Environment Program.
But Ryan said the team would never choose a cause, or take up a fight that was ahead of what the Communist Party was comfortable with, especially if it opposed current government policy.
“You would be foolish to go out ahead of the Chinese Communist Party and the Chinese authorities on issues and lead the way,” he said.
Despite the speculation and the concern, Ryan said it was possible the explanation for Fan’s disappearance was actually very simple.
“She possibly did something wrong … the evidence was put out there for all to see, I guess, in a way that put the authorities in a position where they had to come down hard on her,” he said.
Netflix’s Apostle trailer teases a bloody cult thriller from the director of The Raid
The year: 1905. The plight: Religious blood cults are kidnapping people. The solution: Dan Stevens, certified action hero.
In Apostle, a new film coming to Netflix in October, Stevens — best known for roles on Downton Abbey and Legion, but a proven skull-buster in the criminally underrated The Guest — teams up with The Raid director Gareth Evans for a unique twist on the religious psychodrama. The “twist” is somewhat literal: In the first trailer, we see cranks of a vise stretching out the spine, shackles wrapped around the wrists of prisoners, and a turn or two of a knife in the belly. Apostle promises a gruesome thriller that should scare and shock and further solidify the caliber of both actor and director.
Stevens plays Thomas Richardson, described in the film’s official synopsis as the “prodigal son,” who returns home to discover that his sister has been abducted by a religious sect living in solitude on a misty island. To retrieve her, Thomas travels to the remote location and embeds himself among the members, led by Prophet Malcolm (Michael Sheen). Thanks to bloodlust and the general evil of man, the rescue operation does … not go smoothly.
Written and directed by Evans, Apostle is “a harrowing occult fable where the only thing more horrifying than madness is the sinister reality behind it.” Fans of puritanical action-horror like Black Death, Solomon Kane, The Wicker Man or even Tom Hardy’s Taboo should immediately cue this one up.
Apostle hits Netflix on Oct. 12.
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What’s Coming and Going From Netflix the Week of September 17, 2018
I’m most excited this week about a weird limited series called Maniac from Cary Joji Fukunaga (Beasts of No Nation, True Detective, It). Emma Stone and Jonah Hill star as patients in a “mindbending pharmaceutical trial gone awry.” It looks like they hallucinate themselves into a lot of wacky situations, allowing for lots of different costumes, wigs and prosthetics, which is always a good time.
I’d be remiss if I didn’t at least point out that Tony Danza and Josh Groban star as a father-son duo in The Good Cop. Tony’s the “crooked but kindhearted dad,” Josh plays a “pathologically honest detective.” What hijinks could possibly ensue?
Arriving This Week
A * denotes a Netflix original. Links go to Netflix trailers and watch pages.
Monday, September 17
- The Witch
Tuesday, September 18
- American Horror Story: Cult
- D.L. Hughley: Contrarian*
Friday, September 21
- Battlefish*
- DRAGON PILOT: Hisone & Masotan*
- Hilda*
- Maniac: Limited Series*
- Nappily Ever After*
- Quincy*
- The Good Cop*
Sunday, September 23
- The Walking Dead: Season 8
Leaving This Week
Nothing’s leaving this week!
Article via: What’s Coming and Going From Netflix the Week of September 17, 2018
Ariana Grande: Tribute to Ex-BF Mac Miller
Ariana Grande is looking for ways to deal with Mac Miller‘s death, and one way she found is to embrace her ex-boyfriend’s own words.
Ariana posted a tribute to Mac Saturday, saying she was listening to one of the cuts from his album, Swimming.
The track — “Ladders” — has the lyric, “Somehow we gotta find a way/no matter how many miles it takes.”
Grande posted the artwork from the album, but added storm clouds … clearly for emotional effect.
TMZ broke the story … Mac died of an apparent OD earlier this month. He had been with friends the night before he died and law enforcement believes drugs took his life.
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Watch: The Music World Mourns Mac Miller+ Ariana Grande Turns Off Her IG Comments
Kanye West Posted A Video Of North Singing The Drake Song That Started The Kim Kardashian Affair Theory And People Have Thoughts
The majority of the theory stemmed from the lyrics to Drake’s song, “In My Feelings,” which references a woman called “KiKi.”
In another song, Drake repeated the words “Your Wifey” in the same vocal pattern Kanye uses on his track, “Runaway”
And in another track, Drake referenced “creeping down the block and making a right” to see his secret lover. Turns out that you can get from Drake’s house to Kimye’s by following these directions.
However, a few hours after the theory blew up the internet, Kim shut the whole thing down with this comment on The Shade Room’s Instagram account.
And a couple of days after that, Kanye appeared to respond to the theory in a string of tweets in which he sent “good energy and love” to Drake.
Before saying he wanted to attend one of Drake’s concerts to “give love and be inspired”.
However, Kanye appears to have thrown a spanner in the works because yesterday he posted this video of his five-year-old daughter North West singing in the back of a car.
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Amy Winehouse’s father slams Paul McCartney for saying he could have helped the singer: ‘What would he have done?’
Amy Winehouse’s father, Mitch Winehouse, has called out Beatles’ legend Paul McCartney for his claim that he could have saved his daughter from her tragic death.
On Friday, on what would have been his daughter’s 35th birthday, the father of the British singer appeared on ITV’s “Loose Women” and revealed that he was shocked to read that McCartney regretted not being able to help Winehouse battle her addiction.
“What would he have done? It’s up to the person in recovery and they have to want to get help. It’s all about the person who is dealing with her addiction,” Mitch said of McCartney’s comments. “We’ve gone through the hurt and the pain and it’s still painful and our way to deal with it is to help young people.”
In an interview with GQ, the “Let It Be” singer recalled the time he met Winehouse in 2008, three years before death, and said that he was aware that the young star “had a problem,” but regretted not saying or doing anything to help her.
“‘I knew she had a problem, but I ended up just saying hi, she said hi, but afterwards I thought I really should have just run after her — ‘Hey, Amy, listen, you’re really good, I really hope you…’ — and say something that broke through the despair. And she’d remember and think, ‘Oh yeah, I’m good, I’ve got a life to lead.’ But you always have those little regrets.”
Winehouse’s father also clarified on the talk show that, although his daughter struggled with drugs, she did not die from an overdose.
“What people don’t realize about Amy is she was clear of drugs for three years. A lot of people think she died of a drugs overdose, right? Well, she didn’t, she was clear of drugs for three years. Some people say, “Well, what’s the difference?” She died of alcohol poisoning.”
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NRA TV depicts ‘Thomas & Friends’ characters in KKK hoods
Diversity seems to be an ugly word these days. What should be celebratory of different people and their cultures has turned into an ugly word. For example, a National rifle Association online show depicted the characters from hit-childhood show “Thomas & Friends” in white, Ku Klux Klan- style hoods on burning tracks.
Host of NRA TV’s “Relentless,” Dana Loesch went after the classic children’s character Thomas The Tank Engine after its maker, Mattel, joined forces with the United Nations in efforts to increase gender diversity and representation on the program and include new characters from around the globe.
Loesch, a conservative spokeswomen for the gun rights group, specifically called out one new character – Nia, a steam engine from Kenya.
“That’s where it gets really strange to me,” Loesch says on Friday’s episode. “Am I to understand this entire time that Thomas and his trains were white? Because they all have gray faces. How do you bring ethnic diversity? I mean they had to paint what I guess they thought was some sort of African pattern on the side of Nia’s engine.”
The program cut to an image with three trains wearing white hoods and tracks on fire. “Fair, I get it,” Loesch sarcastically says. “Thomas the Tank Engine has been a blight on race relations for far too long. Clearly this is overdue.”
The NRA did not immediately respond to USA TODAY’s request for comment.
Mattel announced Friday that “Thomas & Friends,” a Nick Jr. show, would add characters to its newest season from around the world and partner with the UN to promote its Sustainable Development Goals.
In the new season, Thomas will travel from his fictional home Sodor for the first time in the series to visit China, India and Australia, Mattel said. More female characters will also be represented, the company added.
“This change will deepen the brand’s engagement with girls who represent over 40% of the show’s viewership and provide a strong message of gender equality to the young audience,” Mattel said in a statement.
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KRS ONE 2010 interview rap battling
KRS ONE drops some knowledge on the hip hop game and rap battling
Elfen’s Music Video of the day Aloe Blacc I’m the man
Hey ya’ll I’m back with the music and TBT music videos of the week! This song was featured in a BEATS Headphone staring Colin Kaepernick back in 2014.
BEATS Headphone ad with Colin Kaepernick 2014