President hails 'Gentleman' but state TV bans him
"GANGNAM Style" star Psy was praised by South Korea's president and slammed by its state broadcaster all on the same day yesterday, as his new song "Gentleman" made more than just musical waves.
While President Park Geun-Hye cited Psy's "exemplary" respect for copyright principles, KBS television banned the "Gentleman" music video saying it could encourage anti-social behavior.
A KBS statement suggested the offending sequences in the video, which has already clocked up 140 million views on YouTube, showed Psy jaywalking down an empty street and then kicking a traffic cone labelled "No Parking."
KBS said the images might set a bad example to younger viewers and did not meet the standards set by the state broadcaster.
"We strictly forbid any material that might disturb basic public order," KBS said.
The video ban came as the South Korean president favorably name-checked Psy during a meeting with policymakers in which she urged a "paradigm shift" from an economy based on manufacturing to one that embraced creativity.
"Growth led by a few big firms and the government are bound to be limited... we need a healthy ecosystem of creative entrepreneurs," she said.
Rampant piracy in IT and cultural products needs to be curbed to encourage more creation of software, she added, praising Psy for paying to borrow a dance move from another K-pop act for his "Gentleman."
The video features a hip-swinging dance originally performed in 2009 by popular girlband Brown Eyed Girls for their hit "Abracadabra." In order to incorporate the routine, Psy paid an unspecified fee to the team of choreographers who created it.
"This recognition of the value of other people's creativity is a very exemplary case," Park said.
The "Gentleman" video shows Psy, wearing his signature sunglasses, dancing at various locations in and around Seoul including a high-end clothing store, restaurant, swimming pool and a library.
The storyline features the singer teasing and playing practical jokes on women, such as pulling their chairs away as they are about to sit or untying a woman's bikini top at a swimming pool.
While President Park Geun-Hye cited Psy's "exemplary" respect for copyright principles, KBS television banned the "Gentleman" music video saying it could encourage anti-social behavior.
A KBS statement suggested the offending sequences in the video, which has already clocked up 140 million views on YouTube, showed Psy jaywalking down an empty street and then kicking a traffic cone labelled "No Parking."
KBS said the images might set a bad example to younger viewers and did not meet the standards set by the state broadcaster.
"We strictly forbid any material that might disturb basic public order," KBS said.
The video ban came as the South Korean president favorably name-checked Psy during a meeting with policymakers in which she urged a "paradigm shift" from an economy based on manufacturing to one that embraced creativity.
"Growth led by a few big firms and the government are bound to be limited... we need a healthy ecosystem of creative entrepreneurs," she said.
Rampant piracy in IT and cultural products needs to be curbed to encourage more creation of software, she added, praising Psy for paying to borrow a dance move from another K-pop act for his "Gentleman."
The video features a hip-swinging dance originally performed in 2009 by popular girlband Brown Eyed Girls for their hit "Abracadabra." In order to incorporate the routine, Psy paid an unspecified fee to the team of choreographers who created it.
"This recognition of the value of other people's creativity is a very exemplary case," Park said.
The "Gentleman" video shows Psy, wearing his signature sunglasses, dancing at various locations in and around Seoul including a high-end clothing store, restaurant, swimming pool and a library.
The storyline features the singer teasing and playing practical jokes on women, such as pulling their chairs away as they are about to sit or untying a woman's bikini top at a swimming pool.
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