Current:Home > ContactOne reporter's lonely mission to keep "facts" flowing in China, where it's "hard now to get real news" -PrimeWealth Guides
One reporter's lonely mission to keep "facts" flowing in China, where it's "hard now to get real news"
View
Date:2025-04-18 07:33:38
Tokyo — Wang Zhi'an was a star investigative reporter on China's main, state-run TV network. His hard-hitting stories, which included well-produced exposés on officials failing in their jobs, would routinely reach tens of millions of people.
But that was then. Now, Wang is a one-man band. He still broadcasts, but his news program is produced entirely by him, and it goes out only on social media — from his living room in Tokyo, Japan.
"I was a journalist for 20 years, but then I was fired," Wang told CBS News when asked why he left his country. "My social media accounts were blocked and eventually no news organization would touch me."
- Blinken meets Xi, says U.S. and China agree on need to "stabilize" ties
The World Press Freedom Index, compiled annually by the organization Reporters Without Borders, ranks China second to last, ahead of only North Korea.
Speaking truth to power as China's President Xi Jinping carried out a crackdown on dissent was just too dangerous, so Wang escaped to Tokyo three years ago.
It's been tough, he admitted, and lonely, but he can at least say whatever he wants.
This week, he slammed the fact that Chinese college applicants must write essays on Xi's speeches.
Half a million viewers tuned into his YouTube channel to hear his take, which was essentially that the essay requirement is a totalitarian farce.
Last year, Wang visited Ukraine to offer his viewers an alternative view of the war to the official Russian propaganda, which is parroted by China's own state media.
While YouTube is largely blocked by China's government internet censors, Wang said many Chinese people manage to access his content by using virtual private networks (VPNs) or other ways around the "Great Firewall."
But without corporate backing, his journalism is now carried out on a shoestring budget; Wang's story ideas are documented as post-it notes stuck to his kitchen wall. So, he's had to innovate.
On June 4 this year, to report on the anniversary of the violent 1989 Tiananmen Square crackdown on student protesters by Chinese authorities in Beijing, Wang crowdsourced photos from his 800,000 followers. Some of the images had rarely, if ever, been seen.
Wang told CBS News he wants his channel to be "a source of facts on social and political events… because in China, it's so hard now to get real news."
His dogged commitment to reporting turned him from a famous insider in his own country, to an exiled outsider, but it didn't change his mission. He's still just a man who wants to tell the truth.
- In:
- Xi Jinping
- China
- Asia
- Journalism
- Japan
- Communist Party
Elizabeth Palmer has been a CBS News correspondent since August 2000. She has been based in London since late 2003, after having been based in Moscow (2000-03). Palmer reports primarily for the "CBS Evening News."
veryGood! (569)
Related
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Texas abortion case goes before state's highest court, as more women join lawsuit
- Israel and Hamas extend their truce, but it seems only a matter of time before the war resumes
- Tribes do their part to keep air clean. Now, they want to make sure pollution from afar doesn't put that at risk.
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Antisemitic incidents in Germany rose by 320% after Hamas attacked Israel, a monitoring group says
- Calls for cease-fire in the Israel-Hamas war roil city councils from California to Michigan
- Greek officials angry and puzzled after UK’s Sunak scraps leaders’ meeting over Parthenon Marbles
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Plains, Georgia remembers former first lady Rosalynn Carter: The 'Steel Magnolia'
Ranking
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- 1 student killed, 1 injured in stabbing at Southeast High School, 14-year-old charged
- Cyber Monday is the biggest online shopping day of the year — thanks to deals and hype
- Rescuers begin pulling out 41 workers trapped in a collapsed tunnel in India for 17 days
- Have Dry, Sensitive Skin? You Need To Add These Gentle Skincare Products to Your Routine
- Dutch election winner Wilders taps former center-left minister to look at possible coalitions
- US Navy to discuss removing plane from environmentally sensitive Hawaii bay after it overshot runway
- Jill Biden unveils White House holiday decorations: 98 Christmas trees, 34K ornaments
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Man who wounded 14 in Pennsylvania elementary school with machete dies in prison 22 years later
'Family Switch' 2023 film: Cast, trailer and where to watch
Thick fog likely caused a roughly 30-vehicle collision on an Idaho interstate, police say
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
When is the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree lighting? Time, channel, everything to know
Russian court extends detention of Wall Street Journal reporter Gershkovich until end of January
Cities crack down on homeless encampments. Advocates say that’s not the answer