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'Christopher Robin' has been banned in China, and it's reportedly because Winnie the Pooh memes have been used to criticize its leader Xi Jinping

Travis Clark   

'Christopher Robin' has been banned in China, and it's reportedly because Winnie the Pooh memes have been used to criticize its leader Xi Jinping

xi jinping winnie the pooh

Getty Images; Disney

  • China denied the release of Disney's new film, "Christopher Robin."
  • A source told The Hollywood Reporter that it was due to China's crackdown on Winnie the Pooh images on social media.
  • The images have been used to criticize Chinese leader Xi Jinping after the ruling Communist Party announced it wanted to eliminate presidential term limits.

 

The Hundred Acre Wood will not be going to China.

Disney's new live-action take on the Winnie the Pooh characters, "Christopher Robin," will not be released in the Middle Kingdom. According to The Hollywood Reporter, which cites an anonymous source, China denied the film's release because Winnie the Pooh had become a symbol of resistance against the country's ruling Communist Party and its leader, Xi Jinping.

Earlier this year, the party announced that it wanted to eliminate presidential term limits for Jinping. This did not go over well with many Chinese citizens, who posted Winnie the Pooh memes on social media to compare the fictional bear to Jinping. It's been a symbol of criticism toward Jinping since he took power in 2013, but blew up following the announcement.

This prompted Chinese censors to crack down on the meme on Chinese social-media apps.

Why Winnie the Pooh? The joke is that Jinping supposedly resembles the Pooh bear in appearance. For instance, in the image below, the shorter, chubbier Pooh is walking alongside the taller, skinnier Tigger, which is compared to Jinping walking with former US president Obama.

In another circulated image, Pooh is hugging a pot of honey. The image reads, "Wisdom of little bear Winnie the Pooh" in Chinese and "Find the thing you love and stick with it" in English.

The Chinese social network Weibo even blocked all mentions of John Oliver and his HBO show "Last Week Tonight" last month after Oliver criticized Jinping. Oliver also said Jinping was insecure about the Winnie the Pooh images being used to mock him.

"Clamping down on Winnie the Pooh comparisons doesn't exactly project strength," Oliver said. "It suggests a weird insecurity in him."

"Christopher Robin" is now in theaters in the US.

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