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Politics

Kenny G Backs Down on Hong Kong Support After Chinese Reprimand

Zenon Evans | 10.24.2014 12:40 PM

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Twitter, Kenny G

As we know, countless thousands of pro-democracy protesters, known as "Occupy Central," have taken to the streets of Hong Kong, pushing back against China's unrepresentative control over the city's political leadership. In the middle of this fight wandered (ever so briefly, he swears) an unlikely individual: Kenneth Gorelick, a.k.a. Kenny G.

Yes, the smooth jazz saxophonist with funky hair walked right into the heart of the protests on Wednesday and posted a picture of himself on Twitter with the caption, "In Hong Kong at the sight [sic] of the demonstration. I wish everyone a peaceful and positive conclusion to this situation." That sounds just as benign as his music.

Within hours the Chinese government issued a reprimand:

Kenny G's musical works are widely popular in China, but China's position on the illegal Occupy Central activities in Hong Kong is very clear. We hope that foreign governments and individuals speak and act cautiously and not support Occupy Central and other illegal activities in any form.

Indeed, Kenny G is wildly popular throughout China and Hong Kong.

So, the offending Tweet disappeared, and Mr. G serenaded his authoritarian fans with a slew of new tweets, which he also put together in a Facebook status:

I was not trying to defy government orders with my last post. I was in Hong Kong as a stop on my way to perform at Mission Hills and happened to walk by the protest area as I was walking around Hong Kong as a tourist. Some fans took my picture and it's unfair that I am being used by anyone to say that I am showing support for the demonstrators. I am not supporting the demonstrators as I don't really know anything about the situation and my impromptu visit to the site was just part of an innocent walk around Hong Kong. I love Hong Kong and always come here to perform when I'm asked to. I love China and love coming here to perform for over 25 years. I only wanted to share my wish for Peace for Hong Kong and for all of China as I feel close to and care about China very much Please don't mistake my peace sign for any other sign than a sign for Peace.

On Thursday The Atlantic published an interview with Kenny. He denies that he gave encouraging words about democracy to protesters, insisting that he was just passing through and only hung around for a few minutes, and that it was other people taking the pictures, not him.

Is Kenny G some kind of Maoist commie? Probably not. Does he like not being banned from China and thereby cut off from his ridiculously huge fanbase and their money? Most likely.

Still, Kenny G waded into an international political affair, and he disappointingly came out of it squarely neutral. Not really an admirable stance when one side is composed of hopeful, educated freedom fighters who demonstrate peacefully, speak politely, and clean up the streets they occupy, whereas the other side is a historically brutal, oppressive goverment currently using police to gas and beat their counterparts. Yes, the same government that worries democracy will be too empowering for the poor.

Not that others have stepped up to the plate to robustly criticize China. American universities regularly cave to the nation's censorship demands, and the Obama administration offered the ultimate milquetoast finger-wag when it proclaimed that both sides of the current unrest ought to show "restraint." 

The latest news on the situation is that proteste leaders "plan to hold a spot referendum Sunday on whether to stay in the streets or accept government offers for more talks and clear their protest camps. The three main groups behind the demonstrations said Thursday they would register public opinion at the main downtown protest site, where thousands remain camped out," reports NBC.

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NEXT: Oakland City Officials Can Now Require Landlords to Evict Sex Workers

Zenon Evans is a former Reason staff writer and editor.

PoliticsHong KongWorldCultureCivil LibertiesChinaDemocracyPopular CultureMusic
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  1. MegaloMonocle   11 years ago

    Like we needed confirmation that Kenny G has no balls.

    1. Zenon Evans   11 years ago

      I'm a fan, and the news made me sad.

      1. Heroic Mulatto   11 years ago

        I'm a fan

        I find that admission to be more noxious than anything Kenny G wrote.

        1. Zenon Evans   11 years ago

          Aw c'mon, he's talented!

          1. GILMORE   11 years ago

            FIRE!! KILL IT WITH FIRE!!!

      2. Ted S.   11 years ago

        I posted a link to this in the AM Links. Where the hell is my hat-tip? 😉

    2. Scruffy Nerfherder   11 years ago

      What an incredible chicken shit

    3. antisocial-ist   11 years ago

      I came here to say exactly that. What a pussy.

  2. Adam330   11 years ago

    I for one will never buy a Kenny G album again.

    1. e-bowler   11 years ago

      Again? That's quite an admission there.

  3. Raston Bot   11 years ago

    what kind of sick universe do i inhabit where that guy gets mad ass??

  4. e-bowler   11 years ago

    "Kenny G kisses just like my dad."

    1. Episiarch   11 years ago

      God damn I had totally forgotten about that episode. How could I forget that line?

  5. sarcasmic   11 years ago

    Pussy.

  6. e-bowler   11 years ago

    While I hate the PRC govt and will cheer every setback they get from whatever corner, it's kind of murky in a legal sense who is right in the current crisis in HK. The govt of HK has never been democratically elected, so portraying this as democracy vs authoritarianism is missing the point.

    1. Jon Lester   11 years ago

      From what I hear, most residents want these protesters to get out of their way so they can get to work.

    2. Zeb   11 years ago

      While it seems like these protestors are much less idiotic than the US occupy movements and I think that political rights are important, I worry that the outcome will just be to make everything worse in Hong Kong. They do enjoy very good economic freedom and pretty good personal freedom in Hong Kong. I would hate to see this push the Chinese to curtail those more. Economic freedom if far more important to people's actual lives than political freedom.

    3. JD the elder   11 years ago

      Eh, while it's true that HK has never been purely democratic and that there are a lot of complications to the issues here, I think it's completely fair to say that the heart of the issue is who gets to even be nominated to stand for election: Beijing's stance is that only Beijing-loyal candidates should be allowed to stand for election, which kind of makes a joke out of the idea of democracy and universal suffrage. The fact that HK's never been purely democratic doesn't negate the fact that the protesters are trying to push it in a more democratic, independent direction, and Beijing is trying to push it in a less democratic, independent direction.

  7. waffles   11 years ago

    I'm not surprised, just disappointed. It would be awesome if Kenny G were punk about this, but sadly no. Perhaps I do not live in the best of all possible universes.

    1. pogi   11 years ago

      The best of all possible universes would be the one where Kenny G was beat stupid with a tenor sax wielded by Sonny Rollins, encased in concrete along with every other "smooth jazz" dispshit, and dropped into the deepest part of the Marianas Trench.

  8. Almanian!   11 years ago

    Whatever. Not a Kenny G fan, certainly not a China fan. OTOH, China is one of the biggest growth markets for my company....so....beddin' down with the Commies to a certain degree. Green dollars evidently smell better than clean consciences, so I can't blame Mr. G entirely. Mostly, if he'd have just STFU right out the gate....never becomes an issue.

    Whatever.

    1. Episiarch   11 years ago

      Kenny learned the hard way that people who like to exercise power over others are really good at sussing out whether they have some power to wield over anyone who annoys them. The Chinese politicians saw his little tweet and knew they could fuck with him and make him tuck his tail between his legs...so they did.

      1. Almanian!   11 years ago

        Again, I find that often "STFU" is in one's self interest

        1. BakedPenguin   11 years ago

          The thing is, his first statement was pretty innocuous, unless you're a totalitarian asshole.

          1. Zeb   11 years ago

            Yeah, it seems likely that he really just was stopping to talk to some fans and not really taking any position on the protests.

    2. Warren's Strapon   11 years ago

      Thing is, his original statement was pretty neutral. In fact it sounds like something that could have come out of the Central Committee. I guess the picture was the problem, not the statement.

  9. heartburn   11 years ago

    Woah. What a pussy.

    Oh yeah. And fuck the Chinese government.

  10. Zeb   11 years ago

    Kenny wants to play music and make money. I can't really blame him for backing off from looking like he is taking a political stand.

    My favorite thing about this story is learning that Kenny G music is ubiquitous in Chinese elevators and trains.

    1. heartburn   11 years ago

      Well, he's no Ted Nugent.

    2. Warren's Strapon   11 years ago

      Don't shit where you eat.

  11. Careless   11 years ago

    I will bet every last cent that I own that he didn't write the first sentence of that.

    1. Careless   11 years ago

      An American wouldn't write "defy government orders" even if that's what he meant to write. That's commie propagandist thinking

      1. Rhywun   11 years ago

        Back when the Commies were a little more tone-deaf, G's "apology" would probably have just been lifted from the Little Red Book - "forward, proletariats!" and such.

      2. Careless   11 years ago

        And yes, I do realize that the most important consequence of my post will be to help a commie propagandist be slightly more competent at faking humanity.

    2. heartburn   11 years ago

      "I will bet every last cent that the government lets me keep..."

      Fixed that for you.

  12. Hugh Akston   11 years ago

    In an alternate universe somewhere, Kenny G refuses to back down and continues to voice his support on various social media channels for peaceful protests and political change in Hong Kong. The attention of a popular Western musician emboldens the opposition and broadens support for the Occupy movement in HK. The Chinese respond by adding Kenny G's music to the list of verboten Western culture, blocking downloads and criminalizing possession. The opposition hits back by handing out free physical copies of his music at their rallies, and setting up black mirror sites for downloading Kenny G music beyond the reach of the Great Firewall.

    Eventually, Kenny G becomes the mellow adult contemporary anthem of the Hong Kong self-determination movement. The music spreads like a virus through the masses of Hong Kong, whose growing protests threaten to grind not only the Chinese, but indeed the global economy to a halt. Eventually, the Chinese state has to accede to the movement's demands, and grant Hong Kong independence.

    Decades from now, as an independent Hong Kong becomes a gleaming beacon of freedom and prosperity in Southeast Asia, the movement that began it all comes to be known as the Kenny G Revolution, after the man who refused to back down against Chinese bullying, and whose music rallied countless millions to fight for the cause of political self-determination.

    1. waffles   11 years ago

      Truly that would be the best of all possible universes.

    2. Episiarch   11 years ago

      But I thought Wyld Stallyns was the music that would bring peace to the world!

    3. Flatulent Monkey   11 years ago

      So Kenny G would be China's Velvet Underground?

    4. Zeb   11 years ago

      Yeah, that might happen. Or the Chinese might decide to send the army in and shoot them all and take more control over personal and economic liberties that are pretty good in Hong Kong at the moment.

      1. e-bowler   11 years ago

        You think the British would stand by and let that happen?

        1. Rhywun   11 years ago

          Good one.

  13. Suthenboy   11 years ago

    His instrument is made of brass, not his balls. He is a musician, so what? I can't blame the guy.

  14. wareagle   11 years ago

    sure, that's the problem today - a musician's squishiness on an international political topic.

    1. flye   11 years ago

      Clickhole:

      It's Time To Have A National Conversation That Doesn't Include Input From Celebrities, Because Yikes

  15. MegaloMonocle   11 years ago

    Better reply:

    "I was walking around HK and took my usual "political" position of hoping that everything can be resolved peacefully. I am astonished that apparently the government authorities regard this position as hostile to their side of the current dispute. I didn't have a dog in this fight until the government authorities tried to beat me into submission. Now, I'm thinking the protestors have a point. Peace Out."

  16. jmomls   11 years ago

    Wow, I never knew what Squidward looked like without his makeup on. Yikes.

    *From what I hear, most residents want these protesters to get out of their way so they can get to work.*

    So, just like Occupy Wall Street, then.

  17. Aresen   11 years ago

    I would like to know if Kenny G has ever used the phrase "people before profits".

  18. B.P.   11 years ago

    I saw Kenny G open up for Michael Bolton at the Kentucky State Fair years ago. Fourth row. Free tickets, of course. I was drunker than hell, and my brother got into a fight. It was hilarious.

    1. Zeb   11 years ago

      I was drunker than hell, and my brother got into a fight.

      Any story from the Kentucky state fair that didn't have at least those two elements to it would be a big disappointment.

  19. Rorschach Carlyle   11 years ago

    "Freedom Fighters", indeed. They aren't fighting for freedom, they're fighting for democracy. Which, if they get it, they'll most likely use to vote away what freedom they have, just like every other Western democracy has.

    1. Zenon Evans   11 years ago

      That's the spirit.

  20. Brett L   11 years ago

    Is Kenny G the one who is now running a billion dollar hedge fund or something?

  21. Anomalous   11 years ago

    He's a sax offender.

    1. Robert   11 years ago

      Oh, that Kenny G. I thought this was about the much more prominent one, http://wfmu.org/~kennyg

  22. Marty Feldman's Eyes   11 years ago

    I dislike the Chinese gov't as much as the libertarian, but I actually find it rather refreshing that a celebrity admits he doesn't know enough about a situation to open his mouth about it. This has gotta be a first.

  23. BigT   11 years ago

    If a Chinese musician came out for the Occupotty movement, how would we respond? Probably tell him to STFU. Our guv would likely say nothing.

  24. cheapghd   10 years ago

    We store the Cheap GHD products in 2014 set off a craze in the UK, now will give you a seventy-five percent discount.

    http://www.ghdukcheap.com

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