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'Interviews Before Execution,' China Death Row Reality TV Show, Canceled

Interviews Before Execution

First Posted: 03/12/2012 4:56 pm Updated: 03/12/2012 5:04 pm

A reality-TV fate worse than being spurned by that final rose on The Bachelor actually exists; in fact, the participants on one Chinese television program were all put to death, with no Running Man-esque opportunity to survive -- but the controversial program couldn't get a stay to prevent its own demise.

"Interviews Before Execution," first broadcast on Henan Legal Channel Nov. 18, 2006, according to the BBC, interviewed a prisoner on death row every week in cruel and voyeuristic detail. The Daily Mail notes that sometimes interviews were recorded just minutes before a prisoner's execution, and that many confessed crimes and begged for forgiveness as their time on Earth ran out.

"We want the audience to be warned," Lu Peijin, director of the channel that produces the show, told Current.org. "If they are warned, tragedies might be averted. That is good for society."

Journalist Ding Yu interviewed more than 200 convicts on "Interviews Before Execution," ABC News writes, in many cases meting out details about the grisly crimes they committed.

But what began as a planned public deterrent to crime turned into a popular phenomenon rivaling American Idol in the United States, capturing 40 million viewers per broadcast and rocketing Ms. Ding to fame, according to The New York Times.

Ms. Ding doesn't believe her show was exploiting convicts. She was quoted by The Daily Mail:

"I feel sorry and regretful for them. But I don't sympathise with them, for they should pay a heavy price for their wrongdoing. They deserve it."

Ding acquired the nickname "Beauty with the Beasts," the BBC reports.

Though not broadcast throughout China, the controversial "Interviews Before Execution" drew its best ratings on an episode featuring Bao Rongtin, an openly gay man who murdered his mother and violated her dead body, according to The Daily Mail. The show prompted additional episodes featuring the prisoner, and in his final conversation before execution, he implored Ms. Ding to shake his hand, which she did, but to which she later confessed to second-guessing. The BBC notes that homosexuality is still considered a taboo in China.

"I had never come close to a gay man, so I really couldn't accept some of his practices, words and deeds," Ding told the BBC.

The BBC and PBS International have picked up rights to the documentary, "Dead Men Talking," according to the New York Times, which details the show's explosive popularity. PBS International's website describes the film and its additions by the BBC as taking "viewers into the nightmare worlds of violent criminals sentenced to death—and of the TV journalist who is their last connection to this world."

The international spotlight on the show comes on the heels of the show's cancellation, according to ABC News, which the news outlet confirmed with Legal TV Channel, the station in China's Henan province that produced and broadcast the show. The cancellation was attributed to "internal problems."

In China, the BBC notes, 55 crimes are punishable by death, including murder, treason and bribery. Crimes such as tax fraud, credit fraud and smuggling relics were only recently removed from the list of capital offenses. The New York Times notes that the exact number of yearly executions in China remains a state secret, though Amnesty International and other groups estimate the country as the leading executioner in the world.

The trailer for the documentary, "Dead Men Talking"
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A reality-TV fate worse than being spurned by that final rose on The Bachelor actually exists; in fact, the participants on one Chinese television program were all put to death, with no Running Man-es...
A reality-TV fate worse than being spurned by that final rose on The Bachelor actually exists; in fact, the participants on one Chinese television program were all put to death, with no Running Man-es...
Filed by Ryan Craggs  | 
 
 
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MaybeMilo
"You can't fight in here. This is the War room!"
02:51 PM on 03/18/2012
People are messed up animals, that's for sure.
05:49 AM on 03/18/2012
I am sure that Sarah Palin and Mitt Romney, both who have had much praise recently for China, and how America should be modeling its practices after their success stories, will be right on this, and suggest such practices be instituted in America.

After all, it seems pretty clear it would fit in beautifully with their view on how we should handle criminals and law and order in this country. Just think how far this would go to help the GOP put women, blacks, brown skinned immigrants, and gays in their place and stop their take over of America from the white males who are its rightful owners and rulers.
05:06 AM on 03/18/2012
i think this is a terrible ideal, there should be some dignity in death, i am glad the show was cancelled
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chaserblue
Shaving my legs with Occam's razor
09:39 PM on 03/17/2012
As much as we like to feel superior and compassionate by not airing our executions on state sponsored TV, we need to take a step back and consider that we imprison more people that any other country on the planet. Leading Russia (number two) by a wide margin, we lock up over 700 people for every 100,000. China is lagging far behind with 119 per 100,000.
I'm not saying that what they do isn't brutal. I happen to think that if there was even once that the death penalty was applied wrongly, then it shouldn't even be an option. However selling slave labor to the highest corporate bidder should be a crime in itself, yet every day it happens here.
12:32 PM on 03/17/2012
Horrible? Yes, but not as horrible as putting people to death despite evidence showing the conviction was unsafe just to look 'tough on crime' for political reasons.
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12:16 PM on 03/17/2012
We might could get the truth about the connections between politics and the destruction of America if we had something like this. Just thinking about it I can name a dozen off the top of my head that needs to go first..
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roninroshi
Oni ni Kanabo (鬼に金棒 )
10:40 AM on 03/17/2012
Crimes such as tax fraud, credit fraud"...Lots of US bankers need to go to China!
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Giacomo Salvadore
04:24 PM on 03/16/2012
We have MSNBC which broadcasts 48 hours of prison documentaries every weekend starting at 7:00pm on Friday. It must have a lot of appeal as some sick form of voyeurism.
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jimme
Being liberal is true freedom.
04:14 PM on 03/16/2012
I don't know who's more depraved, the producers of this, or those who watch it.
08:33 AM on 03/16/2012
How sick can things get?
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Don Fitch
12:52 AM on 03/16/2012
UN Anti-Drug Day Soon: Get your execution pay-per-view now!

http://yourbrainonbliss.com/Blog/?p=357
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Weeklong Zero
Workers of the world, relax!
12:23 AM on 03/16/2012
If a Muslim country did this:

"Those barbaric, savage Muslims will never evolve into the 21st century unless they abandon their hateful, evil faith!"

China did this:

"Oh...well you know its the governments fault, we can't really blame the people or the culture"

Hypocrisy much?
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Aj Meleisea
08:41 AM on 03/18/2012
Either that or it's the money talking...
07:07 PM on 03/15/2012
I'll bet she didn't air any interviews where the condemned professed their innocence...
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John E Priegnitz
If you think education is expensive, try ignorance
04:33 PM on 03/15/2012
This is just sick and nothing short of a snuff film.
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12:19 PM on 03/17/2012
There's plenty of that around too...and nothing is really done about it..maybe a smack on the hand once in awhile if someone starts cutting into the wrong person's profits...but it's just another version of porn in my opinion..At least this way..there's no chance of any more damage done to other people...with the porn industry it never stops..
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John E Priegnitz
If you think education is expensive, try ignorance
06:21 PM on 03/18/2012
I'm a little confused, how are snuff films and pornography exactly similar?
12:42 PM on 03/15/2012
That's quite interesting. In the UK we create far more news by rehabilitating murderers letting them out and leaving them to re offend. over 69 additional innocent people have died this way since the introduction of the "life sentence". Morally we see it as more palatable because we don't take responsibility for our governments actions and the news presenters more or less show it with a "oh dear, what can you do?" slant.
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12:21 PM on 03/17/2012
We have been reading about the UK getting fed up with government actions and news presenters lately...sure wish we had a little of that with Murdochs here..
09:25 PM on 03/17/2012
You start by looking at every story in the paper and checking to see if the people involved had their phones hacked. I would not be amazed if they did the same thing all over the world. Then again it does depend how much its been covered up.
05:12 AM on 03/18/2012
thats what we do to, rehabaliotation is a joke in america, they become reoffenders, and stack up more victims.