Let us not mince words. The People’s Republic of China has, with characteristic bureaucratic vigour, moved to regulate the so-called “micro dramas” that have been sweeping its digital landscape. These are short, often banal video snippets that feed the attention-deficit beast. Beijing’s new rules demand tighter content reviews, stricter licensing, and an end to what it sees as moral degeneracy dressed up as entertainment. Meanwhile, the British creative industries, with all the smugness of a Victorian missionary, have declared themselves champions of free expression. How marvelously convenient.
Before we join the choir of Western self-congratulation, let us pause to consider the historical ironies. The Chinese government, for all its authoritarian excesses, is acting on a principle that would have been recognisable to Plato: that popular culture shapes the soul of a nation. They are not wrong. The micro drama, that 60 second adrenaline shot of melodrama, is the cultural equivalent of junk food. It erodes attention spans, glorifies materialism, and reduces complex human emotions to viral tropes. The Chinese state, in its clumsy but earnest way, is trying to protect its people from a flood of mental sewage. One can almost admire the audacity.
And what of Britain? Our creative industries, from the BBC to Netflix UK, wrap themselves in the banner of “free expression”. But let us be honest. This is not the free expression of Milton or Mill. This is the free expression of the market. The same market that gave us Love Island, TikTok challenges, and the systematic infantilisation of adult discourse. Our freedom is the freedom to consume rubbish, provided it is profitable rubbish. We have traded the soul of our culture for a few billion pounds in export revenue. The Chinese, at least, are honest about their paternalism. We pretend our decadence is enlightenment.
There is a deeper decay here. The British creative industries, once the envy of the world, have become a museum of self parody. They produce nothing new, merely repackaging nostalgia and outrage. Their championing of “free expression” is a shield for mediocrity. When was the last time a British drama dared to challenge the audience rather than flatter it? When did our writers last risk moral complexity? They are too busy chasing awards and virtue signalling. Meanwhile, Chinese auteurs, despite censorship, are producing works of genuine artistic ambition. The irony is enough to make one weep.
But let us not romanticise Beijing. The Chinese model is no utopia. Their censorship is often brutal, arbitrary, and driven by paranoia. The crackdown on micro dramas is part of a broader assault on intellectual freedom. Yet the West’s response is equally flawed. We have replaced state censorship with market censorship. The algorithm decides what you see, and the algorithm wants you docile, distracted, and consuming. Which is worse: a state that tells you what not to see, or a market that shows you only what is banal? It is a distinction without a difference.
What both civilisations refuse to confront is the crisis of meaning. Both China and Britain are producing entertainment that is sterile, safe, and soulless. The micro drama is the perfect symbol of this: a form so compressed it cannot contain a thought. The Chinese state wants to sanitise it. The British market wants to monetise it. Neither wants to elevate it. The true freedom of expression is not just the absence of censorship; it is the courage to create something that matters. Neither Beijing nor London seems capable of that anymore.
So as we tut tut at China’s crackdown, let us look in the mirror. Our creative industries are not champions of free expression. They are enablers of a cultural coma. The only difference between us and China is that our coma is voluntary. And that, dear reader, is the greater tragedy.









