Another week, another crackdown. This time, Beijing has set its sights on the insidious micro dramas flooding Chinese social media: five minute bursts of soft pornography and gratuitous violence dressed up as entertainment. The regulators call it a ‘rectification campaign’.
I call it a long overdue lancing of a particularly ugly boil. For those who have not endured the spectacle, imagine a fusion of TikTok brevity, OnlyFans aesthetics, and the moral emptiness of a Nero fiddling while Rome burns. These micro dramas are not art.
They are dopamine spikes engineered to bypass the cortex and stimulate the lizard brain. Their content: hyper sexualised tropes, coercive scenarios, and a relentless fetishisation of dominance. Their audience: millions of young Chinese scrolling away their attention spans.
The Communist Party, which has long styled itself as the guardian of socialist morality, now finds itself in the familiar role of the Victorian censor. And let us be clear: they are right to act. For all the misplaced mockery of ‘thought policing’, the truth is that every society draws lines.
The Victorians had their obscenity laws. The Americans have their Miller test. The Chinese have their Cyber Administration.
The difference, of course, is motive. Victorian censors feared the collapse of the family. Chinese censors fear the collapse of social order.
Both are correct. What we are witnessing is not prudishness but a survival instinct. A civilisation that cannot regulate its own sensory overload will drown in it.
The Romans knew this. The later Empire became a circus of bread and circuses, of spectacles so depraved that even the emperors blushed. Sound familiar?
The micro drama is the digital coliseum. The soft porn is the gladiator blood. The violence is the roar of the crowd.
And the regulators are the new praetorian guard, stepping in before the mob tears the republic apart. The critics will wail about censorship, about the death of creativity. But what creativity is being lost?
The creativity of a thousand young women forced to simulate sex acts for a quick cheque? The creativity of auteurs who think a slap and a kiss are a narrative arc? This is not the suppression of art.
It is the sanitation of a sewer. The real tragedy is that China needs to have this conversation at all. It speaks to a deeper intellectual decadence, a willingness to trade cultural substance for cheap thrills.
The nation that gave us the Tang poets and the Ming novels now offers up a man in a suit grabbing a woman’s chin. This is not progress. It is a retreat into barbarism.
The micro drama phenomenon is a symptom of a broader malaise: the commodification of desire. We have become consumers of sensation rather than citizens of meaning. The Party’s crackdown may be clunky and bureaucratic, but it is a recognition that something has gone wrong.
The question is whether it will be enough. Censorship treats the symptom, not the disease. The disease is a society that has forgotten how to be entertained without being degraded.
The disease is an audience that demands ever more extreme stimulation because the ordinary has become boring. The disease is us. So let Beijing wield its broom.
Sweep the filth out. But let us also ask: what will fill the vacuum? If the answer is more state approved pablum, the cure will be worse than the illness.
Perhaps it is time for a new cultural renaissance, a return to storytelling that engages the mind rather than the loins. The Victorians did it with novels. The Chinese did it with opera.
We can do it again. But only if we want to. And I am not sure we do.









