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  • This is Shaq

  • on The Great Wall of China.

  • Here's Michael Jordan,

  • There are a lot of these.

  • For years, the NBA has been sending teams to China

  • where more people watch NBA games than in the United States.

  • The purpose is to play basketball,

  • meet Chinese fans,

  • and have players like Rip Hamilton spread a clear message.

  • The NBA has worked hard

  • to build a successful business in China,

  • but then they almost lost it all because of a single tweet.

  • It was March of 2000 and President Clinton was pushing for a trade deal with China,

  • despite concerns about China's human rights record.

  • It does deny its citizens fundamental rights of free speech and religious expression.

  • It does define its interest in the world in sometimes in ways that are dramatically at odds from our own.

  • Just a decade before, China's government put down an uprising at Tiananmen Square.

  • “...human rights not trade!”

  • And in 1999, Americans also had concerns about China's record in Taiwan and Tibet.

  • The Fortune 500 companies are controlling the American foreign policy in China.

  • This is wrong.

  • It's gotta stop.

  • President Clinton, we are asking you to take a courageous position.”

  • But Clinton insisted that

  • doing business with China would have a positive impact on their human rights platform.

  • "The question is not whether we approve or disapprove of China's practices.

  • The question is: What is the smartest thing to do to improve these practices?"

  • Bill Clinton came to think that engagement, that trade, that direct contact would have

  • a positive impact on the human rights situation in China, as well as improving

  • the overall U.S. China relationship.

  • The next year, China joined the WTO.

  • 2001 is important because that's when the country enters into the World Trade Organization,

  • which greatly simplifies doing business, not just with the United States, but with the entire world.

  • The Chinese economy was about to take off.

  • US businesses began investing in China

  • and eventually Chinese companies would start investing back in the US.

  • As China became richer, as China became more integrated into the global economy,

  • it became a more important market for the United States.

  • After 2001, the average Chinese person had more disposable income

  • as a result of the rapid growth.

  • It was the perfect moment for the NBA to build a business in China and it all started right here.

  • With the first pick in the 2002 NBA Draft, the Houston Rockets select Yao Ming from Shanghai, China!”

  • At the time Yao Ming was 21-years old, watching the NBA draft on a laptop in China.

  • Can you fully comprehend, for yourself, for Chinese Basketball, and for the NBA,

  • what it means to be the NBA's number one overall pick?”

  • Yao was the NBA's “next big thingfor fans in China,

  • where basketball has been popular ever since it was introduced by missionaries in the 19th century.

  • When the Communist Party came to power they banned most Western sports,

  • but basketball was embraced as a national passion.

  • But China never produced a star player...

  • until Yao.

  • "...Yao Ming and company, ready to go..."

  • Now they could watch a Chinese player playing at the same level of these legendary greats

  • and playing Shaq

  • 200 million Chinese viewers tuned in for his first game against Shaq and The Lakers.

  • They're watching live in Shanghai at 10:30 in the morning as O'Neal goes right at Ming!"

  • Compare that to 9.9 million: the average number of Americans that watched the NBA Finals that year.

  • Yao, first touch, for two!”

  • Yao became a household name in China and soon American companies turned to him for endorsements.

  • Can Jimmy play?

  • Hi Yao!

  • Jimmy?”

  • Get a Garmin

  • “...the new 17-inch powerbook.”

  • Yao's popularity also helped the NBA develop their fanbase there.

  • In 2004 The NBA started sending teams on an annual summer tour of China,

  • where the Houston Rockets became a fan favorite, simply because that was Yao's team.

  • The tours brought the biggest NBA players to China and boosted the league's popularity.

  • For comparison, The NBA has slightly more Twitter followers

  • than the the next major sports league in The United States.

  • But in China, the NBA dominates social media platforms like Weibo.

  • Nearly 500 million people watched NBA games last year using Tencent, China's largest

  • streaming platform.

  • That's more than the entire population of the United States.

  • In 2019 Tencent and The NBA signed a deal worth $1.5 billion dollars,

  • almost three times what it was worth five years ago.

  • The people who manage the NBA recognized that there were tremendous opportunities in China

  • and they worked hard to develop that market and they have succeeded.

  • Then seven words threatened everything.

  • Daryl Morey is the general manager of the Houston Rockets

  • and his tweet repeated a phrase chanted by protesters in Hong Kong.

  • Well this is just about civil liberties, this is about having a voice in government.

  • What's wrong with that?

  • And so he thought nothing of tweeting this out, whereas in China, it was perceived quite differently.

  • It was seen as an effort to break up China, an effort to weaken China.

  • The Chinese Consulate in Houston responded by saying they weredeeply shocked

  • by the erroneous comments on Hong Kongand asked the Rockets tocorrect the error”.

  • Daryl Morey took down his tweet and

  • The Rockets tried to do damage control.

  • Yeah, We apologize, you know, we love China.

  • We love playing there.”

  • Despite the apology, the government cancelled NBA broadcasts on Chinese state TV.

  • CCTV's sports channel has just announced that it will suspend the broadcast of any

  • NBA games in China, including this week's preseason games.”

  • Tencent also suspended broadcasts of Houston Rockets games.

  • In Shanghai, workers were tearing down advertisements for upcoming games

  • And fans protested outside the stadium where teams were set to play.

  • On social media, a fan posted this video of himself tearing up tickets to the game

  • in support for the Chinese government.

  • The NBA Commissioner stood behind Morey at a press conference.

  • The long held values of the NBA are to support freedom of expression and, in this

  • case, Daryl Morey, as the general manager of the Houston Rockets, enjoys that right.”

  • But the league undercut their message when

  • journalists were stopped from asking about the incident afterwards.

  • “I just wonder after the events of this week and the fallout we've seen, whether

  • you would both feel differently about speaking out in that way in the future?”

  • Foreign businesses in China, have long recognized that there are red lines that must not be crossed.

  • And traditionally those have been the three Ts: Taiwan, Tibet, Tiananmen.

  • Three political issues the Chinese government tries to control messaging around.

  • Companies have learned that if you cross one of these lines, there is a price to pay.

  • For example, in 2018 Gap was selling this t-shirt featuring a map of China without Taiwan.

  • After a photo of the shirt was posted online, Gap apologized and promised to stop selling

  • theincomplete” t-shirt in a statement released by People's Daily: a government newspaper.

  • You're talking about a one party state that has the ability to let you in, to expel you, to make you rich.

  • By withholding access to consumers, China forces foreign companies to apologize

  • and/or change their message in order to continue selling products.

  • Because China has a population of 1.4 billion, that usually works.

  • The NBA learned that doing business in China means playing by their rules and that's

  • not what US leaders like President Clinton had envisioned.

  • The hope was that trade with China would open it up to ideas of democracy and free speech,

  • while making American companies money at the same time.

  • But as American companies changed their messages to sell products in China,

  • the risk became importing Chinese censorship.

This is Shaq

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