The latest mystery in Shanghai, complete with sliding bookshelves, secret passageways and contraband goods, is this: Why are all the popular DVDs and CDs missing from this city’s shops?
It’s a mystery that can easily be solved, actually.
In China, embarrassments are usually hidden from sight when the world comes visiting, and that is what has happened to a large supply of bootleg DVDs and CDs as Shanghai prepares for the World Expo, which is expected to attract 70 million visitors.
A few weeks ago, government inspectors fanned out across the city and ordered shops selling pirated music and movies to stash away their illegal goods during the expo.
But shop owners found a novel way to comply — they simply chopped their stores in half.
In a remarkable display of uniformity, nearly every DVD shop in central Shanghai has built a partition that divides the store into two sections: One that sells legal DVDs (often films no one is interested in buying) and a hidden one that sells the illegal titles that everyone wants — Hollywood blockbusters like Avatar (for US$1), Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland and even Lady Gaga’s latest CD The Fame.
Customers entering these shops are now routinely directed toward a slide-away bookshelf that reveals a secret corridor. To chants of “movie inside, movie inside,” a young sales clerk will lead them past a series of empty spaces before entering a room stocked with thousands of bootleg copies of popular films, music and TV programs.
“This is where everything is now,” a clerk at Movie World said. “We have to do it this way because of the expo.”
The situation is even more bizarre at Oscars Club, a centrally located DVD shop where city officials recently tacked up a large poster showing the expo mascot — a blue Gumby-like character named Haibao — stomping on an illegal DVD. The poster’s slogan reads: “Fight Against Piracy!”
Store clerks, however, don’t hesitate to steer customers into the back room to find illegal copies of Sherlock Holmes, Up in the Air and HBO’s new series The Pacific in Blu-ray disc format.
Intellectual property rights experts say they are outraged by what looks to be a sham crackdown. And the Motion Picture Association of America, which represents some of Hollywood’s biggest studios, calls the situation troubling.
“Although various senior Chinese officials have made numerous statements in support of intellectual property protection and the fight against piracy, their talk has not been followed by sufficient action,” Mike Ellis president of the Asia-Pacific division, said in a statement last week in response to a reporter’s question.
Officials, however, insist that the recent crackdown has been effective. Since last month, more than 3,000 shops have been closed for selling pirated music and movies, they say.
They also strongly deny encouraging stores to build secret rooms.
“That is impossible,” says Zhou Weimin, director of the city’s cultural market administrative enforcement team. “No inspector dares to say that to the store operator. Hinting like that is definitely illegal.”
Zhou acknowledged that “some stores have adopted a more covert way to run their business,” but he said that this was not a new phenomenon and that they would not get away with it.
As for DVD shop workers, they seem as divided as their stores.
Asked last week what was going on, clerks at Even Better Than Movie World (across the street from rival Movie World) readily acknowledged to a visitor that they had been told to hide the illegal goods and that inspectors would pretend not to notice the clandestine operation in the backroom.
After a few months, they say, the wall will come down and the store will go back to selling illegal DVDs out in the open. However, when the same visitor returned later, identified himself as a journalist and asked the same question, the clerks pretended there were no secret rooms.
“I don’t know about the existence of that small room,” a Movie World clerk said last week. Pressed, she said: “I’m not the boss.”
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