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TV drama on 'sent down youth' too rosy, say critics

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A television series intended to pay tribute to the Communist Party has drawn the ire and even disgust of some viewers for its perceived white-washing of a key part of the Cultural Revolution.

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Zhiqing or Sent-down Youth, which began airing at prime time on the main China Central Television channel last month, centres on the lives of a group of young people sent to rural Heilongjiang province between 1966 and 1976.

While much of the story, written by renowned novelist Liang Xiao-sheng, has so far been devoted to the growing attachment of the main characters to the locals, their friendship under harsh conditions and awakenings of first love, the production has been criticised for glossing over how a discredited political ideology wasted the potential of an entire generation.

Some online users also criticised it as flattery to Vice-President Xi Jinping, who was part of the zhiqing generation. Xi worked in the countryside from 1969 to 1975 and wrote an article several years ago about the experience.

The largely romantic take on a painful chapter in the nation's history angered viewers and prompted calls on liberal-leaning web portals such as kdnet.net and tianya.cn for a boycott of the show. Some are urging the broadcaster to drop the 44-episode series.

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'This is a drama full of lies and praise for evil,' one commentator wrote.

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