Chinese 'Sex and the City' confronting awkward truths in China
TV series discusses topics normally taboo on the socially conservative mainland, including sex, sexism and the obsession with status
A wildly popular drama likened to Sex and the City is breaking ground on China’s staid state television with content that strikes at the heart of life today for the nation’s urban women.
Ode to Joy has broached a range of topics typically off-limits in socially conservative China including sex, sexism and status.
The show, which just completed its second season, centres around five young women from different backgrounds who are neighbours on the same floor of a smart Shanghai high-rise apartment called Ode to Joy.
It made headlines in May with a scene in which character Qiu Yingying bursts into tears at the sudden breakdown of her relationship.
“He asked me whether I am a virgin,” she sobbed, after her boyfriend stormed out upon discovering she was not.
In many countries such a scene would hardly register, but the normally hush-hush topic set off a furore in China.