One such petition was filed on the Blue House, i.e., the Office of the President of South Korea’s website on December 19, the Jung Hae-in and BLACKPINK’s Jisoo starrer. It claimed that Snowdrop was insulting the pro-democracy movement in South Korea with its twisted representation of historical events.
The Korean government finally answered the petition sixteen days after the final episode aired and the petition managed to garner more than 365,000 signatures. In its statement (via Manila Bulletin), the Blue House’s Public Communication Office has acknowledged the objective of the petition is to cease airing the show.
It also highlighted that JTBC had countered the petition, back in December 2021, by clarifying that every misunderstanding regarding “distortion of history” and “disparagement of the pro-democracy movement” will end once the remaining episodes air.
Their decision will depend on the regulations “violated” by Snowdrop
According to Article 4 of Korea’s Broadcasting Act, the government can’t regulate or interfere in the making/releasing of a show unless it is “in accordance with the law while guaranteeing the freedom and independence of broadcasting.”
But the Blue House agreed that the Korea Communications Standards Commission is responsible for “maintaining fairness” in public broadcasting.
The Blue House assured that they will be discussing “whether or not the broadcast review regulations have been violated” by Snowdrop. Their decision will depend on the “degree of violation” as they understand the need to strike a “good balance,” especially now that K-dramas are achieving international acclaim.
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