Hello everyone on the subway, I have been giving speeches on Guangzhou Metro Line 3 these days... "Recently, a video of a man giving a speech in a Guangzhou subway carriage has attracted attention. In the video, the man aimed his selfie camera at himself and the crowded passengers behind him, gave a loud speech, and claimed to "challenge his inner fears and be brave to be himself", attracting the attention of many people around him. At present, the man's social media account shows that he has posted more than ten videos of giving speeches on the subway. Guangzhou Metro responded to this by stating that the behavior of passengers giving loud speeches in the carriage not only violates the provisions of the passenger code, but also causes inconvenience to other passengers. It will strengthen inspections and promptly stop related behaviors. Subsequently, the man released a video apology, stating that he would "try his best to give speeches in parks or compliant places without affecting others." The intention is to exercise his eloquence and break through self affirmation through speech and expression, but it must be based on not infringing on the rights of others. However, giving speeches and filming videos in a closed and crowded public space like the subway clearly interferes with the normal travel of other passengers, disrupts public order, and may even infringe on the privacy and portrait rights of other ordinary people in the carriage. This is definitely not an behavior that should be encouraged. Is the subway speech a self breakthrough or a show that disturbs the public? Searching for short video platforms, it was found that "subway speakers" under the name of "breaking through fear and overcoming oneself" have been staged in many places, forming a fixed routine for gaining traffic, and even receiving the "support" and encouragement of many people in the comment section, and successfully "taking off" with this. Due to its dense passenger flow, subway cars have become a "background board" and traffic code for some bloggers to shoot short videos, seriously affecting the travel of ordinary people and posing hidden public safety risks. As an iconic scene of modern life, the subway seems to be particularly favored by internet celebrities and traffic. In recent years, many curious and staged activities on the subway have attracted public attention and discussion. In October last year, four beauty and hairdressing practitioners were caught filming videos of haircuts in a Shanghai subway carriage to attract attention, and were ultimately administratively punished for disrupting public order; Last June, on Line 1 of the Shijiazhuang Metro, two men dressed in hospital gowns and Hulk jumpsuits filmed a parody video in the carriage for one hour, and were eventually administratively punished; Women who exposed their clothing on the railings of the Shanghai subway and filmed promotional materials were also subject to administrative detention and fines in accordance with the law. The subway is a public space that carries millions of people for travel, not a "stage of traffic". Ignoring others' feelings and confusing the boundaries between public and private will ultimately lead to severe punishment. For short video bloggers, they should abandon the impetuous mentality of prioritizing traffic, adhere to public rules and boundaries, attract fans with high-quality content, rather than becoming slaves to "traffic performances". Relevant departments and platforms need to strengthen inspections and regulatory constraints on such harmful content, maintain a good online ecosystem, and make the subway quiet and the online space clear. (New Society)
Edit:Luoyu Responsible editor:Wang Erdong
Source:Ban Yue Tan WeChat public account
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