Some authenticity in China’s shallow pool

China never has been known for its stellar policies on little girls. But last week, its female trouble in Beijing was especially vexing. There were, of course, the rumblings about members of the Chinese women’s gymnastics team who appear younger than the International Olympic Committee’s age requirement of 16. But that controversy was put on the back burner by the fracas surrounding Lin Miaoke, the 9-year-old who lip-synced “Ode to the Motherland” during the opening ceremony.

The real voice behind the pig-tailed and photogenic Miaoke turned out to be that of 7-year-old Yang Peiyi. A gifted singer with a round face and crooked baby teeth, Peiyi was scheduled to perform at the ceremony until Communist Party authorities deemed her not cute enough for the job. Then, when her replacement’s vocal skills were found to be lacking, ceremony organizers decided to have it both ways: Peiyi’s voice was played while Miaoke, a veteran of Chinese television commercials, stood before the crowd of 91,000 at the National Stadium and adorably moved her lips — maybe she was singing, but the microphone wasn’t turned on.

Ever since the Chinese media broke the story, cries of totalitarian-style foul play, along with copious references to the lip-syncing, Grammy-stripped 1980s duo Milli Vanilli, have been in heavy pundit and blogosphere rotation. Ceremony organizers, already under criticism for digitally enhancing a fireworks display, are being accused of sacrificing Peiyi’s self-esteem for the sake of artificial beauty standards and rigid nationalism.

“The reason was for the national interest,” Chen Qigang, music director of the opening ceremony, said in an interview. “The child on camera should be flawless in image, internal feeling and expression.”

Flawless in image, internal feeling and expression? What an outrage! No wonder Americans are scandalized by this hybrid performance. Over here, this would never happen. Over here, we would choose the beautiful person as a matter of course and then ignore — or not care about — the fact that she couldn’t sing as well.

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