Graphic hip-hop video taken down
BY LAURA MCQUILLAN
Related Links
Relevant offers
Music
A music video depicting the stalking and killing of a woman has been removed from YouTube by its record label, at the same time the censor's office has begun a classification process at the request of the Department of Internal Affairs.
The video for rapper Derty Sesh's second single, Forever, has been pulled from YouTube by Move The Crowd Records.
Move the Crowd boss Kirk Harding could not be reached for comment.
Two versions of the video had been made, with the extended online version showing the rapper, real name Nathan King, crouching over a bound woman before stabbing her and cutting out her organs.
It also featured shots of mutilated women's bodies and the rapper stalking a couple in a park.
The television version ended with a woman screaming as the hooded rapper appeared, whereas the online version depicted him assaulting her.
Anti-violence groups had called for the taxpayer-funded video to be banned from television over the weekend, with Rape Prevention Education director Kim McGregor describing it as depicting "extreme misogyny".
Chief censor Bill Hastings told NZPA the Department of Internal Affairs had submitted the video to the Office of Film and Literature Classification.
Interested parties, including Move the Crowd Records, Rape Prevention Education, the Society for the Promotion of Community Standards and the Department of Internal Affairs, were yesterday invited to make comments on the video.
They would be given two to three weeks to make comments before they were considered by the Censor's Office and classified.
Mr Hastings said he had seen the video but had no comment to make on it.
He was unaware the video had been pulled from YouTube.
"That's interesting. Maybe they'll tell us the reasons why in their submissions to us."
The television version of the clip was funded by NZ On Air, with added parts for the online version produced separately and funded by his record label, NZ on Air music manager Brendan Smyth told the Sunday Star-Times.
The Move the Crowd blog, movingthecrowd.blogspot.com, had invited members of the public who did not like the online version to complain to YouTube to have it censored and made available to people over 18-years-old.
King told the Sunday News he had wanted the video to cause controversy.
"My whole thing is to push the limit ... People in the hip-hop community [are saying] this is the best New Zealand hip-hop video to date."
- NZPA
Sponsored links
Surgery leaves Adele's voice intact
TV show host's jibes 'helped Rimes'
Elton John fears for 'stigmatised' son
Grammys could be full of surprises
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Grammy spotlight shines on Adele
Naomi Watts to play Princess Diana
Del Rey 'doesn't deserve haters'
O'Connor tempted to bare too much
Tension high as lethal log pile cleared
Police name Hawke's Bay crash victim
'Trail blazer' Carmen farewelled in Auckland
Usshers make it his and hers at Coast to Coast
Victim was holding bat, says witness
Gardener's paradise planned for Chch
Danny Lee drops back to pack at Pebble Beach
Obama tries to defuse birth control fight
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Promoter dismisses bike helmet harm study
Will bill make food safer or be a form of control?
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
EU courts Kiwis for science grants
Tension high as lethal log pile cleared
Police name Hawke's Bay crash victim
Black Caps overcome spirited Zimbabwe in T20
Vatuvei magic gives Warriors win over Souths
'Trail blazer' Carmen farewelled in Auckland
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Engineer's report prompts mall evacuation
Usshers make it his and hers at Coast to Coast
Deep south beats rest of nation in jobless
Farmer faces wait over 'useless' land
Stadium firm also designed CTV
