Rupert's Adventures in China: How Murdoch Lost a Fortune and Found a Wife

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Mainstream, 2008 - Biography & Autobiography - 302 pages

In the mid-1990s, amid rumours that he had an agenda to bring down totalitarian regimes, Rupert Murdoch was blackballed by the Chinese authorities and a 'Murdoch File' was opened by a member of the Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party.

Despite this opposition and the fact that from then on every step he made was monitored, Murdoch remained committed to establishing a media presence in China. But convincing the Chinese authorities that he wasn't a threat was no easy matter. When News Corporation eventually announced a deal with the official organ of the Chinese Communist Party, the People's Daily, to launch China's first joint-venture Internet site, the world's media interpreted the move as the lifting of the 'Black Ban' on Murdoch.

This remarkable book details Murdoch's many convoluted money-spinning deals and ventures with high-profile Chinese figures. It is a roller-coaster read that reveals exactly what Murdoch's dealings cost and what they achieved, and ultimately asks: was it all worth it?

From inside the book

Contents

Obsession
1
Whoops
15
Deng Rong The King is Dead
26
Copyright

19 other sections not shown

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About the author (2008)

Bruce Dover is a senior media operative who spent several years running Rupert Murdoch's 'China push'. He is now the Chief Executive of Australia Network, the international satellite television network of the Australia Broadcasting Corporation, and divides his time between Sydney and Vietnam.

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