The context is not, though. Produced in Jordan and directed by a Jordanian woman, Tima Shomali, “Rawabi” is not only about students being vicious to one another, but also about the patriarchal society that surrounds them. They are shaped by it, and they unwittingly reinforce it: the show ends, six episodes later, with a gunshot, after a teenage revenge plot spirals into an “honour killing” .
The salacious stuff often grabs the headlines. Take “Jinn” , which in 2019 became the first original Arabic drama on Netflix. It was not very good; critics panned the writing and acting. But the loudest public criticism focused on a smooch between two youthful characters. As love scenes go, this one was chaste, just a quick peck on the lips. Still, it was enough for Jordan’s top prosecutor to ask the government to ban the series.
Even on streaming services, the political restrictions are hard to dodge. Asked to ban “Jinn”, Jordan’s media regulator said it had no jurisdiction over Netflix. Other governments disagree. In 2018 Netflix pulled an episode of “Patriot Act with Hasan Minhaj”, an American comedy show, from its catalogue in Saudi Arabia. The episode criticised the kingdom over the war in Yemen and the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist. Saudi Arabia said the show violated its cyber-crime laws.
Well, those girls shouldn't be under veils, that's for sure...more please
I can't wait to see these shows on Netflix, netflix please pay attention to the saudi woman, they deserve the world!
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