Is it ethical for busy public figures to charge fees for interviews? At the 
same time, is it incumbent on them to answer every journalist's queries despite 
their busy schedule? 
Renowned Chinese sociologist and sexologist Li Yinhe, who has charged money 
for interviews and set off a debate, has defended her move. 
 
 
   Li Yinhe. [newsphoto 
 file] | 
She said the fees enable her to screen 
numerous requests from media organizations to talk on sex-related subjects. 
Li, a researcher with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, courted 
controversy when a Guangzhou Daily reporter tried to talk to her about her 
proposal for legalizing gay marriages earlier this month, at the latest session 
of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), China's top 
advisory body. 
The reporter was told that he had to pay to get the interview 500 yuan 
(US$61.7) per hour with the first 15 minutes free of charge. After a one-hour 
question-and-answer session, the reporter paid the fee. 
 Li admitted in her blog on Sina.com, a Chinese language 
website, that she had previously charged foreign journalists for interviews. 
The British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) paid Li 50 pounds (700 yuan) for a 
5-minute interview and Hong Kong-based Phoenix Satellite Television offered her 
500 yuan (US$60) for a 15-minute interview. 
Li is not the only person in China to charge for talking to the press. A year 
ago, Sun Daolin, a well-known actor of yesteryear, also asked for an interview 
fee. 
His reason, as some art commentators have speculated, may be that he could 
have earned a lot of money by publishing the stories he was giving to reporters. 
It is also common practice today for Chinese media to pay regular commentators, 
particularly TV stations. 
In the case of Li, however, many journalists and the general public have 
misgivings about whether she should charge for the occasional interview as she 
would for her consulting services. 
Li is China's first female sociologist on marriage and sex issues, and was 
once listed as one of China's 50 Most Influential People by Asiaweek magazine. 
In a brief (free) telephone interview, Li told China Daily that she believes 
the charge is necessary to avoid having to field endless requests for interviews 
asking similar questions. 
Li was critical of journalists wasting her time by not doing their research 
before they interview her, asking questions about facts she has explained many 
times before. "They don't do their homework and they expect me to do all the 
talking," Li said. 
"But I've talked about those issues hundreds of times and the answers can be 
easily found on the Internet." 
This is why she began setting down rules: the first 15 minutes of the 
interview are free. Lengthier interviews will attract a fee. In doing so, Li 
believes her media interviews will be condensed so that she can retain her 
allocated research time. 
"Fifteen minutes are absolutely enough for any regular interview about any 
current news event. If you ask for more time from me, you have to pay. 
Otherwise, I'd like to keep the time for my research." 
Interviews extending beyond 15 minutes often involve greater professional 
expertise, she said. "In this aspect, the media are paying for my intelligence 
and years of research." 
Li deflected criticism that she is already employed by the Chinese Academy of 
Social Sciences and therefore should not expect extra payment, saying that her 
job description does not include receiving media interviews. "I deserve to earn 
more if I work more," she said. 
Li also believes that the media should pay for the experts who have made 
possible their programmes which are then sold for profit by contributing their 
opinions. 
"Not paying them (experts) is an unreasonable way for media organizations to 
save costs," she said. 
Media professionals have aired many, sometimes sharply divided, views on Li's 
interview charges. 
Zhao Chenyun, secretary-general of the All-China Journalist Association, told 
China Daily that although there are no rules concerning fees for interviews, 
it's common practice that experts have the right to accept or decline an 
interview, but that they should not charge the media for giving an interview. 
With protection of intellectual property rights high on the agenda, however, 
consultants and researchers are now more mindful of being quoted and the issue 
of payment. "On this matter, we could hardly judge it as right or wrong to pay 
for an interview," Zhao said. 
Liu Hao, deputy editor-in-chief of Caijing Magazine, believes public figures 
should not charge the media for their expertise. "Experts are being spoilt by TV 
producers paying them to talk. It is a fair deal experts receive exposure when 
they appear in the media. This will more or less raise their publicity and thus 
bring other chances for making money," Liu said. 
Zhao Jing, a media researcher with the New York Times' Beijing office, said 
he was shocked to hear of Li's demand for fees. 
He said it is wrong to use money to buy opinions, and that it is unacceptable 
to buy news and even more unacceptable to buy a person's opinion. 
"An expert's opinion is easily influenced by money. If they were paid to 
comment, it would be media talk instead of the expert's voice," he said. 
Charging money for press interviews goes against the practice of the 
international media industry, according to Samuel Freedman, professor of the 
Graduate School of Journalism of Columbia University. 
"It is not considered ethical to charge a fee for an interview," he told 
China Daily. "I know of no reputable journalists who would consent to such an 
arrangement." 
According to Peking University sociologist Xia Xunluan, who has also been 
frequently quoted by the media on social issues, "to pay or not to pay, it 
entirely depends on the person's choice." 
But Xia said he did not demand payment from the media because he regards his 
comments as a contribution to society. 
On the flipside, Xia raised the problem of reporters stealing the ideas of 
interviewees and using them without giving acknowledgement. 
He said sometimes reporters might quote one or two sentences from an 
interviewee but base the rest of their story on the interview, unacknowledged. 
It is a minor infringement of intellectual property rights. 
(China Daily 04/04/2006 page1)