A festival in Malaysia has been cancelled after British singer Matty Healy attacked the countryâs anti-LGBT laws.
During the performance by his band The 1975 at the Good Vibes Festival, Healy addressed the audience in a profanity-laden speech before kissing bass player Ross MacDonald.
The band then ended their set, claiming officials ordered them off stage.
Homosexuality is illegal in Malaysia and punishable by 20 years in prison.
The band were headlining the Good Vibes Festival in the capital Kuala Lumpur on Friday.
On Saturday the festivalâs organisers said the remaining schedule for the festival had been cancelled following the controversy.
A statement said the decision came after an âimmediate cancellation directiveâ from Malaysiaâs Ministry of Communications and Digital, as part of its "unwavering stance against any parties that challenge, ridicule or contravene Malaysian laws.
In footage shared online, Healy could be seen telling the crowd that the bandâs decision to appear in Malaysia had been a âmistakeâ.
âWhen we were booking shows, I wasnât looking into it,â Healy said. "I donât see the [expletive] point, right, I do not see the point of inviting the 1975 to a country and then telling us who we can have sex with.
âUnfortunately you donât get a set of loads of uplifting songs because Iâm [expletive] furious,â the frontman continued. âAnd thatâs not fair on you, because youâre not representative of your government. Because youâre young people, and Iâm sure a lot of you are gay and progressive and cool.â
Healy and MacDonald then kissed as the band played the song I Like America & America Likes Me.
Soon after - just 30 minutes into the set - Healy and the band walked off stage, with the singer telling the audience: âAlright, we just got banned from Kuala Lumpur, see you later.â
A source close to the 1975 confirmed the incident to the BBC.
âMatty has a long-time record of advocating for the LGBTQ+ community and the band wanted to stand up for their LGBTQ+ fans and community,â the source said on Friday night.
In an initial statement to local media on Friday, festival organisers said the bandâs set was stopped due to ânon-compliance with local performance guidelinesâ. But at that stage they said the festival would continue as scheduled for the rest of the weekend.
Malaysiaâs Communications Minister Fahmi Fadzil hit out at the bandâs performance on Twitter, calling it âvery disrespectfulâ. He added that he had contacted festival organisers and asked them to provide a full report.
Healy has previously used appearances on stage to highlight anti-LGBT laws.
In 2019 he invited a male fan on stage during a gig in Dubai to hug him, before sharing a quick kiss. The incident attracted criticism in the country, where homosexuality is punishable by 10 years imprisonment.
Posting on Twitter after the show, Healy said: âThank you Dubai you were so amazing. I donât think weâll be allowed back due to my âbehaviourâ but know that I love you and I wouldnât have done anything differently given the chance again.â
Other performers at the Good Vibes Festival include the Strokes, Dermot Kennedy and Ty Dollar $ign.
I understand his stance, but thatâs not the way to protest. His actions were selfishâimmediate repercussions include festival cancellation, adversely impacting vendors, attendees, and everyone else that mightâve benefited from having international musical acts in Malaysia.
But in the longer-term, heâs made it that much harder for other international artists to bring their music to a country that sorely needs it and brought more scrutiny upon the LGBTQ+ community (who struggle as it is).
If he wanted to protest the anti-LGBT laws, 1975 shouldâve just not come to Malaysia. Poor form on his part.
think most people can tell that majority of African and Asian countries have anti-LGBT law without needing âinternational attentionâ
Until I read this very article, I had no idea that being gay in Malaysia was punished by 20 years in prison.
Fuck your whataboutism. Of course anti LGBT policies are fucked in a lot of other places and that should be condemned on an international level. If you defend locking away people for loving who they want (in a consensual manner) you are an enemy of the free world and this issue definitely has nothing to with drunk people pissing in a pool or whatever.
This obsession of politicizing everything is disturbing.
Imprisoning people for who they are / who they love isnât politics, itâs human rights. If you think someone saying thatâs bad is imposing their views on you, that suggests your views run counter to that. I feel sorry for you if youâve been raised in an envrionment that mandates hatred.
Letting people fuck any other consenting adult they want is a fundamental human right that transcends politics. Every piece of shit backwards nation or person will come to understand sooner or later that this is a settled matter culturally. The sooner they get over this, the better for all of us.
Itâs not cool how you equated supporting LGBT rights with tourists being shitty.
And yes, the white saviour complex is real, and I would love to hear more about the views of the Malaysian LGBT community on the incident.
But jumping from a critique to white saviourism to the crap you say about âhomogenizingâ and âimposing viewsâ is also not cool.
The issue is, social change should be driven by the locals, through civil organizations, grassroots movements, education, etc. If foreigners want to help, they can help local LGBT groups with support, know-how, expertise.
If, instead, you just go to a foreign country, tell people there how backwards and evil their society is, and demand they change it, at best youâll be wasting your time, and if youâre high-profile enough, boost local reactionary sentiment.
The advance of LGBT rights in the west has been a long process. And other societies arenât going to just magically internalize the results of it. They still need to walk the path. But, since itâs already been done once, they can hopefully do it faster.
You are absolutely right that this is no way to protest, it was done too hastily and impromptu. I mean that is just unprofessional.
He should have planned it more, maybe have a whole set of songs specifically addressing in the matter, banner drops, audio visuals etc. Hell, he could have gone all in with like a themed concert, with a unifying storyline, to show the tragedy and stupidity and cruelty of the laws.
Also he did not apparently coordinate with the local lgbt+ activists, to speak to specific issues affecting that community. He could have anchored the agitation on the actions of specific officials, named and shamed them for their cruelty. Or he could have brought attention to specific cases, specific people being persecuted, make their case known to a wider audience.
All in all, you are correct, it does come off as a bit selfish and it is not the way to protest. Poor form indeed.
/S
Yea but who is he inconveniencing really? I guess Malaysians who have the means and interest to go to this kind of event must have relatively progressive views already, meanwhile it gives the government an easy opportunity to grandstand and score point with their baseâŠ
Thatâs kind of a bad take I think. Protests should have impact. Itâs now in the world media and bringing attention to stupid bigoted laws. If they donât want it to happen again they should stop being bigoted asshats. Easier said than done if course, but change has to start somewhere.
See this is why this place needs downvotes.
It looks like the majority agree with you, when everyone in the comments is disagreeing with your utterly shit take.
What? Theyâre totally are down votes, the guy has 84 downloads right now
Hey⊠he got bad rep during the time he dated Taylor Swift but this was pretty cool.
Props to him and being consistent about it.
Or he got caught saying some racist shit and then doubled down on it⊠not a cool guy.
How about yâall go build houses and toilets for some uncontacted tribe and force them to change their lifestyles?
Kinda off topic but I was so surprised when I visited Colombia and found poor communities living in shacks on the beach. Their properties are worth 10s of millions of US dollars and they refuse to sell because they donât want to give up the lifestyle and community that they have. Really puts into perspective how wrong we can be when we think we are helping people.
Same thing in Hawaii. Pigs running around, people living in shacks, on land worth 10s of millions. Not as much anymore, but its still there. I actually donât agree with the person you replied to though, thatâs more about human rights which should be universal and not a choice for how people live. Although I really like how both The Orville and Star Trek have explored this
Every party should include ridicule of ridiculous Malaysian laws.
LOT OF ANGER IN HERE GUYS
As an aside, hereâs Doug Stanhopeâs experience with insulting Thai royalty.
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