
Watching ‘House of Cards’ in Tehran, to hard-liners’ delight
TEHRAN, Iran — Iran’s government has long tried to keep out American pop culture, but it seems happy to let Iranians watch the backstabbing, deceitful machinations of fictional U.S. politician Frank Underwood in “House of Cards.”
Iran’s hard-liners point to the show and say: This is what America is really like.
The sudden arrival of the Netflix series, which stars Kevin Spacey as a South Carolina congressman who connives his way to the presidency, illustrates the reach and popularity of Western television and film. It also offers a window into the thinking of Iran’s censors, who have approved the dark portrayal of power politics and even murder in the corridors of Washington — but not the bedroom scenes.
“It shows how politics is dirty in the United States,” said Mohammad Kazemi, a student of mechanics at Tehran’s Azad University. “They do anything to reach power.”