If you'd like to check out Chinese TV, http://english.cntv.cn/ will give you some material in English.
You'll note some other differences. Chinese media is (IMO-grin, and at least in English editions) offering more of a world view. (In contrast, in the Anglosphere, the media tends to be insular-again IMO).
Another difference, its a bit more serious than anglosphere media, which tends to try too hard to be 'cool' and often becomes just frivolous. I guess, because they have to be, since it must have popular appeal, and if no-one buys their media, they are out of business. SO are they really free?
----------------------------------
William Penwell: public protest are banned.
Professor Kerry Brown ( at Sydney University - http://sydney.edu.au/china_studies_centre/en/staff/kerry-brown.shtml ) said recently that (in a special talk) that there ae 200,000 to 500,000 public protests a year in China.
Some are handled peacefully, some less so. But your own TV (in your own country) will often show violent confrontations between demonstrators and authority.
Have I challenged your view of China?