Sunday, August 17, 2008

Fencing... Yes It's A Sport

(August 10th)

As I was initially ticket-less until yesterday (the unsold tickets from France arrived in Beijing so there was a big line-up on Friday to see what was available), the sport gods looking down from Olympus decided that I would get some fencing and athletics tickets......A work friend also heard my wish to see some rhythmic gymnastics (no I'm not joking) and he had a friend who has a friend...well, you know the story.....It's called 'guanxi' in Chinese!

Anyway, the first trip was to fencing where I got to see France blow it in the gold medal match against I don't remember who......quite impressive being there compared to watching it on TV:


Saturday, August 16, 2008

Sweaty Bush

(August 9th)

I managed to get some tix but unfortunately not the Beach Volleyball to see our illustrious president sweatin' it out with the beach volley hotties.....I probably would have been uncomfortable also to where to put my hand.


Where should I put my hand?

Friday, August 15, 2008

Air Quality

(August 8th)

Well, here is quick snap-shot of the air outside on Friday morning, Aug 8:

All those anti-pollution measures work, that's for sure

It does look a bit 'heavy' but that is normal because it is super-humid and for me this would have been a day to stay in bed under the quilt with the air-con at full blast....but I've got a lead on getting some Olympic tix.....Wish me luck!

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Where To Watch The Opening Ceremony

(August 8th)

After a full-day of scouting locations, we thought we would aim for the new All-Star Bar and Grill that has been advertising for weeks about their opening early August as well as the "best burgers in Beijing" as the ads purport.....So we dropped by in the afternoon of the 8th to reserve a table for our group (about 20) and this is what we saw:


Not quite ready

It pays to plan ahead in China! In the end we settled on another place but we ended up leaving as it was packed and watched the opening ceremonies from the comfortable living room of a friend....

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

The Secret Is Out Of The Bag

(August 5th)

Business as usual for Beijing copyright pirates during Olympics

BEIJING (AFP) — China has muffled dissidents and thinned out its notorious traffic for the Beijing Olympics, but its brazen peddlers of counterfeit goods are proving tougher to bring to heel.
Despite a half-hearted crackdown meant to curb embarrassing copyright theft during the Games, sellers of China's vast array of counterfeit goods say they are ringing up bumper sales to bargain-hunting Olympic visitors.
Some spruikers are even brashly wearing counterfeit versions of the blue and white Olympic volunteer shirts now-ubiquitous in the city.
"Business is good. We've got a lot of new customers now due to the Olympics," said a young woman who gave only her surname, Wu, selling pirated Dolce & Gabbana, Polo, and other clothing at Beijing's Silk Street market.
Merchants at that and other fake-goods emporia had reported a crackdown in recent months as Beijing moved to sweep the city's less-savoury elements such as prostitution under the rug during the Games.
But despite finding a slightly less varied selection, several shoppers said it looked like business as usual.
Many shoppers running the gauntlet of pushy vendors in Silk Street's narrow corridors did so with the official yellow badges of Olympic visitors hanging from their necks.
"It's the same as before except the vendors seem a little more polite. But the prices are higher too," said Kristian Joergensen, 28, a Danish teacher whose brother-in-law competed for Denmark in archery in Beijing.
Joergensen, who visited the market six years earlier, bought 10 pairs of Dolce & Gabbana underwear for 175 renminbi (25 dollars).
"Then we saw someone else selling them at 10 pair for 50 yuan. Oh well," he said.
China is awash in counterfeit DVDs, fake brand-name clothing, shoes and handbags, infuriating China's trading partners who say Western firms lose billions of dollars in sales each year as result.
The United States filed a case against China in April last year at the World Trade Organisation over the problem.
Vendors said a pre-Olympic crackdown had shut many factories of fake goods, with authorities especially targeting luxury brand knock-offs such as Gucci and Calvin Klein.
But with the Olympics underway, knock-offs of Polo, London Fog, Louis Vuitton and other big names were openly sold throughout the city.
"You want Adidas? No problem," said a woman vendor, pulling a pair of fake Adidas trainers -- priced at 250 yuan -- from a concealed box at the Yashow Clothing Market.
The five-story complex is just 200 metres from a shiny new official Adidas store.
A store at the market selling pirated DVDs also continued operation, although it had moved from the first floor to a less-conspicuous sixth-floor room and the selection was thin compared with a few months ago.
"We'll get more next week. You come back," said a woman minding the room.
Some longtime Beijing visitors weren't surprised.
"I knew they wouldn't shut this place up. It's too much of a money-spinner," said Don Lessem, an American living in Mongolia who visits Beijing frequently and was shopping at Silk Street.
He clutched a bag containing several Armani shirts and New Balance sneakers bought for just a few dollars each.
Vendors at the complex, whose parking lot was jammed with tourist buses, brashly sported Olympic volunteer shirts to give their illicit sales a Games gloss.
"The management gave them to us to wear," one young female vendor told AFP.
"It's to show our Olympic spirit!"

UPDATE (Celine’s Note): “It’s been reported that 383,000 000 RMB (38,300,000 €) had been spent at the “Silk Market” during the Olympics. Eight times as much as that spent during the same period last year”. Now what I want to know is do they actually sell 8 times more items or did those Olympics tourists got “rip off” 8 times more!.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Back In The Jing

(August 3rd)

So I'm the official Suiter family delegate to the Olympic Games....
The plane was packed with Olympic-y people and I haven't seen an Air France flight so full for some time....They do have their new entertainment system installed (even for the folks back in Economy)....many choices of video-on-demand so if you haven't seen "Something About Mary" in a while, then there is your chance....I am wondering when the US airlines will get their act together.....I am seriously looking at other options rather than having to suffer through United again.....


Mr. Wang has a new haircut for the Olympics and we took the Expressway between the airport and the center of town with its new Olympic-only lane....I also learned what the Chinese did to cover up their buildings visible from the Expressway that are no way near being completed......Not a bad idea:


Arriving near our apartment (Wang always takes the same way), I looked down for a second then back out the window and I didn't recognize where I was...

It took me a second to realize that where there was this nice open space with flowers and undulating gardens was still a bustling block of low-end restaurants and shops....We knew they were marked 'chai' (destroy), but just a month ago they were still there.

Monday, August 11, 2008

FYI...

The following few posts have been written by Jeffrey who is spending his summer in hot, humid, over crowded Beijing while we are enjoying warm weather, zero pollution in under-crowded La Rivière… Enjoy your guest writer!

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Opening Ceremony

...Of The Olympics

They did it; the opening ceremony was truly spectacular…. Now let’s the game begin.

My favorites were probably the sea of printing blocks, the mass drumming people dancing on the scroll and let’s not forget all the fireworks and the lighting of the torch by Li Ning.


AMAYZING

Friday, August 8, 2008

Guess...

...Which Day It Is!

“08-08-08” marked the opening of the new U.S. Embassy in Beijing. At $434 million, it is the second most expensive building US State Department has constructed overseas, behind only the Baghdad embassy compound, in which all embassy personnel live. In order to “out-Chinese” the Chinese, the ceremony began promptly at 8:08am. Ambassador Clark T. Randt delivered the opening remarks, but quickly turned the podium over to former President George H.W. Bush. Father then passed of to son as the current President George Bush took the microphone. State Councilor and Deputy Foreign Minister Dai Bingguo concluded with his thoughts on the major developments in Sino-US relations since Washington recognized the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1972. Each also honored Dr. Henry Kissinger, who was in attendance with his family, for orchestrating Nixon’s historic meeting with Mao Zedong 36 years ago.
In 1979, the Chinese slighted the new U.S. mission by housing them in the defunct embassy for the Republic of Upper Volta—now Burkina Faso. 30 years later, the U.S. mission is moving into the most impressive new embassy in China.

Oh yeah it’s also the opening ceremony of the Olympics games in Beijing. I can believe it’s finally THE date (sight)…. So I will be in front of my TV set at 2.08pm (that’s France time!) to watch the starts of what anybody who has been living in China in the past 7 years is awaiting. Anyway every thing looks better on TV (you can see everything so much better and with commentary you can actually understand (I would have a hard time following the Chinese version). By a twist of faith I will actually be watching the BBC version since I don’t have French TV at home (no terrestrial antenna) but only our satellite dish from when we lived in Scotland… Once again a truly international family, watching the Chinese Olympics Games from France via British TV!.


"largest single construction project undertaken
by the Department of State on foreign soil".
It is ten acres.

You, Me...

...And 20,000 Others

Let’s get married… well it seems like there were 10,700 couples who were expected to get married on this auspicious date.

Number 6 is also considered a good number to get married and on June 6, 2006 “only 4,800 couples registered to get married in Beijing.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

So Different...

...Yet So Similar

With less than a week before the Olympics and in view of our last month visit to Paris let’s see what the 2 cities have in commun…

Click on the picture to enlarge
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Sunday, July 27, 2008

Paris Is Taking Lessons...

...From Beijing

While in Paris (i.e France!) reading the local Time Out magazine I was surprised to see that Paris also had a “Charter for the Parisian and visitor”. So is it Paris who’s copying Beijing or Beijing that took a page from Paris?.


Never without my TimeOut!

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Sunday, July 20, 2008

Are We Even...

...Or Odd?

The question on everybody’s mind in Beijing today.

From July 20 to September 20, the odd and even license plate number system will operate to ease traffic pressure during the Olympic and Paralympic games. Authorities hope the regulations will take 45 per cent of the city's 3.29 million cars off the road and reduce emissions from vehicles by 63 per cent, officials told a news conference. Cars will be banned on alternate days depending on whether their number plates end in odd or even numbers. Those affected by the ban will be compensated by not having to pay road or vehicle taxes for three months, costing the city about 1.3 billion yuan (€ 130/$189 million).

Frankly right now I don’t really care since I can drive, drive, drive whenever and wherever I want!.

On a side note: When we first learned about the odd and even system, Jeffrey was wondering how they would decide which one will drive which day. When I told him that wouldn't it be easier to let the odd number plates drive on odd days and even number plates on even days, I swear I saw a light bulb on top of his head.....sometime I wonder!

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Olympics Are Coming...

...It's Time To Behave

Fresh from diverse sources on the web:

In a series of essays, the state news agency offers a list of good manners and behaviors for the Chinese people. According to Xinhua:
奥运将临,无数中国人怀着兴奋的心情期 待 着这一盛会,都希望能为奥运出一份力, 为国争一份光。可是,一些国人的不文明 行为,实在令人担忧。新华网评选取十种 比 较典型的社会现象,进行点评。希望每 一 个中国人都能成为文明的奥运东道主,让 奥运带来中华文明的新高度。
Here’s a translation:
The Olympics are coming. Countless Chinese people are waiting with eagerness and excitement for this grand gathering. Everyone hopes to contribute to the Olympic effort and help China win glory. However, there are some uncivilized behaviors of Chinese people that are real causes for concern. We have selected 10 typical phenomena to comment on. Let’s hope that every Chinese can become a civilized host, and the Olympics will elevate Chinese civilization to a new height.

The list, in headlines, reads as follows:

  • 十议奥运礼仪之一:朋友,国旗可不是坐 垫
  • (One: Friends, National Flag Is Not a Seat Cushion)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之二:大声说话的毛病要改 一 改
  • (Two: The Bad Habit of Speaking Loudly Should Be Corrected)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之三:下课声、口哨声不是 奥 运之声
  • (Three: Unruly Noises Are Not Olympic Sounds)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之四:比赛结束垃圾成堆, 不 是 中国特色
  • (Four: Garbage Pileup After Sport Event, Not a Chinese Strong Point)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之五:做文明人排个队有多 难?
  • (Five: How Hard Is It to Stand in Line in a Civilized Way?)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之六:温饱有余,陋习何存
  • (Six: When There’s More Than Adequate Food and Clothing, How Could Bad Habits Still Persist)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之七:做一个热情谦让的中 国 人
  • (Seven: Be an Enthusiastic and Polite Chinese)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之八:奥运来了,网络不要 “ⅩⅩⅩ”
  • (Eight: Olympics Are Coming, Don’t Pollute the Internet)
  • 十议奥运礼仪之九:现场看比赛要 “懂规 矩”
  • (Nine: When Watching Sport Event, Behave Well)


  • Smile When Communicating with Foreigners
    A Smile is Beijing’s Best Business Card — A Smile is the Whole World’s Propriety
  • “Eight Don’t-Asks” When Chatting with Foreign Guests
    Rules for Interacting with Foreigners
    Don’t ask about income or expenses; Don’t ask about age; Don’t ask about love life or marriage; Don’t ask about health; Don’t ask about someone’s home or address; Don’t ask about personal experience; Don’t ask about religious beliefs or political views; Don’t ask what someone does.
  • General Rules for Etiquette with Foreigners
    One’s manners and bearing, and image should be graceful; Be neither humble nor haughty, but at ease and self possessed; Seek commonalities while reserving differences, have reason and integrity;
    Adapt to others’ customs, respect ethical code; Abide by agreements, adhere to promises; Be enthusiastic in moderation, differentiate between insiders and outsiders; Be appropriately modest, be affirmed in yourself; Do not ask private questions, respect others’ customs; Ladies first, be gentlemanly; Seat honored guests on the right, and get along harmoniously.


Also amusing were some of the guidelines for interacting with handicapped athletes:
Don't say bad things to handicapped people!

Etiquette for Interacting with Handicapped Athletes
You should use polite and standard forms of address for handicapped athletes.
Try to keep as light as you can with handicapped overtones.
Pay attention to how you congratulate handicapped athletes.
Pay attention to avoiding taboo subjects, quit using bad platitudes, and do not use insulting or discriminatory contemptuous or derogatory terms to address the disabled. Say things such as, “You are amazing,” or “You are really great.” When chatting with the visually impaired, do not say things like “It’s up ahead,” or “It’s over there.” When chatting with athletes who are paraplegic in their upper body, do not say things like “It’s behind you.”

Lastly, there was one rule on a poster about proper behavior for commuters and pedestrians that seemed a bit odd:
When men and women are walking together, men should generally walk on the outside, and the person carrying things should normally walk on the right. Men should help women carry things, but must not help women carry their handbags. When three people are walking side-by-side, elderly should walk in the middle. Where there are many cars around, men should walk on the side of the sidewalk closer to the street. When four people are walking together, it is best to walk two-by-two..

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Malediction...

...Superstition

2008 was supposed to be a lucky year. Leap years are generally considered fortunate years more so with the number 8 (八ba) which is considered an auspicious number because it sounds like luck (fa)… One of the reasons the Olympics games’ opening date was chosen as the 8 of august 2008 at 8.08pm.
However since the beginning of the year, China hasn’t been so lucky. It all started with the biggest snow storm on January 25th (2+5+1=8) followed by the demonstration in T1b3t on March 14th (1+4+3=8) and then the Sichuan earthquake on May 12th (1+2+5=8) or 88 days before the opening ceremony…. Let’s hope that the series end here and that the Olympics games are a success.

Besides the number 8 being targeted as not being as lucky as previously expected, the Fuwa seem also linked to this year events. A rumor on the net is stating that the Fuwa could be unlucky characters as well (“bring bad luck”). YingYing (yellow) the T1bet@n antelope is linked to the demonstration in Lh@s@. JingJing (black) represents a panda from Sichuan where the earthquake happened last month, HuanHuan (Red) which represents the flam and its more than chaotic route, Nini (green) the swallow that looks like a kite is linked to the deadly train crash on April 28 in Weifang which is the capital of kite, and let’s not forget BeiBei (blue) the fish and the flooding in southern and central China which claimed dozens of lives in June.


they look so harmless

Posts on the internet about the superstition have been removed by China’s censors monitor. Although the Communist Party has tried to stamp out “feudal superstition” since it took power in 1949, the Beijing Games will start on the auspicious moment of 8.08pm on August 8, 2008.
Major calamities, earthquakes in particular, were viewed in imperial China as a sign that a dynasty had lost the mandate of Heaven.

Friday, July 4, 2008

It Might Be Easier To Get...

...A Gold Medal Than A Visa!

We are out the door to go to France for our summer vacation and in the light of the latest China’s let’s-come-up-with-some-new-rules-for-the-Olympics, we are sure happy that our visas are in order.


“In recent weeks there has been a lot of confusion and discussion about the rules for applying for a Chinese visa. Although few public announcements have been made, more and more stories have emerged from people having difficulty in getting hold of a visa. In particular (short stay working) ‘F’ visas have been tough to come by. […]
In fact it may be easier to get some running spikes and work on making one qualifying for an Olympic team.
No such worries will befall families of athletes, who will not require a visa to enter China. Maybe a solution is to marry an athlete…?
These restrictions seem like a very effective way of deterring and alienating potential visitors to China’s showcase. […]
On a final lighter note, Danwei has summarized BOGOC’s guidelines about the kinds of foreigners who will not be welcome in China for the Olympics as:
“No hookers, pimps, dealers, terrorists, activists, revolutionaries, missionaries, demonstrators, pornographers, gun nuts, maniacs, sufferers of mental diseases, carriers of infectious diseases, poisonous snake collectors, beggars or drunkards.”

Monday, June 30, 2008

Driving...

...Learn From the Best

Since I'm leaving on a long well deserved holiday vacation. I let you with this post on the joy of driving in Beijing. I saw the following in a forum. The guy didn’t write it and didn’t know who did it.

*****

As I may have mentioned before, traffic in Beijing is its own art form. The city is adding thousands of cars per - I don't even know, week? Which means you have a healthy mix of people who have never driven before interspersed with people who should never have been driving in the first place.

To introduce you to the intricacies of Beijing driving, I will start with a relatively simple concept: the left turn.

STEP 1:

We see here a typical intersection. The light has just turned green for the east-west streets, and car [A], an enormous black Lexus with pitch black windows, wants to make a left turn into the southbound lanes. Pedestrians wait on each corner. (For purposes of this demonstration, we'll assume no one is running the north-south red light, and no one is jaywalking - a rather large assumption.)


STEP 2:

To make a left turn, it is VITAL that [A] cut off all eastbound traffic as soon as possible. The first few brave or foolish legitimate pedestrians step off the curb; this is of no concern. [A] makes his move.


STEP 3:

NO! Too slow! [A] has managed to partially block [B], a brand new purple and yellow Hyundai taxi, but [A] has only achieved what Beijing drivers would consider a 'weak' blocking position.


STEP 4:

In this detail, we can see why: [A] has only inserted his left bumper and cannot move forward without contact. [B], on the other hand, is in the dominant position - by putting his wheel hard to the right and flooring it, he can fully block [A].


STEP 5:

[B] proceeds to swerve right, cutting off [C], a tiny red Peugeot with a gold plastic dragon hood ornament, spoiler and assorted knobs glued on. Since [B] is just accelerating, and [C] is now decelerating, this has created a low-density 'dead space' in the intersection. [D], a strange blue tricycle dumptruck carrying what appear to be 40 of the world's oldest propane tanks, sees this and makes a move.


STEP 6:


DENIED! [E], an old red taxi with its name sloppily stenciled in white on its doors, has boldly cut across two lanes of traffic, behind [D], and then swerved right, driving [D] into an extremely weak position behind [A]. Meanwhile, [B] and [C] are still fighting for position, with [C] muscling his way into the crosswalk. The only thing between [E] and a successful left turn is a few lawful pedestrians. [E] steps on the gas...


STEP 7:

...and is cut off by [F], an elderly man pedaling his tricycle verrrryyy slooooowwwly with a 15-foot-diameter sphere of empty plastic cooking oil bottles bungee-corded haphazardly to the cargo area. He was part of the lawful pedestrians, but seeing the stalled traffic, decided to cut diagonally across the intersection. Not only has [F] blocked [E], he is headed straight at [B], giving [C] the edge he needs.


STEP 8:

[B] concedes to [C], who drives in the crosswalk behind [F] and blocks [E]. Meanwhile, [G], a herd of about 20 bicycles, mopeds, pedestrians and wheelbarrows, sensing weakness in the eastbound lane and seeing that much of the westbound traffic is blocked behind [D], breaks north against the light. [F] pedals doggedly onward at about 2 miles per hour, his face like chiseled marble.


STEP 9:

Now things get interesting. [C] has broken free and, as the first vehicle to get where he was going, wins. [E] makes a move to block [B] but, like [A] at the start of the left turn, only gains a 'weak' block. [A] has cleverly let [F] pass and guns into a crowd of [G], which both moves [A] forward and drives some [G] stragglers into the path of [D], clearing [A]'s flanks. Little now stands between [A] and a strong second-place finish.


STEP 10:

Except for public bus [H], one of those double buses with the accordion-thing connector. [H] has been screaming unnoticed along the eastbound sidewalk and now careens dangerously into a U-turn. This doesn't appear to concern the 112 people packed inside and pressed against the windows (although that could be due to a lack of oxygen.) [H] completely blocks both [A] and [D]. On the other side of the intersection, [B] has swerved into the lawful pedestrians (who aren't important enough to warrant a letter) and has gained position on [E].

[E] has forgotten the face of his father: He was so focused on his battle with [B] that he lost sight of the ultimate goal and is now hopelessly out of position.

This clears the path for dark horse [I], a blue Buick Lacrosse, to cut all the way across behind [H] and become the second vehicle to get where he was going (and the first to complete a left turn), since [F] has changed his mind again and is now gradually drifting north into the southbound lanes. But everyone better hurry, because the light is about to change...


STEP 11:



STEP 12:
And we're ready to start over.


And to prove that Chinese are the best drivers:



So glad I’ll be out of here for the next 2 months of madness… Will be back in September when the big fiesta is over and everything goes back to normal or at least what we took for normal in the last 2 years. Have a good summer vacation.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Beijing Bad Boy

Time to leave the country and go on vacation in our 450+ inhabitants village in France…. Jeremy comes back everyday from the playground with a tattoo….;)


Born to be wild

Saturday, June 28, 2008

No Counterfeit Cheers...

...Please!

Aoyun! Jia You! Zhongguo! Jia You!" meaning “(Let’s) Go Olympic! (Let’s) Go China!” but when translated literally is more like "Olympics! Add petrol! China! Add petrol!"

"Go Olympics! Go China!” expresses the Citius, Altius, Fortius (Faster, Higher, Stronger) Olympic spirit and is in line with general international principles for cheering, at the same time it encompasses characteristics of Chinese culture."

A committee of official said the simple chants and gestures were designed to help spectators cheer for their favorite athletes in a smooth, civilized manner.

The technical diagram below does its best to demonstrate the complex movements that follow the words:

Chinese Version


If this is too complex for you the BBC have kindly tasked their top designers with simplifying things:

BBC Version


For this vital task BOCOG have teamed up with the Party Office of Spiritual Civilization Development and Guidance (GODPP), the Ministry of Education and CCTV. The Beijing Olympic Organizing Committee has hired 30 cheering squads at Olympic ventures to show spectators how the gestures are done. The Ministry of Education is also arranging special training sessions in schools for the 800,000 students who are expected to attend the games.



When we went to the Bird’s Nest last month we saw first hand some of the volunteers showing their support and practicing their cheers:

Aoyun! Jia You! Zhongguo! Jia You!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Work With Me...

...Please!

How am I supposed to defend the Elégance à la française and explain, once again, that no we do not usually wear a Béret or Panama Hat.

Stereotypes are hard to beat


The official outfits for the French Olympics team (I’m guessing for the opening and closing ceremony and not for the competition!) have been revealed.
I’m speechless. First of all with Paris being the self proclaimed capital of fashion, with dozen of worldwide known designers they chose the company Elis to outfit our team (when I click on the link of the company because I had no idea who they were I found out that they specialize in “Clean Services in Textile and Hygiene”…. Again what’s going on?). Secondly what’s up with the design, where is the French Elegance…


Another team's outfit that is being talked about on the web as well is the Canadian Athletes (and not good talk!)

Yo!


As far as the American athlete's outfits, we only know that Polo Ralf Lauren will design them. No photos have been released… only sketches.

Apparently no women in this team!


“Athletes will wear a wardrobe of V-neck tennis sweaters and ties, Polo mesh shirts with the word "Beijing" written in oversized Chinese characters, and cargo pants. The color scheme will be a patriotic palette of red, white, and blue. Polo ponies will also make an appearance on the garments. Additionally, the Olympic logo featured on the new uniforms may include a replica of a crest with stars and stripes used by the 1932 U.S. Olympic team at the Los Angeles Games.

In keeping with Olympic tradition, attire for the opening ceremonies won't be revealed until August 8, the first official day of the festivities."

So secretive... do they think it's a fashion show on top of a sport competition AND China big coming out party.




Update:
"The company Elis specialize in work uniforms and corporate fashion and has designed the official outfit for the French delegation of the Olympic Games since 1992." Again.... what's going on?!

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Number Of The Day...

...… 5,174
(Or Maybe 5,333 I Have Conflicted Statistics!!)

Number of public toilet in Beijing, the capital now has more public toilets than any other city in the world.

Not sure every toilet in the city should qualify for the term toilet!

(not photographed in Beijing)

And because everything must be perfect for August:
“The city also dispatched 8,000 toilet maintenance staff, each responsible for a specific restroom to ensure frequent and thorough cleaning. They also received training in hygiene standards and techniques, Olympic knowledge and practical English expressions!!"

A few months ago a bullet proof toilet (well in fact 8 exist) was unveiled in Zhongguancun plaza. The 800,000 yuan (€80,000 - $100,000) toilet is not only bulletproof but can withstand a 15 ton blast as well

In case of a terrorist attack, look for those ones


For background purpose:
Toilets in the city apparently have a star-rated system: three and four-star bathrooms must have toilet paper available in each individual stall. However, while one and two-star facilities must provide toilet paper, the paper can be located in a central position in the room rather than next to the toilet.

According to archeological discoveries at the Banpo relics site in Xi'an, the first toilet in China can be traced back approximately 5,000 years. We know through similar discoveries that in the Western Zhou Dynasty (BC c1,100-BC c771) and the Warring States Period (BC 475-BC 221), toilets were in common use - simple shafts used by one person or one family. And the toilet in Beijing itself has a history of over 3,000 years, which is as long as the history of the city.
.

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Adid...

...As

I wonder which big European Sport Company is coming in the new up and coming place in town?

??

Just a few blocks from our apartment complex and in the heart of Sanlitun (aka bar street!), a new mega shopping complex called The Village at SanLiTun is set to open soon (well that was being said in the last 6 months!). Apart from the Adidas’s largest store worldwide (with 3,160 sq m or 34,000 sq ft) a lot of other international brands are rumor to come; Montblanc, Sephora (both with their largest store in China), Nike, Versace, Esprit, Lacoste, Quicksilver, Hilfiger, Levis…. As well as a 1,700 seat, eight-screen Megabox Cinema, a 100-room boutique hotel and its fair share of restaurants and bars

THE Village

.


Friday, June 20, 2008

Ayi's World

I would say that our ayi is having a good time working for us….

A well integrated Ayi
(among Daddy, Maman, Grandma, Grandpa, Chloe & Jeremy’s Wii avatars)


Jeremy told her she could not work (ie iron)
because she needed to play with him!


Wednesday, June 18, 2008

The Mouse That Is Not...

...Anonymous Anymore

It the year of the rat you would think that his cousin the mouse would be safe in the Middle Kingdom well not so. The beloved proxy known by everyone who set a foot on Chinese soil and realizes that the message “Network Timeout - The server at www.xyz.com is taking too long to respond” might have nothing to do with time and more with the great (fire) wall, is no longer accessible.

Since yesterday, the mouse is dead, morte, tot, muerto, kaput, 死的, not available anymore so we need to find another way around, a new proxy which won’t be as convenient as the previous one since Firefox had an add on for an “anonymouse” tool bar right next to the existing one.
So far I found a lot of new proxies which work with some websites and not with others. The latest and more reliable one is…… (The name is the same as that big green superhero from the fictional Marvel Comics and with an org extension!!!)


Bye bye little mouse, it was nice meeting you

Monday, June 16, 2008

Another Solution To...

...The 4th Floor Dilemma

I had mentioned before that in general there is no floor number 4, (13 also) 14, 24 in China because the number 4 (四si4) sounds like “death” in Chinese (死– si3) therefore is considered an unlucky number. Floors usually go from 3 to 5 and 12 to 15. Well another solution is:


12, 12A, 12B, 15

Saturday, June 14, 2008

New Signs

(...Of Improvement)

It seems like there has been a new directive coming from above as part of the big spring Olympic cleaning. Every shop sign needs to be according to the new norm:


Click on the picture to enlarge
Click on the "Back" button of your browser to come back to this page

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Please Give Generously...

...Or...

Going to our local market this week I was surprised to see what looks like a list of name (shop name to be exact) along with some sort of donation amount.
Information is surfacing about some of the “voluntary” donation made by Chinese citizens.

“[…] bosses have put up lists of names of employees who've donated and how much they've given.
Grumbling has erupted over the zeal at which company … have demanded donations. Feeling pressure to display generosity, some executives of foreign companies with operations in China quietly voice fears that they may be targeted for boycott if they aren't seen as exemplary in their giving.
Even foreign diplomats say that the Foreign Ministry in Beijing is pressuring them for disaster donations. One European diplomat, who wasn't authorized by his government to speak publicly, said it was clear that China was "keeping score" of how much each country gave.
Employees attached to work units sometimes are told how much they're expected to contribute, only to get new appeals from neighborhood associations and other social groups to donate to separate quake-relief efforts.”

Can you see your name?

Today is the one month anniversary of the 7.9-on-the-Richter-scale Sichuan Earthquake that killed more than 69,000 people, injured hundreds of thousand and left almost 5 million people homeless.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Paper or Plastic

Beijing is upgrading its metro ticketing system with magnetic cards set to replace the current paper tickets. Paper tickets were in service for 38 years at Beijing Subway. An automatic fare collection (AFC) system became operational at all Beijing subway stations on May 23, requesting passengers to produce their magnetic strip tickets or mass transit smart cards twice when entering and exiting the subway gates. The fare for a subway ride remains unchanged, at two yuan (€0.20 or $0.30).


Welcome to the 21st century

Monday, June 9, 2008

You Guessed It...

...It's Another Festival

This one is new this year! Well not new as just been invented no, new as this is the first time that it will be an official day off. In order to avoid the rush around the three golden week*, this year the May holiday was cut short to 1 day (instead of the 3-day holiday) and to make up for the lost day, 3 days off have been added: Mid Autumn festival (中秋节 - zhong1qiu1jie2) mid september, Tomb Sweeping Day (清明节 - Qing1 ming1 jie2) in early April and Dragon Boat Festival (端午节 - Duan Wu Jie) in early June.

Duan Wu Jie which falls on the fifth day of the fifth month of the Chinese calendar is also called Double Fifth. The focus of the celebrations includes eating zongzi (made of glutinous rice stuffec with different fillings and wrapped in bamboo leaves), drinking realgar wine and racing dragon boats (long and narrow human-powered boat).




* Golden Week is the name given to two annual 7-day national holidays, implemented in 2000:
- The "Spring Festival (or Chinese Lunar New Year) Golden Week" begins in January or February.
- The "National Day Golden Week" begins on October 1st.
A third Golden Week holiday, beginning on May 1st and celebrating Labour Day, existed until 2007.
Three days paid holiday are given, and the surrounding weekends were re-arranged so that workers in Chinese companies always had seven continuous days of holiday. These national holidays were first started by the government for PRC's National Day in 1999 and are primarily intended to help expand the domestic tourism market and improve the national standard of living, as well as allowing people to make long-distance family visits. The Golden Weeks are consequently periods of greatly heightened travel activity.

Saturday, June 7, 2008

After The Strawberries...

...the Cherries

Well packed strawberries and now cherries neatly tied up

Neatly packed
Neatly tied up

And nothing much to write about!!!

Friday, June 6, 2008

It's Over...

...No More V.P. Privileges

I’m officially not the V.P of Pekin Accueil anymore….What am I going to do with all my free time!!!!!

No we didn’t lose the election… we resigned!

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

The Last of "That's Beijing" As We Know It..

...And No "Time Out" Magazine Either

My beloved free English language magazine, “That’s Beijing”, which has been with us since we arrived in Beijing will not be published anymore. Well in fact the producer of the magazine since its debut in October 2001 won’t be involved with the brand “that’s”. The publisher who controls the license ended their cooperation. The producers have decided to start a new magazine called “the Beijinger” starting next month.
And if this wasn’t enough another magazine called “Time Out” couldn’t be found anywhere this month. It turned out that the magazine will probably not appear in print due to China's more stringent foreign media clampdowns in the lead up to the Games.


Sunday, June 1, 2008

When Size Matters...

...How 0.005 mm Can Make A Big Difference

China put an end on the production to the ultra-thin plastic bags (i.e 0.025 mm thickness) at the end of last year and has forbidden shops to hand out free bags as of today. The new bags which are 0.03 millimeters thick are priced between 0.2 and 0.4 yuan depending on size.

I knew it was coming, we have been warned since the beginning of the year. But I still went grocery shopping without my “I’m not a plastic bag” (“genuine” of course) so I had to pay 30 mao (€0.03 - $0.05) per plastic bag to be able to carry my groceries home. On the other hand I now have to buy bags for my trash so I need to investigate how much they cost to see if I’m better off asking for the “paying bag”. I am kidding of course; I couldn’t believe it when I first arrived in Beijing some 22 years months ago (when you live in China you have to count in dog Chinese years) how many plastic bags they used. And I’ve learned not to protest when they wrap your fruits or vegetables in several bags then put them in a bigger plastic bag. Once I try to put as much things as possible in one bag, the woman wouldn’t let me do it, she didn’t understand why I didn’t want her bags and I just couldn’t remember in the spare of the moment how to say, “but it’s not good for the environment, it takes over 100 years for a bag to disintegrate in nature”…. And that’s what made me want to study Chinese more diligently!!!!!!!

Now I’ll have to coordinate my (grocery) bag with my outfit!!

China uses more plastic bags than any other country (up to 3 billion plastic shopping bags a day) and squanders 37 million barrels of crude oil on plastic bag production every year.
Ireland, South Africa, Bangladesh and even Uganda are some of the nations that already have a ban in effect. In theory, China should find it easier to switch to cloth, vinyl or bamboo bags, because many consumers gave those up only in the 1990s.