Hence the lack of posting…. Because I cannot baby-sit, cook, tour guide, bargain…. and write posts.
We’ll start with the traditional ones: Great Wall, Forbidden City, Tiananmen, Lama Temple, Temple of Heaven… we’ll then continue with the new attractions: The Egg, the Bird Nest, the Water Cube… without forgetting the other temples, the temple of fashion (!) Yashow, Silk Market, Pearl Market.
* you would know what it means if you had paid attention to older posts!
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Mei Mei* Is In Town
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Mark Your Calendar
I should have written this post last month since it was first implemented in February but I had already talked about “no-spit day” and I didn’t want to overload you with numbers!
So the “big bosses” have come up with a new plan to make the Olympics and Beijingers as civilized as possible (not sure what will happen after August!). Starting last month, the 22nd of each month is “Share Your Seat Day”. The number 22 (二二 - er er) is similar to RR, which stands for sharing (让让- Rang Rang), and the shape of 22 somewhat resembles a seat.
So from now on I’m supposed to queue in an orderly matter (on the 11th), share my seat in public transportation with the people that need them most (on the 22nd) and not spit (no specific date set yet). I guess I’m lucky I still have 27 (28 some months) to be as rude as I want: spit while not queuing and certainly not giving my seat to this 100+ year old woman!! Not a bad deal after all. Anyway, it’s a good thing there aren’t 33 days in a month or they would have to come up with a new brilliant idea.
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PS: it seems that they come up with those ideas only in February (11 February 2007 was the start of the “Queue day” campaign and now this year 22 February 2008 the “sharing seat” campaign.) I predict that in February 2009 the new campaign will be: “Do what the heck you want... nobody is watching us anymore!”"
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Sand Storm...
The sand storm season is in full swing. It’s not as bad as it used to be apparently but from time to time you’ll see the taxi drivers using their "buffer" a little more than usual.
Yesterday’s sandstorm brought once again pollution to an unprecedented level this year with an API (air pollution index) of 305 according to the Beijing Environmental Bureau
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Another Fine Day... |
For your information, The Chinese authorities use an Air Pollution Index (API) to report the air quality. Although most countries use the term API, they may have different scales to measure it, so an API of 100 can represent different levels of pollution.
- 1 = API 0-50 = excellent = PM10 0.000-0.050 (It’s considered “good” in the USA)
- 2 = API 51-100 = good = PM10 0.050-0.150 (it’s considered “moderate” in the USA)
- 3A = API 101-150 = slightly polluted = PM10 0.150-0.250 (it’s considered “unhealthy for sensitive group” in the USA)
- 3B = API 151-200 = light polluted = PM10 0.250-0.350 (it’s considered “unhealthy”y in the USA)
- 4A = API 201-250 = moderate polluted = PM10 0.350-0.385
- 4B = API 251-300 = moderate-heavy polluted = PM10 0.385-0.420
- and so on…
The European Union draws a red line at a PM10 of 0.050 mg/m3. API in Beijing with a PM10 up to 3 times as high as the EU limit value as good.
On a side note, Beijing pollution rating for December 12, 2006 was a record 500, the maximum score on the scale that SEPA uses!
Sunday, March 16, 2008
Painting the Town Red...
There must be some kind of paint sale in town, not only did they repainted the Red Hotel next to our apartment complex this horrible color but now random buildings around town are turning pinkish too!!
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Pink(ish) |
Then there is the subject of the Olympic (I haven’t talked about it for a while!) and this frenzy of making everything look perfect for August… so again everything that cannot be demolished has to be painted!
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Salmon(ish) |
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Sex Doesn't Sell...

Rumor has it in recent days that Tang Wei ("Lust, Caution" lead actress) has been banned by the Chinese broadcasting administration.
“She has been reportedly banned from Chinese screens since March 5, when various Chinese TV station executives received an order instructing them to stop reporting on the actress and to exclude all the commercials featuring her.
The speculation circulating on the web guesses that the ban may have something to do with the Lust, Caution, an "un-patriotic" and "erotic" feature film directed by Ang Lee.
Last Friday China's regulators reiterated the criteria for censorship, saying that films with explicit sex and fear-provoking elements must be cut or revised before release.
The State Administration of Radio, Film and Television said in a notice on its website that the move was intended to purify screen entertainment and create a more harmonious and healthy film environment for the public.
Rumors indicate that Tang Wei and Lust, Caution may be the first target.”
Can you imagine if Hollywood applied the same ban…. There would be not a lot of commercials!!
Monday, March 10, 2008
Stolen..
Let’s call her Friend XY.
- XY has her wallet (and passport) stolen.
- XY goes to the police station to report it.
- Police write in the police report that she lost her wallet.
- XY argues she didn’t lose it, but that it got stolen.
- Police agree and change statement.
- XY goes to her Embassy to get a new passport and a statement for her bank in order to cancel her credit cards, etc…
- XY then needs to go to the police station for foreigners (for some reason, yet unknown by myself) and find out that she actually has “lost” her wallet in this statement.
China… or how to keep statistics on your side.
Sunday, March 9, 2008
Shaving Day
Today is the second day of the second month in Chinese lunar calendar, known as 龙抬头 ("the dragon raises its head"). Traditionally, people go to barbershop to have their hair cut on this day, believing that it will bring them good luck throughout the following year.
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So did you by any chance have your hair cut today?! |
Saturday, March 8, 2008
What's The Definition of Normal?
When I first moved to the States I was puzzled by the way their maps of the world looked like. The American continent was in the middle with Europe/Africa on the right hand side (to the east) and Asia on the left hand side of the map (to the west) which was not the way a map of the world looked like to me. In general, America is situated to the left and Asia to the right. Isn’t Japan called the rising sun nation? And what about the Far East, they have the Middle East but the Far East is on the west side of their map!
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Anyway I was telling our driver Mr Wang that my sister was coming to visit and I joked that he had to learn French since she and her family don’t speak English. He asked me if the letters were the same than English which kind of confused me!! Then I realized that from a Chinese point of view, the world’s languages are not necessarily written in roman letters.
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Click on the picture to enlarge Click on the "Back" button of your browser to come back to this page |
And for your personal knowledge (I need to keep giving you those little trivial pursuit answers!) : China (& Russia) each share a common border with the most countries (14 for each country). China shares a border with Afghanistan; Bhutan; India; Kazakhstan; North Korea; Kyrgyzstan; Laos; Mongolia; Myanmar (Burma); Nepal; Pakistan; Russia; Tajikistan; and Vietnam.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Spring Is Really Here...
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
My First Time...
We finally had our first visit from the cops today. It seems that a lot of people from our complex already had a visit at some point but for us that was the only time in our 18 months in Beijing.
Actually it was a combination visit from the water usage reader and the PSB (Public Safety Bureau). They probably thought that nobody could refuse access to the water reader!
Apparently this was part of a big investigation into temporary residence permit holders for Olympic security.
“From today to the 31 March, Beijing Police will inspect the identity documents of the floating population throughout the whole city, […] lasting 39 days, with four goals to be achieved, namely strengthening the basic registration of the floating population and rental accommodations; comprehensively grasping the base number of Beijing’s floating population; implementing service protection measures; and creating a secure and harmonious public security environment to maintain Olympic security.
The Police said that during the exercise period they would establish publicity stations at important channels where the floating population re-enters Beijing, such as the airport, railway stations, long-distance bus stations, and expressway toll booths, and in floating population residential areas, large-scale markets, and construction sites[…]
According to a police officer, after 2003, the registration of temporary residence permits mostly depended on the people taking the initiative. To increase the rate of registration, police often make visits. Although the legislation has fines and other provisions, in the last 5 years, the police have very rarely used disciplinary measures against those who have not or refuse to apply for temporary residence permits.”
I feel so much better now knowing that…. I’m part of the "floating population", living in a "floating population residential area"!
Sunday, March 2, 2008
Listen...
After months of speculation about what would happened once they "chai’ed" the place we finally have an answer:
A living Plaza…
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47 languages spoken…
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186 currencies accepted…
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This paradise is just down the street from us. But you know me I couldn’t not Google those facts (47 languages?, 186 currencies?). The results are in:
Top 50 languages in the World (most widely spoken)
Chinese, madarin (1,120) - English (480) - Spanish (332) - Arabic (235) - Bengali (182) - Russian (180) - Portuguese (170) - Japanese (125) - German (98) - Chinese, wu (77.2) - Javanese (75.5) - Korean (75) - French (72) - Turkish (67.7) - Telugu (66.4) - Chinese, Yue (Cantonese) (66) - Marathi India (64.8) - Tamil India, (63.1) - Italian (59) - Urdu (58) - Chinese, Min Nan (49) - Chinese, Jinyu (45) - Gujarati India, (44) - Polish (44) - Ukrainian (41) - Persian (37.3) - Chinese, Xiang (36) - Malayalam (34) - Chinese, Hakka (34) - Kannada (33.7) - Oriya (31) - Panjabi (30) - Sunda (27) - Panjabi (26) - Romanian (26) - Bhojpuri, (25) - Azerbaijani (24.4) - Maithili (24.3) - Hausa (24.2) - Burmese (22) - Serbo-Croatian (21) - Chinese, Gan (20.6) - Awadhi (20.5) - Thai (20) - Dutch (20) - Yoruba (20) - Sindhi (19.7)
Lucky you who speak “Hausa” or maybe “Yoruba” you will find somebody who will be able to answer your questions.
Now that we know you can be understood, let see if they’ll accept your money!
Most sources only list 164 currencies (not sure where they got the 24 others!)
Afghani AFA - Austral ARA - Baht THB - Balboa PAB - Birr ETB - Bolivar VEB - Boliviano BOB - Cedi GHC - Colón (Costa Rican) Rica - Córdoba NIC - Convertible Mark BAM - Cruzeiro Real BRR - Dalasi GMD - Dinar (Algerian) DZD - Dinar (Bahraini) BHD - Dinar (Croatian) HRD - Dinar (Iraqi) IQD - Dinar (Jordanian) JOD - Dinar (Kuwaiti) KWD - Dinar (Libyan) LYD - Dinar (Macedonian) MKD - Dinar (Serbian) CSD - Dinar (Tunisian) TND - Dirham (Moroccan) MAD - Dirham (UAE) AED - Dobra STD - Dollar (Australian) AUD - Dollar (Bahamian) BSD - Dollar (Barbados) BBD - Dollar (Belize) BZD - Dollar (Bermudian) BMD - Dollar (Brunei) BND - Dollar (Canadian) CAD - Dollar (Cayman Islands) KYD - Dollar (East Caribbean) XCD - Dollar (Fiji) FJD - Dollar (Guyana) GYD - Dollar (Hong Kong) - KD - Dollar (Jamaican) JMD - Dollar (Liberian) LRD - Dollar (Malaysian) MYR - Dollar (Namibian) NAD - Dollar (New Zealand) NZD - Dollar (Singapore) SGD - Dollar (Solomon Islands) SBD - Dollar (Taiwan, New) TWD - Dollar (Trinidad and Tobago) TTD - Dollar (US) USD - Dollar (Zimbabwe) ZWD - Dông VND - Drachma GRD - Dram AMD - Ekwele GQE - Escudo (Caboverdiano) CVE - Escudo (Timorian) TPE - Euro EUR - Forint HUF - Franc (de la Communauté financière africaine) [Central African Franc]) XAF - Franc (des Comptoirs français du Pacifique) [Pacific - Franc]) XPF - Franc (Burundi) BIF - Franc (Comorian) KMF - Franc (Djibouti) DJF - Franc (Guinea) GNS - Franc (Malagasy) MGF - Franc (Malian) MLF - Franc (Rwanda) RWF - Franc (Swiss) CHF - Franc (West African) XOF - Gourde HTG - Guarani PYG - Guilder (Aruban) AWG - Guilder (Netherlands Antilles) ANG - Guilder (Surinam) SRG - Hryvna UAH - Inti PEI - Karbovanet UAK - Kina PGK - Kip LAK - Koruna (Czech) CZK - Koruna (Slovak) SKK - Króna (Icelandic) ISK - Krona (Swedish) SEK - Krone (Danish) DKK - Krone (Norwegian) NOK - Kroon EEK - Kuna HRK - Kwacha (Malawian) MWK - Kwacha (Zambian) ZMK - Kyat MMK - Lari GEL - Lats LVL - Lek ALL - Lempira HNL - Leone SLL - Leu (Moldavian) MDL - Leu (Romanian) ROL - Lev BGL - Lilangeni SZL - Lira (Turkish) TRL - Litas LTL - Loti LSL - Manat (Azerbaijani) AZM - Manat (Turkmenistani) TMM - Maloti LSM - Metical MZM - Nakfa ERN - Naira NGN - New Kwanza AON - Nuevo Peso ARS - New Peso (Mexican) MXN - New Peso (Uruguayan) UYU - New Sol PEN - New Zloty PLN - Ngultrum BTN - Ouguiya MRO - Pa'anga TOP - Pataca MOP - Peso (Bolivian) BOP - Peso (Chilean) CLP - Peso (Colombian) COP - Peso (Cuban) CUP - Peso (Dominican Republic) DOP - Peso (Guinea-Bissau) GWP - Peso (Philippines) PHP - Pound (Egyptian) EGP - Pound (Falkland) FKP - Pound (Gibraltar) GIP - Pound (Lebanese) LBP - Pound (St Helena) SHP - Pound (Sterling) [United Kingdom Pound] GBP- Pound (Sudanese) SDG - Pound (Syrian) SYP - Pula BWP - Quetzal GTQ - Rand ZAR - Rand (financial) ZAL - Rial (Iranian) IRR - Rial (Omani) OMR - Riel KHR - Riyal (Qatari) QAR - Riyal (Saudi) SAR - Riyal (Yemeni) YER - Rouble (Belarussian) BYR - Rouble (Russian Federation) RUB - Rouble (USSR) SUR - Rouble (Tajik) TJR - Rufiyaa MVR - Rupee (Indian) INR - Rupee (Mauritius) MUR - Rupee (Nepalese) NPR - Rupee (Pakistani) PKR - Rupee (Seychelles) SCR - Rupee (Sri Lankan) LKR - Rupiah IDR - Shekel ILS - Shilling (Kenyan) KES - Shilling (Somali) SOS - Shilling (Tanzanian) TZS - Shilling (Ugandan) UGS - Som (Kyrgyzstani) KGS - Som (Uzbekistani) UZS - Taka BDT- Tala WST - Tenge KZT - Tugrik MNT - Unidades de Fomento CLF - Vatu VUV - Won (North Korean) KPW - Won (South Korean) KRW - Yen JPY - Yuan Renminbi CNY - Zaïre (New) CDZ
Once again if you have "Birr" (from Ethiopia) or "Pula" (from Botswana) they will gladly take them.
I will keep you inform on the construction progress of this "Living Plaza"...There isn't much behind the billboard yet but I’m sure it will be ready for the Olympics!
Friday, February 29, 2008
One Free Extra Day This Month..
Anywhere else in the world it would be considered harassment but we are in China…
China searches for Olympic medal ceremony hostesses with ideal looks (Xinhua)
"SHANGHAI - Young Chinese women whose "eye length is three-tenths of the face" and who have leveled shoulders and curvaceous thighs now have a competitive edge in joining the Olympic Games in August.
In another example of meticulous planning for the Summer Games, organizers are scouting for 40 hostesses among students in Shanghai's 10 universities -- with extremely detailed standards in appearance and body shape, local media reported.
According to the requirement, candidates should be between 18 and 24 and 1.68 and 1.78 meters in height. They should have a "ruddy and shiny complexion", "elastic skin" and "a plump but not fat body".
They should be built in such a way that helps demonstrate "the healthy and encouraging beauty of human bodies", added the requirement.
It also set strict standards on facial features, including the ratio between the "width of the nose and the length of the face", "width of the mouth and width between the pupils", Shanghai's Xinmin Evening News reported.
The candidates would also be judged from their demeanor and intellectual qualities by a panel of experts and have to go through three rounds of competitions before being selected.
Shanghai is the only place other than Beijing where Olympic organizers are searching for medal ceremony hostesses."
Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Pick A Date...
I just love the headline...
BEIJING - Kate and Leo did it on the Titanic, so why shouldn't Chinese? After all, the habit goes back five millenia.
Liu Ying, a Beijing Municipal Bureau of Health official, noted that spitting was a major cause of the spread of respiratory diseases, especially in spring, echoing a Chinese slogan: "Spitting kills even more than an atomic bomb." (…) "I think it's healthier to spit rather than to swallow," said a netizen who called himself Mop Paparazzi on the Mop.com. Liu, however, said people didn't understand the purpose of the drive. "We are calling for stopping the rampant spitting on the pavement, not urging everyone not to spit at all," she explained. "You can wrap your spit with a napkin and throw it into a trash bin," she added. (…) The Olympic host has taken a series of measures to curb spitting, such as the distribution of spit sacks and a 50-yuan (US$7) fine for spitters.
A recent survey by the Beijing-based Renmin University found that in 2007, 2.54 percent of people surveyed in Beijing still spat in public, down by 2.36 percentage points from 2006. Or at least, that was how many admitted doing so. Many Chinese take the practice for granted.
I’m pretty sure that those 2.54 percent all live in my neighborhood!!!
Monday, February 25, 2008
To Drive Or..
I read the following article a few months ago in “That’s Beijing” Magazine:
Checking out that new McDonald's drive-thru in Changping District has just gotten a little bit easier for foreigners due to a new regulation. Temporary driver's licenses can be acquired for a maximum of 90 days, applicants are exempt from the tests normally required, and there are no limitations on the number of times a driver can re-apply – all starting this year.
The reason for this change, speculates Jeff Jia, Director of Beijing Easy Business Services, is for the convenience of visitors descending on the city for the 2008 Olympic Games. "If everything is convenient for tourists – tourist information systems, road conditions, road networks and traffic signs, road markings – more people [will be] interested in driving … [especially] those people who want to discover the real China." According to Jia, fees for this service have yet to be set by the government. At press time, temporary visa applicants need only pay for their photos, medical examination and other materials that need to be submitted.
But don't retire those hitchhiking thumbs just yet, as only foreigners in possession of visas with a validity period of three months or less are permitted to apply. Not ideal, but at least the three-month F visa finally has its benefits.
Didn’t think much about it until I read this other article last week:
BEIJING (Reuters) - Tourists seeking their own Olympian challenge while attending the Beijing Games this August might be tempted to get behind the wheel of a rental car and take a spin on the roads of the Chinese capital. For these intrepid tourists, here are some tips about how to drive in Beijing, a city with three million vehicles on its roads. Those who find the road rules overwhelming can ride the subway or take taxis, buses or limousines to sports venues.
1. Physics 101
Beijing drivers seem eager to challenge the physics principle that no two objects can simultaneously occupy the same point in space.
For instance, lane markers are largely ignored, serving no real purpose in keeping cars apart. When drivers want to get a good look down the road but the view is blocked by cars in front, drivers don't think twice about sliding halfway into the next lane and then straddling two lanes for as long as seems comfortable.
It's also not uncommon for drivers who have missed their exits to simply put the car in reverse and back up into traffic.
2. No-Look Turns
Some countries have rules allowing right turns on red lights. Beijing has something unique: No-look turns. That's right, they follow the maxim that "if you see me, you're responsible for not hitting me," and its corollary, "if I don't see you, it's not my fault if I hit you."
As a result, drivers regularly come flying into streets, merge onto highways or even switch lanes without the slightest attempt to check whether the way is clear. This habit seems a direct extension of China's bicycle culture, whereby every move is a calculated negotiation among throngs of cyclists flowing at roughly the same speed and in the same direction.
Keep your eyes open.
3. Emergency Lights
Don't panic if you see a police vehicle's flashing lights in your rear-view mirror. As a Chinese friend explained, police and other emergency workers typically turn them on just to show they are on duty. If there's no accompanying siren or honking, you can ignore them. Everyone does.
China may be an authoritarian state, but that doesn't mean authorities get much respect. Certainly, on the road they have to fend for themselves. Ordinary drivers can be seen honking and flashing bright lights at patrol cars that were deemed to be going too slowly.
4. Lost in Beijing
Reading maps is critical for anyone navigating a foreign city. But newcomers to Beijing may want to familiarize themselves not just with Beijing's main streets but also its bridges. That's because major intersections are known by the names of the overpass bridges that link intersecting streets.
Strangely, English maps give only the names of the roads, not the bridges. Road signs, however, give distances to upcoming bridges, not the roads. Go figure.
5. Give An Inch
Perhaps it's understandable in a country of 1.3 billion people that you don't get ahead by patiently waiting your turn. On the road, as in other aspects of their lives, Beijingers tend to grab opportunities whenever they appear. Such chances might come in the form of a few inches of space between cars in the next lane, just enough to squeeze in the car's nose and present the driver behind with the dilemma of giving way or causing a collision. The good thing is that Chinese drivers are generally not aggressive, and the high-testosterone road rage that is common on many U.S. highways, for instance, is not typical in Beijing.
6. Now Exhale
To its credit, Beijing is trying to keep drunk drivers off the road by making random spot-checks. Officers armed with portable breathalyzers jump from the curb when cars stop for red lights, forcing drivers to exhale into the machines. Unfortunately, the mouthpieces are used over and over as the officers move down a row of cars. When this driver made a feeble attempt to blow into the machine without making contact with the mouthpiece, an impatient officer suspected he'd caught a transgressor. He ordered me to the curb-side for a more thorough check. This time, though, he took a new mouthpiece from its plastic seal before the second test, which gave me the all-clear.
Happy driving, but be careful out there!
Well it doesn’t help me… since I’m not here on a tourist visa so if I ever want to drive I’d better go back to that funny translation of the Chinese Driving Code (more about this later!).
Anyhow this article made me wonder which one of the tourists who just stepped out of the airplane or the residents who have been living here for a few months, years and start to grasp the concept of driving by the Chinese, are more qualified hence allowed to drive in China.
Saturday, February 23, 2008
A Cube, Some Water
The Water Cube, formally known as the National Aquatics Center, opened to the public a month ago (28th January). The building is recognized for its unique, bubble-like out padding made of ethylene-tetrafluoroethylene plastic pillow. It’s a 11,000-seat venue and apparently "The water in the pool is even better than drinking water." (!!). It cost 1.02 billion yuan (€102 million or $150 million) and was mostly funded apparently by wealthy Chinese living outside of the mainland.
We decided with a group of friends to take advantage of the Good Luck Beijing events that are going on (a good way of testing the new venues) and check out the venue ourselves before the crowds next August (check here if you don’t know what I’m talking about!!).
Our impression: due to Beijing weather and pollution (really Beijing is polluted?) the outside structure looked already dirty and worn and the interior was nothing to brag about. We thought that the cube looked more appealing from a distance and it apparently looks amazing at night when the bubbles are lit up.
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The Outside ! |
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The Pools! |
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The Inside! |
At Night (Photo: China Daily)
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At night time |
Thursday, February 21, 2008
It's Over...
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It’s just Lantern Festival today which means the end of “It sounds like I’ve been living in a city under siege for the past 15 days”…. Because of the firework that is to say. One more big bang tonight and from tomorrow people can go back to a peaceful night of sleep. It personally didn’t bother me because I can sleep through any noise!!
Again if you want to know about Lantern festival… refer to last year post. Updating the blog this year is going to be so much faster… just need a few link to last year posts and here you go!!
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Great time to buy them… they are on sale! |
Tuesday, February 19, 2008
What Did We Do?
Pekin Accueil web site blocked for the first time
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Click on the picture to enlarge Click on the "Back" button of your browser to come back to this page |
Even Gmail chat wasn't working...
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Click on the picture to enlarge Click on the "Back" button of your browser to come back to this page |
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Since We Are On The Subject...
Condoms no longer evidence of prostitution in China (as of December 2007)
All hotels in Beijing will be required to provide condoms in every room by the end of next year, though so far they are only available in 133 hotels out of 700 in Beijing, according to local government statistics.
And we all know what they do with used condoms!
There are even fake beauty salons!! (Reuters, Sept. 2007):
Unregistered karaoke bars and bathhouses would also be targeted in a blitz across the city launched by 11 government departments, Friday's Beijing News reported.
"One third of the prostitutes detained by police in Beijing this year have come from these illegal beauty parlours," the paper quoted an unnamed police official as saying. "These salons make up 50 percent of all the prostitution dens in Beijing."
Police have also instructed China's growing ranks of property owners not to rent out their homes to people who "stay out late" and have "irregular lifestyles", the China Daily said in a separate report
The advice comes a week after Shanghai housing authorities drafted rules urging landlords not to rent rooms to unmarried couples and gays.(…) Other campaigns have included stripping highways of billboard advertisements for luxury goods that might fuel discontent among Beijing's poor, and cleansing local airwaves of "vulgar" and unpatriotic content.
Friday, February 15, 2008
...And Playboy
It all started with an interview of China Publications Import and Export Corporation vice-president Liang Jianrui who told China Daily: "We will provide most of the world's top-selling newspapers and magazines." So far nothing to stop the press since the relaxation of curbs on magazines and newspapers follows Olympic protocol. Previous host cities like Athens, Sydney and Atlanta were also asked to ensure journalists and athletes had access to all leading international publications. But then Liang also distinctly mentioned Playboy this way: "Our law forbids Playboy and we should obey this, but we can't rule out the possibility that it might make its debut (in China). There might be a demand for it." Although several influential domestic Chinese newspapers have since reported that they could not get official confirmation of the executive's remark --I presume no one would announce such a decision under the circumstances, even if there were one –
Beijing is going all out on a PR offensive to show the world next summer that it is an international city and is ready to bend the rules to give visitors a more comfortable stay. In addition to implementing a citywide clean-up campaign involving taxi-drivers and social etiquette lessons, it is ramping up English learning across the city, recruiting an unprecedented number of volunteers for the Games and doing its utmost to sanitize the environment and food hygiene levels in the city.
The good news for athletes, tourists and journalists during the 2008 Olympics is that they will be able to find many of their favorite paperbacks at downtown bookstores, while also being able to catch up on the latest news from the nine designated kiosks only hours after publications like the Financial Times are printed in Hong Kong. Popular Asian newspapers such as Hong Kong's South China Morning Post, Singapore's The Strait Times and France's L'Equipe will also be available, said Liang. Liang said his company is also talking with leading newspapers including The Washington Post and Los Angeles Times to keep down retail costs and make sure the papers arrive in a timely manner. These two dailies do not have access to printing presses in Hong Kong and must be flown from the United States to Beijing.
Each kiosk will retail over 100 kinds of newspapers and magazines, including publications that are difficult to find like The New York Times, Newsweek and Britain's The Sun famous for its topless Page 3 models. In the illustrative map published in China Daily, there were nine kiosks. Six of these are close to the National Stadium. There are three in the Olympics media village, one each in the Main Press Center, the Olympics Village and the International Broadcasting Center. Another one is at the Huabei Hotel, which will accommodate unregistered journalists. The one in Qingdao city is also located in the media center. It would seem that apart from the one kiosk at the Olympic Green, all the other kiosks are in places for journalists and athletes.
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Conveniently located for the Athletes AND Journalists |
One other blog made the following comment:
It shows that the authorities have come to the laughable conclusion that when foreigners complain about the lack of freedom of the press in China they are referring to pornography. (we’re talking about the BBC being constantly blocked.)
Even better than the fact that China appears to think that allowing porn equals free press, there seems to be an implication that the foreign athletes will go crazy without a playboy for a few weeks. The impression seems to be that after years of training, during the most two important weeks of their young lives these athletes will be hunting the city’s news stands for girlie mags.
I sure will keep you posted on the availability of the bunny magazine in Beijing next August. In fact I might have to send Jeff to find out since I will be in France where I’m pretty sure it is available (not that I would know!)
Thursday, February 14, 2008
Valentine...
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February Marie Claire Supplement |
* Magazine cover and idea for the post from camille