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Noisy Chinese Restaurants

22-Apr-09


gui-jie
eric-with-shrimp
Most of the Chinese restaurants are noisy, as long as there are a certain number of Chinese people, no matter where. In the restaurants in Gui Jie in Beijing, you can barely hear the person sitting opposite to you across the 4-seat table. It’s not because we are rude or impolite or ill-mannered, just it’s the way we talk. Most of us still come from farmers’ family and for generations after generations farmers do a lot of farm work in the open air. If you don’t talk loud enough, your friends on the other side of the field can’t hear you. So that’s reason one. Reason two is Chinese people like to argue and show off. When you debate with someone, naturally the louder you are, the more reasonable you tend to sound. And of course, when you want to show off, you obviously have to pitch high to attract attention.

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My observation is, as China’s economy rockets, more people can afford leaving the country of the Great Wall. The Chinese restaurants overseas tend to be louder and louder. Like the Red and Hot Sichuan restaurant near Oxford Circus. Before, Chinese people can’t really afford going out for dinner too much so the target of most of the Chinese restaurants in other countries is not really Chinese. And that explains why the food qualities of these restaurants are poor in Chinese standards. I was once homesick and lost in southwest London, but luckily I found a small and quiet Chinese restaurant. Partly because of the financial crisis there were not many people in the restaurant, and I was greeted with almost standard Mandarin. Immediately I felt at home and asked the waiter/boss how the Sichuan spicy chicken was made. He said they only had a Malaysian chef. I said Ok. I was hungry and homesick, there was no other choice. Then I ordered something else, something that I thought the chef could cook well. It was not bad. And that was how I responded to the boss too, but I know, if I were in that area again, I would not step in that restaurant any more.

Since it seems to be obvious, the louder one Chinese restaurant is the better food it serves.

Photo of lanterns in the street taken by Andy
Photo of big lantern taken by Tsai Wei-Kang
Photo of man with shrimp taken by Eric
Written by Zhao Xue

London International Documentary Festival

21-Apr-09


3:37
The third annual London International Documentary Festival opened last weekend and runs all this week. The event boasts some ninety short and feature films over eight days, and gives audiences a chance to take part in themed screenings and debates.Canadian filmmaker and writer Patrick Pearce has been covering the festival and talks about some of films and events he has experienced.

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By Zhao Xue

Fair-trade Fair Barnet

21-Apr-09


(10:38)

According to The World Bank, food prices rose more than 80% from 2005 to 2008, and small farmers are suffering from rising costs and price instability. Fair-trade Foundation is a Britain-based non-profit organization that guarantees minimum prices to help farmers sustain their businesses. To raise public awareness for this cause, the foundation has organized Fair-trade Fortnight, a series of events across the UK. One such event is being held in a library in North London.

Zhao Xue has more.

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Gay Education

21-Apr-09

(3:25)

More than one hundred and fifty thousand students in Britain are affected by homophobic bullying, according to a recent study. In an attempt to solve the problem, some schools in London are starting gay education programs, which involve teaching children about relationships between people of the same sex. But for parents and teachers, gay education has raised some concerns.

Zhao Xue has more.

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Produced by Alex Wood, Francois Aulner and Zhao Xue.

Go to Gaza, Drink the Sea

21-Apr-09

(3:05)

Just weeks after Israel’s attack on Gaza, a controversial play about a Palestinian and his family’s life during the conflict is being staged in a fringe theater in north London. It is called Go to Gaza, Drink the Sea. And it focuses on the human side of the action which the producers say hasn’t been well told in the news coverage.

Zhao Xue has been to see it.

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“旅式“作家

08-Apr-09

我认为,多数四十岁以上的所谓“旅英作家“,“旅美作家“并不是在英国或美国旅游的,他们完全是逃亡到英国或美国的。因为根据王赓武教授的解释,中国人似乎从来都不鼓励去其他国家。即使“移民“的原意也是短期居住。这也许是中文发展被限制的原因之一。我们后代应该想一个新词。

Chinese Hip-hop

01-Apr-09

I have been doing research on Chinese Hip-hop and just gather some report here:
By courtesy of New York Times
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In Beijing by Beijingers
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In Beijing by Yin Tsang
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Chinese New Year in London, 2009

26-Jan-09

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Produced by Alex Wood, Francois Aulner and Zhao Xue.

Oh Capital, My Capital

30-Jun-08

Thought of this title when I just got my crappy convenient noodles and tasteless crackers in Xining airport, I think it was around mid-night, when I knew that after the plane was delayed for 4 hours, we had to wait for another 2 hours.

Met a guy from Inner Mongolia who lives in Beijing, saying no one cares about you in Xining, if we were in Beijing, we would have been treated a lot better. And my American boss would be invited to some VIP room because everyone in Beijing wants to show the good image of our capital. But since we were in Xining — this remote western city, who bothers to care about you? Air China says they are not responsible for any emergency related to weather. Similar like what most insurance companies in China said after the earthquake: earthquake is not one of the disaters we are responsible for.

So I was walking around in the airport, holding my crappy convenient noodles and the tasteless crackers, thinking about a Shanxi friend saying: “Your people from the capital really have a good life. These housewives at the street volunteering to give directions next to the bus station are so nice, as if they want to take you to where you want to go.” At that time I missed my capital life, especially when I was cold, hungry and in serious sleep deficit.

Then after 20 minutes of piercing ear and head pain, 2 hours in the plane — it was supposed to be 2.5 hours, 1 hour sleeping in the hard bench in the airport and 6 hours of waiting there, I arrived at my capital. Oh capital my capital. Where my love and hate locates. We had to walk 1km in the new terminal, just because my capital is big and splendid and everything has to be big and spectacular. But damn the traffic was amazing at 5 am, probably only saw 10 cars on the 4th ring road. And when we drove to Sanlitun and Gongtibeilu, there were amazing party people ending their nights. I was so jealous. I retired from my party life ever since I started to work seriously.

Capital life is all about catching up. The constructions all follow or even lead the avant-guard trend. Months ago you see a special sales office and weeks later it is torn down. Today you see trees here and tomorrow you see they are located somewhere else. Yesterday you were shopping in a DVD shop till 3am, and the next week when you aimed to go there again, you can’t find it anymore. The sign near our apartment changes everyday. Today it is an office building, and tomorrow it is a want-to-be trendy restaurant. We young people are all so confused. Some broke up, some breaking up, some longing for love, some longing for work. We even get confused in the new Joy City because it is too darn trendy! And we have to wait to go to a cozy tea place and wait longer to pee.

We are all young and try so hard to stand out, try so hard to be like people in their 40s. It is said that 20 something girls have everything when they are 20 and nothing when they are 40. While 20 something boys have nothing when they are 20 and everything when they are 40. I feel I probably have a lot of things, but it makes me so damn tired!

But looking at my city and looking at travelers in my city, especially those holding stupid cameras and looking around for Workers Stadium or gazing at the colorful fountains at Tiananmen, it is also kind of relief. Damn I may try very hard, but at least I am experiencing so fucking much, for better or for worse.

Lately have felt like I don’t have any holidays, as if Monday is the same as Sunday, and Friday is the same as Saturday. Really wish there were days like when I was in university — could just lying in bed, looking at the ceiling and laugh really stupidly. But now every moment you need to think about something, whether to buy the pills or not, whether to clean the floor or not, how to transfer money, how to write better, how to keep in touch with friends, when will I have time to go sit around in my favorite bookstore/cafe.

I didn’t mean to complain here.

Just feel like I am living in a big burning pot, while it is rainy and cloudy lately, so maybe a big steamy pot. Everyone is rushing, from and to all different directions. There was one Chinese young rapper saying when you are standing in the streets, you can feel angry every moment. While here, yes, today, this afternoon. Met a migrant worker wearing yellow safety hat riding over a young 30s Beijinger (could tell from his accent). My Beijing compatriot asking furiously if the migrant fucking know whether to stop and wait the red traffic light or not, while our Chinese compatriot saying sorry and looked really sorry. It is kind of ridiculous. I mean the cursing. We consider Beijing cursing a form of intimacy, like I cursed with my Beijing compatriots the whole Saturday afternoon, to show how much we like each other and like being with each other. Maybe it is just a fashion among teens and 20s people, those who are still innocent enough to think cursing is fun and fashionable.

Last night I told my boyfriend I don’t fancy about marriage anymore, since I have seen the obstacles in relationship. He says it is a sign of losing innocence. When my mom was at my age, she already had me. Don’t know how long she believed in marriage, but she still hopes me to get married sooner or later.

But anyway, I guess there is still some room, a lot of room for quest for innocence because I am still hot headed when I see beautiful things. Still enjoy shopping in funky malls and meeting unexpected little things. My capital is a consuming city. You never get bored shopping here, those who say they can’t find any good skirts are just lazy and not unoriginal.

It is also interesting to stay in our trendy shopping mall in Xidan looking at the construction rubbles across the street. Or walking near the Church in Wangfujing and looking at big tank-like trucks driving through — workers have to pave the road with wood so that it doesn’t damage our road that is stepped by millions of people everyday.

My city also used to be very passionately sunny.

Met a Beijing girl in a plane leaving from Chengdu to Beijing in May, she said she missed the sun in Beijing and brought her sunglasses back to Beijing because she never got to use it in the southern capital. I don’t know how many rockets my city shoots to the sky everyday, I wish the sun could come out soon at least my clothes will dry soon. I can’t wash all my clothes during the Olympic time. My city really used to be very sunny.

Yesterday I went to get my bicycle fixed in a hutong, as it is difficult to get it fixed in modern shopping malls. Our Beijing uncle telling the migrant fixer to fix my little fashion accessory bike well. Then we started to chat. The old Beijinger asked if I were a Beijinger. Yes I have lost a lot of accent. Met a Tibetan monk in Xining, who apparently seemed to be very shameful of the loss of their language, which makes me want to learn Tibetan, just to get to know the truth better, while we are all facing the similar situation, just their loss is more obvious. So mandarinization is kind of modernization I guess.

Anyway, my capital wouldn’t be a big construction site for ever.

Hope it would be tolerant and fabulous.

地震与爱国主义

21-May-08

这几天有朋友和家人知道我在成都,当然我有时也宣传自己在成都,觉得很幸运自己能亲历历史,也觉得自己应该把我看到的告诉大家,如果大家觉得无聊了,也算是从另外一个角度接受信息。我不强求大家跟我想的一样,虽然我是在一个美国的媒体工作,我的老板是美国人,但我保证至少是我看到的听到的她的说法和报道都是客观的。如果我是她,不一定会像她写的那么好,但是观点立场都是差不多的,当然有的时候看问题没有她看的全面。总之我想陈述一个观点,因为我有十分积极爱国的朋友们和同学们,我们爱国的方式不一样,不是去天安门广场呐喊助威就能够真正做到爱国,爱人民,不是买一件我爱中国的上衣就能够真正做到爱国,爱人民(虽然现在我箱子里也有一件从春熙路25元买来的中国加油的上衣,我到目前还没有穿,因为出去采访,要保持一个客观的态度,我认为),或者不是因为自己说到一些批判性的话就表示自己不爱国。

这两天总会听到有人说感觉自己是中国人而骄傲,我为我们的源远流长的文化而骄傲,我为我们中国人民的自强不惜而骄傲,我为我们在历史上和现如今创造许多奇迹,引起世人的关注与赞叹而骄傲。当然看到许多我们无能为力的事情,心里比谁也都难受。尤其是在根本不能说的时候。

昨天晚上我10点多回原来的酒店取衣服的时候发现街上有好多人,拿着被子,凉席,帐篷之类的在广场上,还有好多警察,我当时还以为是有领导来了呢。后来出租车司机说政府报道19号晚上有地震,所以大家都出来睡,包括今天好多公司和商店都关门了。我好像没什么感觉,觉得最难过的其实也都经历过了,成都12号的时候已经通过了检查,我为成都很骄傲,因为开车一小时之外的地方就有受灾很严重的地方,但是至少成都市区内是纹丝不动的。当然高层会有一定的摇晃,表明这样的高层才是质量比较好的,经得住风吹日晒和大地开的一点小玩笑。所以我昨天晚上睡得还相对好,但是还是有点紧张,不记得自己做的什么梦,但也是相当紧张的。

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现在成都大街小巷里都住满了搭着帐篷的人。我能明白好多人都是受了惊吓的。

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