All change, please!
This post has been updated and is now on a new version of this site.
This notice will remain online until 20 September 2016.
All change, please!
This post has been updated and is now on a new version of this site.
This notice will remain online until 20 September 2016.
9 December 2009 at 10:11
…I check all Friends applications as on this site I have “sensitive information”. No, nothing reactionary, just that I’ve my phone number and stuff…
…which really doesn’t bother me a lot. But there’s something to be said about “SPAMMERS”, who’ll gladly fill on that bit of info and wake me up at 1:45 AM…
Here’s the deal: I add:
I might, at times, just simply ask you “hey there —who do you know me from”? Don’t become all scared and feel like this is the Department of National Security breathing down you… I just want to know that our ties are real, legit and that there’s none of this spamming between us.
Sound cool? :-)
All change, please!
This post has been updated and is now on a new version of this site.
This notice will remain online until 20 September 2016.
It’s probably a bit odd for me to be writing about my own speech, as I somehow tend to see this as shameless self-promotion. Nevertheless, I’m doing my bit in telling those who want to be in the know the reason I did my International Chinese 2.0 speech.
We go back to April 2008. China was hit pretty badly time and again — Tibetan protests, coupled with a massive PR problem while the Olympic Flame was making its way across the world — got quite a number of Chinese united and going, quite simply, ENOUGH. “Love China” icons were all the rage, and it was at this time I started an article on this very site about whether or not we were ready for the “international Chinese”.
At first, I wanted the speech to be a display of “just” what locals and foreigners think, as well what sets us together and what unites us, plus a bit about my views of the year 2008 as an International Chinese. However, the first day of the Chinese Blogger Conference was quite enough for me to go right back to the drawing board and spend much of Day 2 redoing the entire prezo. (That was why you saw Zoe and Elliott, not me, at the blog helm on Day 2 here at CN Reviews.)
The redone version started on a much more personal touch: I’d describe a bit of me, my education in Switzerland, what I do, as well as a few of those classical @DavidFeng tweets before diving into what makes the Chinese or the foreigners tick (a la the original prezo). This was a good start as people would first get to know me before they got to know what I did or what I believed in.
For much more about the speech, I’ll let the rest of you take a drive around the prezo itself as I posted a (rather condensed) version of the speech on the Web.
Immediately after the speech, I felt quite a bit confused — even down at times. This was my first-ever speech at the Chinese Blogger Conference. Last year was my first-ever attendance at the event: did I jump the gun too soon? How could this near-silent guy last year become a “someone” this year? Are 14,000+ tweets your “admission ticket”? (I doubted that the moment I thought about that.)
Yes, I did get heckled online by about two people. One actually made more sense and said that it was stereotypical. But far more encouraging were the votes of confidence by virtually the entire Taiwanese delegation and Isaac Mao himself. More and more folks followed me on Twitter or befriended me on Facebook — and mentioned my speech.
I never wanted this speech to be something like a self-ad: I just wanted to make the audience aware that there are quite a number of people, Chinese by ancestry, who are doing their best to bridge the gap, however big or small, between China and the West. (This was pretty much what China 2.0 was all about.) And now that I’ve succeeded (somewhat) in doing this, I feel at least I’ve gotten something done.
Of course, there were also the constructive commentary on how the whole thing could have been better — more humor and more graphics were amongst the suggestions. These folks can rest assured that I’ve taken good note of their ideas and will be doing my best at improving future prezos.
I kind of felt bad myself that some people slept through the speech (as I wanted my bit to entertain people, not put them to sleep, although I had no problems with people actually dozing off), but hey, to all are granted the rights to listen, tune off, or even to doze off. The fact that Carol Lin really tuned in for this one, though, plus the added support I got after the speech, made it all the more worthwhile. Provided the audience and the organizers are OK with this, I’d love to do this again (of course, with a different title and a much-improved prezo) next year!
This post has been originally posted on CN Reviews.
All change, please!
This post has been updated and is now on a new version of this site.
This notice will remain online until 20 September 2016.
All change, please!
This post has been updated and is now on a new version of this site.
This notice will remain online until 20 September 2016.
Home of hangeul (or chosungul if you’re reading this North of Thirty-Eight). Land of Kims and Kimchi. The place where your faithful Fido can be eaten by fellow human beings beans. OK… I overdid the intro, but nonetheless, a five-day visit to Korea got me out of the PRC after it terrorized my body with three full days of 40°C-ish temps.
Picture coming soon
I was expecting a trip to be operated by Ga-Ga Cola (of Rescue Rangers fame), not Coca-Cola. Nope, thanks to some outright stunt maneuvering that landed me a “big-@$$ card” at the Minsheng Bank, they gave us a free — and downright trashy — trip to South Korea. Trashy because the guide was easily the worst guide ever, period. Trashy because we had some pretty shuvulent (David Feng English for “horrible”) people onboard. But these were the only two trashy things about the whole trip. Everything else was the most un-trashy: un-trashy scenery, un-trashy Internet (especially in Seoul), and un-trashy traffic (Beijing, you’re dead!). One last thing that was trashy: we didn’t go to Panmunjeom (where we could have easily defected to North Korea). Nope, that would have meant a quick trip to the DPRK embassy, and nobody wanted to do that. (Odd.)
Picture coming soon
First on our stop was Busan. We had a quick trip down Shopping Street, where I managed to navigate around the shopping area while bumping into complete replicas of the old Hsiushui of Lao Beijing. Busan was brilliant, but so was the name of the hanky paper. I mean, someone had way too much time on their hands naming the hankies!
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Other than that, though, Busan remained quite a good start to the journey.
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Next was a planned escapade into Jeju Island, where we went up mountains to capture drop-dead gorgeous scenery. Some people gave up halfway (or didn’t make it at all), but I was able to climb to the top, no complains, no buts.
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Too bad we were pulled back into the coach. I would have loved to cruise down those highways in Jeju da solo!
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Take a CLOSE LOOK — is this heading downhill or up? This is when Korea starts NOT making sense — this was, in fact, an incline heading up!
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Next up was Seoul.
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Dongdaemun. And free Internet next door (with tea — to the tune of KRW 5,000). I finally was able to catch up on my Mac, after Jeju left me with an ordinary PC in a Net cafe. Ärgh!
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Central Seoul. We circumambulated this crossing like about four times in one day (demented guide be thanked, that’s what).
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Defection ahead to North Korea. We didn’t actually defect, but we went to the Odusan Unification Observatory to capture a glimpse of Kimland.
Picture coming soon
In the distance: the land of the two Kims.
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Do they love our leader more? Or do they want unification faster?
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South Korea should be sued for ripping off shenwumen from us. Then again, our culture did kind of brainwash them, so we suppose we’ll let them get away this time.
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Gyeongbukgeong. Drop-dead gorgeous views.
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Internet got more and more prevalent as the trip wounded its way down — on the last day, I got online outside two restaurants, in the hotel room (then in Incheon), and at the airport, too!
Picture coming soon
Now back in Beijing…
All change, please!
This post has been updated and is now on a new version of this site.
This notice will remain online until 20 September 2016.
All change, please!
This post has been updated and is now on a new version of this site.
This notice will remain online until 20 September 2016.
“Nutcase online.” I went through the logs on Raccolta Online and that was the Google search string one of those guys did to get to this blog.
I’m actually pleased the guy managed to get in here when he was looking for nutcases online… you know, this blog is alive, unlike the 7 o’clock news here in Beijing that are sure to bore you to death. “X and Y met with President Z from the Republic of Ps and Qs”… you know, the stuff that’s really supposed to get you excited. (An immortal Jose quip of “sarcastic bastard” here kind of makes it all fitting. Jose from 8th Grade — you there?)
I’m not commenting on those people who stumble upon this site via Google. Heck, back about six years ago, I put up a website with a page called “Bomb Shelter” because we Mac users back then had system errors with the famous “bomb icon” (in Mac jargon, we say “My Mac just bombed” when we actually mean that our Macs went south), and the “Bomb Shelter” was supposed to tell you how to repair your troublesome Mac. Someone actually did a search (I think on Google) for something like “UN bomb shelter” and stumbled upon my then-Mac site!
Are we going to get the guys from the UN Weapons Inspection team onto this blog next?
You know, this blog has seen better/worse days. Sometime ago, some guy thought this site was some kind of CCTV-endorsed talk show. (I say that because one of those WordPress control panel links in the “incoming links section” showed me a link with the words “CCTV TALK SHOW!”) All I want to say is that — you know, CCTV is far from being as — “nutcase” — as this site is.