This is not a blog post, this is a post about a blog

500DaysPosterThe rising young Chinese writer, Ning Ma, has posted another English article on her blog, Moment of Being. This time, a reflective movie review of (500) Days of Summer — the uniquely told, convincingly acted, best-dressed, IKEA ad/tale of  boy meets girl of the year.

Here’s an excerpt from Moment of Being:

“They are together. One is in it for eternal love; one for that of the very moment. His love is a building he’s constructing; hers is her long hair. The outcome of this love story is not that hard to predict: his building falls apart along with himself; her hair is cut off by herself—and she doesn’t feel a thing.”

Sad yet? You will be (Just kidding. It’s actually a really fun flick). Scoot over to here to read Ning’s review.

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Chinglish cultural collateral

One of the best new Beijing phenomena is Cheeky Monkey Theater, which claims to be the world’s first “Chinglish” (Chinese + English) theater company. The founder and principle playwrite is Elyse Ribbons.

I wrote a post about one of her plays, I Heart Beijing, (see “Beijing gets a heart”) a while back. Here’s an excerpt that was recently quoted in an article about Cheeky Monkey in the Global Times:

“As more and more mixed-up American young people – and their metropolitan Chinese counterparts – start to interact on an interpersonal level, we’ll need more cultural collateral to help us all interpret each other. We need comedy to soothe the culture shock. We need Chinglish to connect the real-life romances.”

I really stand by what I said. In the 20th Century, when the hotspots for globe-trotting Americans were Paris and Prague, Hemingway and a host of other writers, filmmakers and playwrites gave us libraries of “cultural collateral” — artistic artifacts by which a generation understood itself. Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road” did the same thing for the Beat Generation in America. So what about the Beijing Generation? Paris, Prague, and now Peking. There’s a whole army of antsy Americans (and Canadians, Australians, British, French, etc.) college graduates digging it in Dongzhimen. So it’s about time someone wrote a play, or a novel, or a movie … or a blog (’nuff of those already)?

Posted in In the press | 2 Comments

A river runs through it

Tianjin isn’t far away from Beijing, but it does have a distinctive feel. These pictures highlight the colonial architectural influences and the city’s most defining geographical feature: a tributary to the Pacific (which helps explain the colonial architecture).

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Insulation.

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The thing that makes colonial-era buildings stand out is their character.

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A restaurant ominously decoreated with broken porcelain (must scare the waitresses).

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Tianjin's "Little Italy."

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It's a church. It's a university. No, wait, it's an urban planning museum.

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Fengshui.

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More city less planning.

Posted in Places, Tianjin, China | 1 Comment

PR is switching to a two-way conversation

This is a reprint of an article I wrote that was first published in the Global Times in October 2009.

In the September 8 issue of the Global Times, managing editor Zhang Yong analyzed public relations (PR) in China’s public sector in an article entitled “Poor public relations in grand press rooms.”

The article made a strong argument for the establishment of a better PR system for China, and I would like to add that many of the communication challenges facing various organizations in China are not unique to these entities or even to this country. They are the result of the changing world in which we live.

In fact, all organizations – whether governments, private companies or multinational corporations – now have to learn to adapt in a new, chaotic and complicated communication landscape.

Illustration: Liu Rui

PR traces its roots to the post World War I US, when certain entrepreneurial individuals realized that propaganda could be used in peacetime just as well as it had been used during war.

These primitive PR practitioners relied on mass media – newspapers, radio and television – to sell products and shape public perception of companies. This strategy could be compared to a one-way conversation in which one side does all the talking.

However, the world has changed, and so must the methods of PR.

Today, a host of new media, from electronic bulletin board systems to blogs and online social networks, provides a way to send and receive information. Now readers can start their own topics, leave their own comments and share with their own circle of friends. This has resulted in a two-way conversation in which both sides exchange views.

Earlier this year, the China Internet Network Information Center reported that the number of Internet users in China had reached 338 million, surpassing the entire population of the US. The size of this figure can be attributed in part to China’s massive population, but that can’t explain away the growth – 13.4 percent since late 2008.

Such statistics are evidence that people in China and elsewhere are increasingly turning to the Internet for information. This should provide even more incentive for PR practitioners to shift their strategy from one-way communication to two-way communication.

This February, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao engaged in a highly publicized online chat with Chinese netizens, who were able to submit their questions to the premier on an online forum.

This is an example of the most powerful application of new media: the ability to listen. BBS, blogs and social networks enable companies to receive their customers’ feedback or, in this case, the premier to answer citizens’ questions. And organizations are finding that this unprecedented level of interactivity is an indispensable tool for gauging audience opinion.

New media is changing the way organizations tell their story, too. Rather than merely mailing a press release to the media or holding a press conference, an organization can interact directly with its target audience online – much the way Premier Wen did.

Perhaps most promising are online social networks, which allow people to contribute and share content. Not only do such sites allow organizations to capture their audience’s attention, they also make it possible to enlist audience participation.

Even traditional media like newspapers now have their own websites and blogs. Therefore, this new communication landscape presents more options and diversity for PR than in the past.

Economic globalization has also created a consumer culture that presents individuals with more choices than ever before. From groceries to gadgets to entertainment and even medicine – there are more options for people to choose. This has opened up many opportunities for PR to promote the relative advantages of competing products and services.

In addition, economic growth means that audiences themselves are changing. A report from the consulting firm McKinsey this year, “Understanding China’s Wealthy,” predicts that the number of wealthy households in China’s second- and third-tier cities will increase from 1.1 million to 3.2 million by 2015.

As economic growth spreads, it promises to raise consumer purchasing power. Companies can no longer afford to misunderstand with this growing consumer base.

These social factors are the catalyst behind increased Internet use. People are making more decisions about products and services than in the past, and they are going online for information to make those decisions.

Consumers need more information. And they want to be part of a two-way conversation that benefits both brands and consumers.

PR, done wisely, can make that happen.

Posted in Articles | 1 Comment

The town and the city

“You know that feeling you get walking down the street in a big city? It’s the feeling of anonymity. Like even though you’re surrounded by people, you don’t know who anyone is, and no one knows who you are either.

“It’s totally the opposite of being in a small town,” I continued. “In a small town, you walk down the street, and everyone knows who you are. They know everything about you. They’ve watched you grow up. And nothing you do goes unnoticed. Of course, you know everything about everyone else too. That’s got to really affect the way people live, don’t you think?”

“I guess that’s what it’s like to be a celebrity,” she turned to me and said. “When a celebrity walks down the street, everyone knows them–”

“But they don’t know anyone.”

“Right.”

A moment of silent reflection ensued, both of us peering our the window on our respective sides of the vehicle. Then, I picked up the conversation.

“Hmm, when God walks down the street, he knows everyone, but no one knows him.”

“Are you saying that being a celebrity is the opposite of being God?” she chuckled.

Posted in Perspectives | 1 Comment

Four photos

Today, I put four photos on my desk. These shots were taken in sequence once upon a leisurely stroll in the hillside hamlet of Ubud on Bali island.

Travel (游行)

Travel (游行)

Art (艺术)

Art (艺术)

Religion (宗教)

Religion (宗教)

Science fiction (科幻)

Science fiction (科幻)

Posted in Bali, Indonesia, Perspectives, Places | 1 Comment

The non-epiphany

200px-domenico-fetti_archimedes_1620“Eureka!” That’s what Archimedes would exclaim whenever he would stumble upon some new mathematical equation. All in a day’s work, right? Wrong.

Epiphanies, revelations, little floating light bulbs – these are the culmination of months, years, sometimes even a lifetime of study. All of a sudden, all the disparate pieces come together and you see it … so … clearly.

Then there is what will henceforth be known as the “non-epiphany”: a single point in time when all the things you’ve observed leave you lost and feeling farther from the truth than before you even started looking.

I read something once. Something C. S. Lewis wrote, but I don’t know where. He said that along the path, there are points when the destination is out of sight. Like switchbacks on a mountain ascent. Among the crags? Sounds like something he would have said, anyway.

Point is that with all the things going on outside and inside, it’s easy to feel lost. You stand back and realize that we live in a world that is upside down and backward. Things don’t make sense. And the more you look at them, the less sense they make. It’s a wonder we ever felt found.

At least I’ve learned one thing, and that is to cherish the non-epiphany. You can go back to being blind anytime you want, just close your eyes. It’s easy. Sometimes I just walk into a Starbucks and buy myself a hot steaming cup of materialistic consumer culture with a side of classism, and I just down it. Go to a movie if that doesn’t work.

But the non-epiphany is more elusive. You have to run across some sickening sights, sympathize with a stranger, confront the uncomfortable and then realize you’re part of the problem. Oh, and you’re a pawn, too. But at least for one millisecond you catch a tiny glimpse of the edges of the puzzle. Not the whole picture, just the part that tells you that those jagged blue pieces do belong somewhere.

Figure it out another day.

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介绍momentofbeing.com

momentofbeing最近一个特别优秀的的中国女孩开始写新的搏客。我推荐大家上momentofbeing.com看看,呵呵。

“Moment of Being”翻成中文就是存在的瞬间。在文学方面是一个比较抽象的概念。反正我觉得如果我们可以更了解这个现象,如此会知道怎么了解生活中的一些比较神秘的经历。

UPDATE: Ning’s now written an English post. Head on over to momentofbeing.com if you didn’t understand anything that was written above. Here’s a preview…

Our choices, decisions are made by others without us knowing. Yet we are indulged in the illusion of having the power to choose. (If you look online for other people’s comments before you buy things, or choose a vacation destination, or … do anything, you will know what I mean.)

Click here to continue reading “Afternoon Soup and the Lonely Crowd.”

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This is really a bad blog

I’ve been blogging since 2005, and what began as a simple Xanga page eventually evolved into Gotoofareast.com. The design has gone through many changes. Even the content has evolved as I’ve changed jobs and geographies. But you know what? This blog isn’t really all that hot. In fact, it’s a bad blog. And here’s why:

Not enough news: Good blogs, the ones you read every day 100 times a day, offer niche news that you can’t find anywhere else. For example, I’m a regular reader of Danwei.org, dedicated to “Chinese media, advertising and urban life”; Chinasmack.com, which centers on “hot internet videos, stories and pictures in China”; and Boingboing.net, which bills itself as simply “a directory of wonderful things” (which it is). On the other hand, “Tim Gingrich’s writings & world travels,” just doesn’t interest a lot of people.

Not enough controversy: Really good blogs rock the boat. But I have to admit, I practice self-censorship. In fact, probably at least half the things I’d like to write here are never written. Why? Because I have a job and a visa, and I don’t want to loose either. That precludes bad mouthing Corporate America or the Chinese Government (not as far apart as you might think…). Social justice is a topic I’d love to delve into, but it opens you up to being called a hypocrite — no one’s perfect — or even worse (for an American), a socialist. Finally, I’ve forayed into religion before. But in the blogosphere, it’s kind of a comment killer. What a shame, I have so many shocking things to say!

Not enough nudity:If I was really desperate for fame, I would just post a naked picture of myself. You don’t even have to be good looking to pull off such a PR stunt. So the fact that I know this secret and have not employed it myself should be proof that I’m really blogging purely for literary fulfillment and the enjoyment of knowing that if everyone wanted to hear what I had to say, at least they could. Also, because pornography is illegal in China.

n61802922_30861560_8275Here’s a slightly controversial, half-naked pic anyway. (Click it, you know you want to.)











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What’s a “Human Flesh Search Engine”?

20090911004951_597A buddy of mine, Luis Tapia, has produced the first part of a documentary about the “Human Flesh Search Engine” (人肉搜索) phenomenon, in which Chinese netizens collectively scour the Internet for clues to determine someone’s real identity — for better or for worse. I’ve heard talking heads link the human flesh search engine to everything from grassroots democracy and consumer activism to vigilantism and mob rule. So the topic is deserving of its own documentary, and I’m glad someone who is actually on the ground in China like Luis has taken the initiative to explore this further.

Watch the video here.

Luis is an American filmmaker living in Shanghai; his company is Daedalum Films — head over to his Web site to watch more of Luis’ work.

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