Asia

China’s Sneaker Wars: How the Underdogs Fight Back

Here’s a link to a piece in Slate, the on line magazine, about how Chinese competitors to Nike and Adidas, the two global mega brands in the sneaker market, are defending their home turf as we move toward the Beijing Olympics next year. I have to admit, sponsoring the North Korean Olympic team is not a marketing strategy I would have …

The King is Dead

I mourn, and all of Hong Kong mourns, the death at 86 of Tsang Tsou-choi, the King of Kowloon. You could say he was a graffiti artist; you could equally say that he was the most notable calligrapher of his generation.
Tsang, who variously worked as a laborer and a janitor, claimed that his family owned the Kowloon peninsula, and spent …

Fairytales of New York

Hong Kong openly patronizes Guangzhou, secretly sneers at Shanghai, and keeps a safe distance from Beijing—but seems tragically hung up on New York.
There’s a new bar on the waterfront that bills itself as a “New York lounge style bar” (which is different from any other “lounge style bar” in what way, exactly?). Not ten minutes …

The `Quality’ Wars Heat Up…

The sniping between the US and China over the various quality scandals plaguing Chinese exports is getting more intense—and in some cases, other-worldly. Li Changjiang, China’s quality czar (and what a job THAT must be these days…) fired back at the foreign press recently, saying it should be responsible and report the …

An Old Lesson on Openness

A footnote in a 60+ year old book got me thinking about an important question for today’s China: what are the benefits of being open to criticism and inspection? It was something that former TIME correspondents Teddy White and Annalee Jacoby considered in Thunder Out of China, a study of the country during World War II:

Nonpartisan

Bogus bun scandal

It turns out that the cardboard bun scandal–the sensational story that’s had people talking (and cracking jokes, ie “I always thought those lamb skewers tasted a little funny”) over the last few weeks–was an elaborate hoax concocted by a freelance TV reporter in Beijing.

This AP story says that an investigation determined that the …

Comments on Slavery from a Former Prisoner

A story in yesterday’s South China Morning Post says that the foreman of one of the notorious Shanxi brick kilns where children and mentally handicapped workers were kept as slaves under appalling conditions has been sentenced to death. He beat one of the workers to death with a shovel. Twenty eight others received terms ranging from …

Between the Lines: Hong Kong Develops a First World Coke Habit

At a birthday party in Hong Kong recently, guests ordered 19 grams of cocaine, which was delivered to the venue by a man on a motorcycle. By international standards of debauchery this wasn’t excessive (doubtless there are dealers in Madrid or Monaco who won’t get out of bed for orders of less than 20 grams). But in Hong Kong, the …

‘The China Syndrome.’

I suppose it was inevitable that as a result of the various quality scandals—toothpaste, seafood, Thomas the Tank Engine et al– there’d be commentary that says, see, China really isn’t a manufacturing super power. The money quote in this piece, published on the OP ED page of today’s Wall Street Journal, is this:

Polls show a

Surreal Sunday in Beijing

Austin Ramzy / Time

This is a follow up on my previous post about the travails of the blind activist Chen Guangcheng and his wife, Yuan Weijing. You may recall that Yuan fled her home in rural Shandong Province to travel to Beijing. She hoped to meet a U.S. embassy official and international journalists in an attempt to publicize her …

The Myth of China’s Soft Power

The economic influence of the world’s rising power grows by the day, its trade surplus climbing month after month– never, it appears, to be reversed. It carries in its pocket almost $2 trillion in foreign exchange reserves—the cold hard cash that is the very essence of influence in a post cold war world. Meanwhile its direct …

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