Friday, August 29, 2008

Quality Time With Our Former Colonial Overlords (Or, Neil's Trip To The UK)

Bonus Episode: PHOTO EXTRAVAGANZA TIME!


It's been two months since I got back from my heavenly trip to the United Kingdom. I suppose I miss it so much that I'm going to force some more Anglo-love down your throat. But panic not: I won't bore you with my long-winded babble. It's just picture time. What better way to get to the real heart of Britain.

So you've all heard of Engrish. But what are you supposed to call funny English signs found in native English-speaking countries? Who can say. Either way, these were quality enough to elicit a few chuckles from yours truly. Enjoy. It's not only in Asia that you find comedy just walking down the street.



Oh, the good old Hoxton Whores. I'm sure their parents are proud of their choice of group name. I haven't the foggiest who these people are, but apparently they like clubbing. Whore it up, kind folk! (Edinburgh)


Talk about bold statements. On one hand, it's great to see freedom of speech in action; these types of shenanigans would result in death or "disappearance" in the good old PR of C. On the other hand, it's a little disconcerting to see that some Scots want to break from the English. More power to them. May they have more luck than the Quebecois. (Edinburgh)


For Little Nasty (Edinburgh)


Billy Corgan wuz here (Edinburgh)


Sandra's favorite "found porn" (Edinburgh)


This I know! (Edinburgh)


Hallo friend, "take a look"! (London Chinatown)

Totally! (Loch Ness)


Even their signs begging you to clean your dog's shit are polite! (Fort Augustus)


My Favorite Sign EVER! Long Live Chairman MEOW! (Edinburgh)


Wow, that's quite the damning accusation if I've ever seen one. (Edinburgh)


GW mongers war, they monger cheese (Bath)


I don't know... (Bath)


Brock Street Clinic's biggest fan (Bath)


It's probably for the same reason I have mine... (London)


Sticking it to the Mao (V&A Museum, London)


Seriously? No one thinks this is too easy a target for a pub? (London)


"Beer", unless you're in China, in which case it's just "another person". (London)


It's all really how you use it... (London)


In the case of this blog? Tons (Kensington Tube Station, London)



And finally, in keeping with the recent theme, here's what some Londoners think of our poor Friendlies pals. Killjoys! (London)

Monday, August 25, 2008

Olympic Fatigue

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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Let The Games Begin

(Or, The Bubbling Internal Strife Regarding Athletic Loyalties)

Time to let that national pride fly. I anticipate a healthy dose of tension and anxiety in the coming weeks, especially as an American living in China, forced to listen to the daily blithering of the locals. Since the Games have basically been reduced to a USA vs. PRC medal-snatching contest, loyalties will lie bare on the table, ripped from our proud hearts and set loose on each other in a primal death match.


Google's latest: Pig diving!

Admittedly, I was quite bitter in the days leading up to Day One, but I'm in full fever mode now. I know I said I didn't care much about the Games themselves, primarily concerned with their success rather than the over-politicized details. But that was last week when I was drowning on an exclusive diet of domestic propaganda bullshit with nary an American victory to snuff it out. No more. While still suffocating with all this Chinese chest beating, Team USA have begun to kick the other nations back into place. Now my competitive American spirit is yearning for complete destruction of the Chinese and their haughty hopes and dreams. Competitive sports can do that to a person.

Let's rewind to opening day, 8-8-08, the most auspicious day in the history of the universe for the Chinese people (that is, since August 8, 1908 and until August 8, 3008...). By now, everyone in the world who gives a damn has seen the Opening Ceremony from Friday. Hot damn with a buttered biscuit and side of grits, that show was fucking incredible. Astonishing, amazing, awesome. China deserves credit for creating the best opener ever, completely giving the uh-uh, no you didn't bitch slap to all the annoying rabble-rousers who want the Games to fail and utterly sodomizing poor London in a preemptive strike that they won't even have a chance to match in 2012. The drum intro alone caused a sea of goosebumps to prickle up in waves all over my body (and it wasn't the only thing popping up either, giggidy-giggidy). That light-drum countdown? Grab me a towel so I can clean up this mess.

Although the showcase that comprised the mid-portion of the spectacle dragged a little bit, it filled me with a sense of pride and meaning that I would have never expected from an Olympic Opening Ceremony. Showing the world - mostly ignorant to China's history and contributions to humankind - what the Chinese have accomplished through history felt like a little serving of just desserts. It's not often that the world unanimously agrees on anything. Scenic painting via interpretive dance, detailed puppetry, my beloved Chinese opera, tea and enough fireworks to take down every skyscraper in Shanghai. And that undulating print-block dance was just off the hook. Did you know there were people in there?!

Zhang Yimou did a beautiful job, all flowing garments, lush colors and clever wire-fu effects that utilized the space in the Bird's Nest perfectly. It was like his Guilin and Hangzhou Liusanjie shows on steroids, speed, growth hormones AND Red Bull.

Though the lingering effects of the soul-shaking drum riot were still booming in my bones (and Sarah Brightman's shrill chirping still ringing in my ears), the closing portion of the torch relay gave it ample competition for my favorite portion of the show. Li Ning, oh he of gymnastic and sports brand fame, has to be one of the ballsiest and luckiest dudes around. There's no way in holy hell I'd ever be caught running sideways along the top perimeter of a stadium, hanging about 70 meters above the ground on flimsy little wire. In between "oohs" and "aahs", I had to keep my fingers crossed that he wouldn't plunge to his death and ruin all of the glorious cred accumulated by China up until that point. Alas, there was no tragedy and, when he lit that mega torch at the end, I was speechless.

After giving the world the best illuminated, synchronized percussion orgy known to mankind and the glorious Erection of Fire, the participating countries were paraded out in borderline excruciating slowness - ingeniously in order of character strokes - prompting me to long for another set from the drum bashers or another fireworks carpet-bombing. Are there really only 200+ countries on the planet? It felt like 500. Were some of those places even real countries? Looking at all the random flags, it seems like Britain went a little overboard with their colonization efforts. Actually, I've never felt so ignorant or uneducated while watching a sporting event.

Now to fashion. To my surprise, the Americans were the best looking in their Ralph Lauren duds. Naysayers be damned to the 5th circle of Hell, but those little white hats were classic, so suave that they even made Kobe look like less of a cocksucker. Sure, the Italians may have looked amazing in their silver suits, but it is the order of nature for Italians to always look good. Other personal favorites include the Kiwis, who were badass in evil Mordor black; the Malaysians, who looked they were off to the market in their kebaya kurung and songkoks; and the Spaniards, who I would have preferred to just come out naked, because those devils are hot as fuck.


Wow, Dude Looks GOOD. (Courtesy of WSJ)


Disappointingly, after all the Brit-lust I've been experiencing lately, the Great Britain suits were sullied by the guys wearing them (faux-hawks = still not cool). Is it just me, or do they all look like hooligan thugs? Bunch of wankers. At least the Chinese looked joyful and dignified with the cards they were dealt - those infamous tomato-scrambled-egg suits - despite all efforts to embarrass them. [Side note: whoever designed those should be drawn-and-quartered by the equestrian team. Or crushed under Yao's foot.]


The infamous Chinese tomato-egg outfits. Could also be McDonald's uniforms too...
(Also courtesy of WSJ)

Now to the games themselves. It's only been 2 days, but the heated firestorm that's brewing is going to get messy at the end of this fortnight (refer to next post...). The incessant barrage of "Go China!", "China is the best!", "Glory for the motherland!" and other such nonsense is starting to drive me a *little* crazy. Also, while broadcasting only the major Team China events is not out of the ordinary (fair enough, the US does it all the time), forcing me to rewatch the Gold-winning events when I want to watch something else is going to get old really fast. Although watching that tiny little weightlifting beast Chen Xiexia win gold in the Women's 48KG (with a Turkish bitch on silver and a Taiwanese champ on bronze) was pretty awesome, I seriously could give two shits about a women's air pistol competition when there's a bunch of other stuff going on (eerily coincidental: Russia and Georgia got silver and bronze in the aforementioned event...talk about timing).


Chen Xiexia: She Will Beat Your Ass.

TAIWANese Bronze Champ, Chen Wei-ling

Seriously, she could totally ruin you. (from Sina.com)

I just want to see the Americans smash China in every event, hopefully as brutally as the basketball mismatch. Did anyone think poor China even had a pretty boy's chance in a prison shower with that one?

My vitriol isn't the result of some vindictive hatred towards the other half of my genetic makeup, I'm just sick of hearing all the horn-blowing fanfare from the TV announcers, my coworkers and everyone on the street sucking China's athletic cock (or teat). Way too much National Self-Love. Someone needs to keep them from getting too uppity and proud, lest they think they can take over the world after the Olympic victories, using their medals as ammo.

Fine, maybe it's not so serious. Utter annihilation of the motherland isn't in keeping with the spirit of the Olympics (nor is senseless murder or war, but who's counting?), so let's just settle for getting #1 in the medal count. With a healthy headway for good measure. China can have the #2 position, what with all those accumlated minor medals for lame shit like air-pistol shooting or synchronized spitting. As long as the French are kept from the top 5 most-medals-won list, everyone should be pleased.

Oui, Oui~ Who's Tough Now?

I don't know what's wrong with me, but I'm feeling mighty proud to be an American right now. It feels good. Walking past a cafeteria full of Chinese watching the US team beat the French in the men's 4 x 100m freestyle relay, a wide crooked smile spread across my face and sparked a satisfying warmth throughout my body.




The BBC's amazing Monkey Olympic Intro, created by Damon Albarn (Blur/Gorillaz) and Jamie Hewlett.

Monday, August 11, 2008

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Quality Time With Our Former Colonial Overlords (Or, Neil's Trip To The UK)

Episode 10: All Good Things Come To London

Well friends, you've survived chapter after chapter of travel blabber and are mercifully close to the end. Although it's been over one month since happy time ended, I am still experiencing flashes of the crushing sadness and panicked anxiety that I felt in those final days, when I would have loved nothing better than to be able to stay in the UK forever.

Day 1: London Chinatown
At first, I was so shocked to see the sun out at 9:15 PM. So I got into the habit of taking pictures of my watch and wherever I happened to be around this time. Didn't always get the shot on-time (or at all), but it became a nice way to keep track of my trip.

Even as my time on holiday crept closer to its bittersweet finale, the tourism train remained on course and we didn't relent in our goal to cram as much stuff into the final days as possible, until the very last minute on British soil. Although we had already accomplished a great deal within a short amount of time, there is always something more to see and do in the UK. Even if your wallet runs dry from binging on musicals, you still have weeks worth of free museums to wander through. It is indeed a place of beauty.


Day 2: Along the Thames with Big Ben
G.W. Bush was in town at this very moment, mere blocks away, complete with a warm welcome from violent protesters. We were just annoyed that streets and Tube entrances were closed for "security." The helicopters overhead didn't help maintain serenity either...

My initial reaction to Britain remained consistent until the end. I loved it all with genuine heart (except the maddening extra charge for all eat-in items at coffee shops and takeaways). Gorgeous, humbling architecture so plentiful you run out of "WOW"s after a day of wandering. Enough entertainment, culture, and food options to put you in so much debt that your college loans would blush. Shopping at stores with real sales that don't require hard bargaining or any additional stress to the ticker. Double-decker buses. The Oyster Card. Cashpoints, not ATMs. Richly layered history dripping from everything you see and touch. The Union Jack. Nature in technicolor, as it was meant to be, from vibrant emerald grass to sky blue skies teeming with whipped cream clouds. Getting a good laugh from guys wearing skinny jeans so tight it looked like their balls were trying to shawshank their way out of the denim. Full-frontal nudity and cussing on the BBC after 10pm. Harry Potter. The sensational adrenaline rush you get as you run across the street, praying you don't get hit, but too confused to know which way to look before crossing. That strange, musty smell that was ubiquitous in all the loos. And the people. How could I forget the people?

Day 3: Piccadilly, post-Mamma Mia
This was the day we failed to see Coldplay, hence resorting to the warm comfort of ABBA.


The citizens of Britain, however authentic you believe them to truly be, were a delight. Of course I don't mean ALL of them. But a large enough segment to warrant my current Anglo hard-on. I may be a little indulgent in my doe-eyed raves, but come on, look what I have to work with on a daily basis in China. Cut a Yank some slack! I stand by my claim: the Brits were great. Embarrassingly reserved by day, frighteningly boisterous by night; polite and mannered on the surface, critical and judgmental within. The weird dichotomies that abound create a national epidemic of split-personality disorder. Since I share similar neuroses, I felt a familiar comfort that eludes me in the US and China.

Yet, at the end of the day, that feeling of admiration is likely not reciprocal. Polite and mannered as I may be, nothing in my arsenal could compare to that of a true Brit. They see through my American guise immediately and no amount of garble-accented "sorry" or "cheers" will ever change that fact. Not that I'd ever want it to. I could never repress the sunny American disposition that creates a need for physical contact, verbal affirmation and consistent smiling, no matter how much I love the Brits with their chilly demeanor and proper austerity.


Day 4: On the coach from London to Bath
The National Coach services really are convenient. Clean, kinda reliable, and without the heart-stopping fear you get with Chinese drivers. And no horn-honking. So lovely.


In spite of its relative brevity, my whirlwind trek through the UK had to end. Unfortunately for you, that also means these thrilling accounts have come to a close. From the stylish streets of London to the grand antiquity of Bath, through medieval Edinburgh to the wilderness of the Highlands, I sincerely hope you enjoyed the journey, even if it was just a fleeting, vicarious pleasure. Ideally, you'll be inspired to make a similar jaunt of your own.


Day 6: Edinburgh Airport
Where'd Day 5 go!?! Flushed down the toilet in a drunken stupor. So here we are on Day 6, having just arrived in Edinburgh, after a 1-hour flight from Bristol on the awesome Easyjet.


In the final days, the gravity of the impending return to Shanghai loomed over my head like one of Pooh's little black rain clouds. Perhaps more severe than the relapsing culture shock experienced after a trip back to America, the prospect of crawling back into the polluted womb of China was too much to fathom. Especially with all Olympic jingo-bullshit flooding into every open orifice in the country.


Day 7: On Princes Street in Edinburgh
After a full day of serious sightseeing at the Castle and in the Closes.


After spending two weeks in a relatively civil society built upon manners and decorum (however artificial) and tasting European history and culture firsthand, I entertained thoughts of faxing my resignation to my bosses in Shanghai and saying to hell with the overflow of possessions in my tiny apartment. But sense and reality always have a way of stifling those impulsive thoughts of mine and I reluctantly boarded the plane.


Day 8: Edinburgh Bus
Is that rain in the background? Why yes. After a day in the Highlands, all clear and temperate, we returned to a frigid 10 degree C rainstorm in the capital. Delicious Italian dinner wolfed down with the quickness, we wanted nothing more than to get back to the B&B.


Immediate yet premature reminiscing of my phenomenal time in England was instantly ruined by the pig sitting next to me. In all my years of light-hearted complaining about the mainlanders and the gaping abyss that is proper social protocol, I have never, NEVER, been this shocked by someone's behavior. Please trust that I'm being quite gravely serious here.

This girl, who couldn't have been older than 30, was the embodiment of every ill currently being plaguing the new generations of Chinese society that I hate so much. More than a Little Empress, she was the epitome of self-centered garbage without so much as a speck of regard for those around her. Sprawled out in her seat, arms hanging over the headrest and legs spread eagled, crotch unceremoniously jut forward like she was advertising at Tsukiji, she chewed her gum with a gaping maw, lips curled in an awful sneer. Before take-off, she kicked the seat in front of her no less than 20 times as she shifted positions in a manner more befitting a clumsy troll than a graceful elf. The poor chap sitting beside her - the pitiful boyfriend - was on the receiving end of a few pushes, slaps and kicks, the annoying jerky elbow jabs that spoiled brats like to throw when in the midst of a tantrum.

After getting hit with a few recoils, the polite reserve I had acquired from two weeks of English osmosis was beginning to run out. Biting my lip and closing my eyes, I had to find my happy place, as my neighbour's spasms and complaints continued at an infuriating pace. When the food arrived mid-flight, she spied a pile of spinach on her boyfriend's tray and, without an ounce of dia-dia cuteness, she declared "my spinach." (wo de bo cai), reached over and grabbed it. Boyfriend gave a pitiful half-frown and did not protest. A defeated man clearly resigned to this kind of behaviour. When he made a motion to take a bag of peanuts that she had left sitting on her tray table, unopened and ignored for hours, she slapped his hand, gave him the "why the fuck are you so stupid" face, and coldly stated "you can't eat it, you're a fat pig" (ni bu neng chi, ni pang zhu). Chewing the spinach with an open mouth, feet still propped up against the chair in front, I secretly yearned for her to choke on it and die a slow and painful death.


Day 10: Above Edinburgh
I must say, Scotland was one of the most amazing places I've ever been. I was genuinely sad to leave. Wait, what's that? Day 9? If you really must know, I was busy shitting myself in a mausoleum when it came time for the daily shot, so you'll forgive me for being distracted.


My breaking point came during the final lull in our journey, while everyone was peacefully sleeping or enjoying the in-flight entertainment. Lost in an episode of Family Guy, my arm was suddenly and forcefully pushed off the arm rest as she lifted it up in a huff. I couldn't believe she had dared to be so forthcoming in her impolite flirtations, so I firmly put the arm rest down and replanted myself in position. And she did it again, with a quick elbow jab to my bicep. At that point, I really didn't care anymore, so I slammed it back down, so so satisfyingly on her leg, shoving her back into her seat territory. She slowly and deliberately pulled off her eye-mask (provided by Virgin, such luxury!) and looked me dead in the eye, saying "I want this up" (wo jiu shi yao fang shang qu). As if she could threaten me with those lifeless mainland eyes. Dumbfounded, I drew my face close to her's and replied "I'm using it" (wo jiu shi yao yong), as I pressed the arm rest down against her with perversely pleasurable might.

I think she got the point. Perhaps it was the first time someone denied her. She made a pouty face, pulled the mask back over her ugly face, shifted positions and kicked her feet over her sleeping boyfriend's lap, scaring the crap out of him in the process. For the remainder of the journey, she attempted to push me a few more times, but I remained firm, unwavering, and she relented. The whole ridiculous situation was entirely new to me and, after the initial urge to slit her throat with my plastic knife subsided, I continued to passive-aggressively huff and puff, blocking her attacks when necessary, laughing whenever she tried (and failed) to move that arm rest, and tried my best to keep composed until we landed in Shanghai. With the animosity fully out in the open, the back and forth was pretty entertaining.


Day 11: Hot Pot dinner in Clevelands Building, Bath University
On my last night in Bath, I had a filling ma-la hot pot dinner with new friends who I had taken quite happily to in the few days that I visited.

That rude little tart on the plane was a painful reminder of the awful reacclimation ahead of me. Her horrid behavior was the most extreme experience of social retardation - Chinese or otherwise - that I've ever witnessed. You'd think that having reached this pinnacle before touchdown would make the return to Chinese soil easier. Wrong wrong wrong. In the two weeks I was absent, Chinese efficiency remained status quo (i.e. non-existent), airport bureaucracy was rendered even more bumbling, and new security measures enacted for the goddamned Olympics (I swear, I will be so happy when they are over and we never have to hear of Beijing 2008 ever again) exacerbated the headache threatening to blow my brain out of my temples. It took me 2 hours just to get out of the airport. I was beginning to regret getting on that plane.


Day 13: Les Miserables
Oh what a show. We approached the classic with some trepidation, afraid the hype of 25+ years wouldn't deliver. So so wrong. It's a close second to Phantom, which is quite something in my book. After the show, we emerged to a rain shower and a celebratory mob cheering the Spanish Euro Cup victors. They were so raucous that a distracted bus crashed into a lorry in the middle of Piccadilly Circus. Awesome. (Oh yeah, and on Day 12 at this time, I was busy getting assaulted at the Radiohead concert)

When I stepped out into the humidity and stank of the summer air, the initial shock ripped me straight back to reality. The trip was officially done. No more pleasantries with strangers, no more comfortably chilly climate, no more uncensored living. After the plane ride from hell and the work week mere hours away, I felt desperate. Why the fuck did I have to come back? Head hanging low, I plopped into a taxi and covered my eyes with a heavy hand to shade the glaring midday sun. Feeling bitter and disappointed, maybe a little teary-eyed, I just wanted to get home and delay the inevitable return to daily life in China.


Day 14: Wicked
The last day of the trip, spent with the witches of Oz.


Making admirable small talk, the jovial driver asked me about my trip and continued to chatter about the weeks of typhoon rain that had flooded Shanghai in my absence. I nodded politely in return, distracted by memories of the cool breezes and unpolluted skies in London. With a beaming smile, she paused, leaned over and said that I had brought the sun back with me. Pulling my hand from my eyes, I gazed out the window, taking in the vista for the first time. It was actually a beautiful day in Shanghai. As much as it hurt to be back, I couldn't justify further resentment. It is not Shanghai's fault that it's not as awesome as London. No place is as awesome as London. We don't penalize a hamburger because it's not as delicious as a filet mignon, so why should the same judgment be wrought on completely different cultures? Thus Shanghai remains home for now and I'll keep my whining to a minimum. I had just spent 2 weeks on holiday after all. And England, in all her majestic glory, claims top spot for the best trip I've ever been on.

For more pictures of the trip, please head over to Flickr: London, Bath, and Scotland. Thanks for reading.