The Double Menu Caper

April 3, 2010

Our hotel was outside Xian’s city walls.  We had a view of the battlements that were centuries old. At night, the walls and towers were outlined with white Christmas lights.  I ached to get up there and walk those walls.  It was 1999, and I’d wait more than nine years before that happened.

Our second day in the city, we walked from the hotel into the city to a Xian restaurant. I went in first and the hostess, who didn’t speak a word of English, handed me a menu written in English.

This is a different restaurant from the one I mention.

My wife, dressed more like a Chinese peasant than an American, came in after me and she was handed a menu in Chinese. My wife glanced at my menu. She took it out of my hands and gave it back to the hostess.

“We’ll use the Chinese menu,” she said. The prices in Mandarin were less than half the English version.  A stunned look appeared on the hostesses face.  It was a Candid Camera moment, and it was all I could do to avoid laughing.

See I ate no Dog, I Ate no Cat, Guest post by Bob Grant http://wp.me/pN4pY-8y


Dragon Air

April 3, 2010

The first time I went to Xian, China’s ancient capital before moving to Peking (Beijing), was in 1999. The airport terminal looked like something out of Casablanca.  Stairs were rolled into place and we walked to the terminal.

The last time I went was in 2008 and there was a new airport that would put most in America to shame.

China is replacing old airports and building new ones—hundreds, and they are building them with the future in mind. China is also planning to buy another 218 aircraft this year.

I flew with Dragon Air

In 1999, the taxi driver cheated us. He said his meter was broken, but he’d give us a bargain, which turned out to be higher. Then the hotel tried to cheat us. While my wife was arranging a car and driver to take us to see Qin Shi Huangdi’s tomb and the Terra Cotta Warriors, the desk clerk said we would need two cars.

I saw a sign in a corner that said vans were available and the price was lower. I picked up the sign, carried it to the desk, and held it where my wife saw it. She turned to the clerk  and if words could fly, her’s would have been arrows. We got the van.

See more about Xian

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Lloyd Lofthouse is the award-winning author of the concubine saga, My Splendid Concubine & Our Hart. When you love a Chinese woman, you marry her family and culture too. 

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Jailed for Negligence

April 3, 2010

Robert Hart, the main character in My Splendid Concubine, wrote, In China, the innocent often suffer along with the criminals where in England the accused often goes free or the sentence is too light.

A piece in The Washington Post, Prison for bosses of China disco after deadly fire, pointed out how two bosses of a nightclub in southern China were sent to prison for more than 15 years for a fire in their club that killed 44 people and injured 64. In addition, the club’s general manager was sent to jail for three years while fourteen other club managers received jail terms up to six years.

A similar fire in America in 1942, the Cocoanut Grove Fire, killed almost five hundred and injured hundreds more.  The kitchen helper who started the fire due to negligence was not punished but the nightclub’s owner was sent to jail for twelve years but let out in four.

When Faith Dremmer was killed in southern Illinois by a motorist who swerved across the road hitting her and two others, all he received was a ticket for improper lane use. What would the verdict have been in China?

Learn more about China’s justice system at http://wp.me/pN4pY-hH

 


Media Demons

April 2, 2010

When I read it, I laughed. To me, it was obvious.

Definition for propaganda: ideas, facts, or allegations spread deliberately to further one’s cause or to damage an opposing cause; also: a public action having such an effect (Merriam Webster.com) Or—manipulation of information to influence public opinion.

In 1948, the CIA established Operation Mockingbird, a program designed to influence the American media to play an important role in the propaganda campaign against the spread of Communism. The CIA recruited journalists, who wrote for The Washington Post, New York Times, Time Magazine, New York Herald Tribune, Newsweek, Miami News, Chattanooga Times, etc.  By 1953, this CIA network had a major influence over 25 newspapers and wire agencies (like the Associated Press and United Press International).

Evidence suggests that Operation Mockingbird (or something like it) exists today. If so, whom would this operation target? After all, Cold War Communism is gone.

The reason I mention Operation Mockingbird in this post is because of something I read in the New York Times today—Journalists’ E-Mails Hacked in China. The first few paragraphs of this piece infer that China’s government is responsible. Later, the piece indirectly mentions there is no way to know who did it. In the last paragraph, we are not sure if Google is partially responsible. As a journalist, why organize the piece this way?

See Google Recycled http://wp.me/pN4pY-2r


Farewell, My Concubine

April 2, 2010

Chen Kaige, self-trained as a filmmaker, was the director for this award winning 1993 film. Prior to “Farewell, My Concubine“, Chen received modest acclaim for the “Yellow Earth” and “The Big Parade”. With “Farewell, My Concubine,” he won the Palme d-or in Cannes.

Farewell, My Concubine

Although the film is in Mandarin with English subtitles, the story captured me from the beginning. If you are interested in Chinese history, this film spans several decades beginning near the end of the Ch’ing Dynasty. On the surface, it is just a story of two boys who happen to become famous, but have their difficulties like most of us lesser mortals do. However, the setting shows the  transformation of a nation from the Ch’ing Dynasty to a warlord dominated republic, the Japanese invasion of World War II and then Mao’s Cultural Revolution.

I saw this movie a decade ago and I remember this powerful, dramatic story of one man’s life from the day his mother took a knife and chopped off an extra finger on each hand so he would have five instead of the six he was born with.

The main character is apparently modeled after an actual person—Peking Opera superstar Mei Lanfang—some may imagine that Lanfang was ‘gay’. However, he only specialized in male roles. He was married at least three times and had children.

Discover Not One Less

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Lloyd Lofthouse is the award-winning author of The Concubine Saga. When you love a Chinese woman, you marry her family and culture too.  This is the love story Sir Robert Hart did not want the world to discover.

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