Photo of the day: Steady Growth

All this week, Radii is posting a photo essay by Liu Qilin (aka Jady) entitled Lost Land of my Campus: “An area less traveled or known by others. Like a desert. A paradise.”

After quite a long time, finally I picked up my curiosity again to step into one of the mysterious areas of my campus(Beijing Normal University). Beside the gate there is a room with many beautiful fish, which I can see through the windows. Entering the gate, I found it was like an abandoned garden, where everything seemed to have frozen for a long time, except captive animals. Many items were put there, rusting or growing on their own.

Animals there are possibly suffering captive depression. They don’t move a lot and always show you a vacant stare. They seldom interact with each other, which is quite like the interpersonal relationships of modern society. Is their life as a form of decoration, being used and deserted, just like the plants that used to be beautifiers?

China Nights: Back-Alley Batman

China Nights is a Radii series featuring stories of crazy, funny, weird and wild after-hours experiences in this crazy, funny, weird, wild place. Hit us up if you have your own story to share.

Let’s cut to the chase about why I’m in China. Not for the love of drinking and getting ripped off by cabbies, nor Chinese girls, nor the culture, nor Communism. All of that’s in New York if you look hard enough. I came for one reason and one reason only: to meet a superhero. And I did.

My search started how any search starts: I walked up and down the street, drink in-hand, boys in-tow. Our mission was straightforward and simple. Find the Batman. We began by looking up, as anyone else would.

When you take in Shanghai’s massive buildings jutting into the smog, you begin to wonder what was underneath it all before. Row houses, richly textured with grey bricks, hardwood and hundreds of years of nightly family-style dinners. Most of them gone now. Replaced by the 30-some-odd story apartment buildings like the one I inhabit.

The process shaping Shanghai’s forest-o-buildings evolution is nothing short of brutal. Those old houses? Bulldozed in the night. Sometimes, in the wee hours of the morning (prime Batman hunting hours). Only skeletons remain of what look like bombed-out structures, with plastic toys, kitchen appliances and other household refuse loosely scattered among the rubble.

Our search took us to one of these boneyards around 4am. We ducked in cautiously, like horror movie heroes that don’t make it. The twists and turns of the alleyways canopied in bamboo scaffolding completely obfuscated the little light there was, and we relied on short-range flashlights from our cellphones. As we advanced a few feet at a time, we illuminated the next few feet of near-collapsing stone walls, carved doorway arches, three-legged chairs and headless baby dolls. Then we heard it.

We could make out heart-beat-faint harpsichord music playing from just a few stories above. It was the original animated, Adam West-era, Batman intro music. Crunching over the broken glass lining the floor, we ran into what looked like a railroad-style apartment. The first room was filled with plastic statues of the Virgin Mary. Two dozen metal hooks hung on rusted chains from the ceiling of the second room, and there were drains in the floor. The third and final room was completely bare except for a solitary blue-plastic chair wedged into the corner beneath a shoulder-width hole in the ceiling.

We legged it up the chair and pulled ourselves onto the second floor. It was even more ruined than the first, and mostly bereft of a ceiling. Though there was more light, the source of the harpsichord Batman theme wasn’t clearly visible. It seemed to be coming from all sides. We tried to follow it the best we could.

Deftly maneuvering around a crumbling, load-bearing wall on the outer face of the building, we shimmied on a ledge a few inches long to reach the apartment window adjacent to the one we’d come up. Climbing through the window, we could see the entire half of this floor was open.

And there he was. On the opposite corner of apartment building, perched on a ledge similar to the one we had just crossed — Batman stood watch over the people of Shanghai.

He was naked except for a pair of boxers, which clung to the sides of his sweaty, thin legs. He had two empty bottles of baijiu next to him, and one more in hand. On his face he wore the legendary, black, pointed-ear mask. I said, “Hello,” but he didn’t speak English and told us to “go the fuck away,” or so I assume.

Cover illustration by Marjorie Wang

Sex Doll Sharing App Launches in Beijing, Prompts Instantaneous Hot Takes

Hmm. This exists:

In the sharing economy of the Wild East it seems anything is rentable. A newly-launched app in China is proving this with its offering of shared sex dolls.

Xiamen-based app developer Touch announced Wednesday that it has started a limited trial run in Beijing that allows users to choose a plastic partner for home delivery.

Rentals cover 24-hours at 298 yuan ($45.5) or up to a week for 1,298 yuan and include an 8,000 yuan deposit.

The app tries to address any health concerns by explaining its hygiene policy.

“The dolls’ lower parts are changed for every customer,” reads the app. “Please remove the lower parts before returning. After the lower parts are cleaned, the doll can be used repeatedly.”

Naturally, the Western media’s first impulse has been to recoil in revulsion and craft thinly-veiled punchdowns as clickbait headlines, a cottage industry in English-language reporting on China and its sex dolls.

“There’s no way on this sweet Earth you’ll persuade me to use a sex doll sharing service,” Tech in Asia says, reasonably enough.

Mei Fong, Pulitzer-winning author of a book on China’s recently rescinded one-child policy, points out that this is a side effect of the gender imbalance created by a preference for male children:

An ex-Yahoo engineer calls it Peak Sharing Economy:

https://twitter.com/r_c/status/908539129062756354

Most people just think it sounds gross.

But is there a more charitable way to look on this latest innovation in China’s expanding share-app economy?

Shenzhen-based Maker Naomi Wu has a more nuanced and ultimately illuminating take on the whole thing:

Something to think about. This certainly makes for a click-worthy headline, but the deeper story isn’t peak anything. It’s early days, really, if you connect the dots between companion robots and the exploding VR porn industry.

It’s also worth noting that social blowback from a surplus of sexually frustrated young men is not a phenomenon limited to China.

All this to say… maybe take a step back next time you wanna squeeze some cheap laughs out of sex doll sharing apps. Because they’re probably not going away.

Cover photo via Global Times/Weibo

Photo of the day: Funky Head Accessories in Yiwu

Continuing this week’s photo theme — Things in Yiwu.

Though the Zhejiang city is small by China-city standards, its commercial clout is such that it autonomously strikes bilateral trade deals in Eastern Europe:

A Chinese international trade city may be set up in the village of Bolbasovo, Orsha District. The project was discussed during a meeting between Deputy Head of the Belarus President Administration Nikolai Snopkov and a Chinese delegation led by First Deputy Chairman of the People’s Government of Yiwu, Zhejiang Province Chen Xiaozhong on 17 August [2017]… “As the sales grow, the production of popular goods might be relocated from China to Belarus,” the head of the Belarusian company said. “Belarus will become the second European country where Zhejiang will undertake a similar project. The first one was implemented near Warsaw in 2016,” he added.

Radii’s founder Brian Wong recently led a student group around Yiwu’s massive wholesale market and discovered that one product class that might be absorbed in this shifting production ecosystem is: funky head accessories.

This is kind of a big thing in China, subject to the whims and vagaries of fashion. A few years ago bean sprouts clipped to your dome were in. The classic rabbit ear headband has never quite gone out of style among the kids cruising up and down Beijing’s tourist alleys such as Nanluoguxiang.

Naturally, these things are wholesaled in Yiwu.

Photo of the day: Squishy Toys in Yiwu

Continuing this week’s photo theme — Things in Yiwu.

Yiwu just sent its first freight train to Prague:

A train loaded with 88 containers of cloth, clothing, shoes, hats and Christmas items left east China’s Yiwu City Sunday morning for Prague, the Czech Republic. It will pass through Kazakhstan, Russia, Belarus, and Poland and travel about 16 days before arriving in Prague. The journey is about half the time for traditional sea voyage. On August 4, the first train from Prague arrived at Yiwu, east China’s Zhejiang province. Before the launch of the Prague route, Yiwu, often called the “world supermarket,” already boasted eight freight train routes.

Radii’s founder Brian Wong went to Yiwu recently and found that among the things wholesaled in this “world supermarket” are: squishy toys.

Maybe these aren’t as big overseas. In most major Chinese cities you can find street hawkers perched over pretty much any bridge moving these things. You smash them on the ground and they make a satisfying splat, then slowly reconstitute their original shape, insofar as they have “shape.”

Kind of a niche thing but Yiwu sells them in bulk.

Want some of those Gudetama ones myself…

Fireflies and Lasers in Wuhan

This recent news item touches on a few of Radii’s core content areas (things Chinese millennials do, weird theme parks, problems of scale):

China is home to about 100 known firefly species in 21 genera, with perhaps 100 others yet to be discovered. Spread across the country like a vast and sparkling tapestry, China’s lightning bugs could surely be considered a national treasure. Yet skyrocketing demand for live specimens is driving a lucrative trade that now threatens their survival. In recent years Chinese urbanites have flocked to theme parks for massive firefly shows, and alarming numbers of the insects have become romantic gifts. According to the Firefly Ecological Alliance (FEA), a Chengdu-based conservation organization, over 17 million live fireflies were purchased in 2016. Most were sold through Taobao, the popular online shopping platform, where one vendor reportedly sold as many as 200,000 per day.

That’s a report by Scientific American from Wuhan’s East Lake Peony Garden, China’s first firefly-themed amusement park. The park has as many as 10,000 fireflies at any given moment, corralled into the park for the delight of children and pairs of amorous Chinese 20-somethings, whose “lust for romance is a death trap for fireflies” (Sixth Tone’s killer headline).

To curb China’s newfound insatiable lightning bug lust, the East Lake Peony Garden recently switched to lasers to mimic the effect of having thousands upon thousands of flickering flies light up on demand. But Scientific American reports that the network effect of this newly created market for indigenous Chinese firefly species like Abscondita terminalis, A. chinensis, and Aquatica ficta may spell ecological disaster:

Although buyers bask in their luminous glow, such prolific commerce spells doom for China’s fireflies. Although these insects spend up to two years as larvae, flying adults last for just two weeks. Of those sold online, an estimated one quarter to one half will die in transit. And those that do reach their destination alive are unlikely to reproduce, due to unsuitable conditions for mating and egg-laying.

They conclude: “Do we really want our children and grandchildren to live in a world devoid of fireflies?” No. We don’t.

Photo: Hubei.gov.cn