Zhibo: Narcissism, Gross AF Prepositions, and PSY Becomes a Fan

Zhibo is a weekly column in which Beijing-based American Taylor Hartwell documents his journey down the rabbit hole of Chinese livestreaming app YingKe (Inke). If you know nothing about the livestreaming (直播; “zhibo”) phenomenon in China, start here.

Exceedingly Valid English Criticism of the Week prepositions are hard to use and they are gross as f.

This is one of those things you don’t – or at least, I didn’t – think about until you have to explain English to people all the time.

Just consider the nightmare that is the word “to.” Quick – no dictionary, no Wikipedia – can you explain what “to” means? If so, you’re already doing better than most. Now, consider the following sentences:

It’s a good idea to let the students write in class.

No problem

You should let the students to write in class.

PROBLEM.

Having a house in the South of France is my dream.

No problem

I dream to having a house in the South of France.

PROBLEM

Go ahead, see if you can simply and straightforwardly explain to yourself why the correct sentences are ok and the incorrect sentences aren’t. This being the internet, I’m sure you all nailed it first try – but I myself find this sort of thing quite challenging.

And that’s not even considering that there are more than two to’s, too.

behold, the correct reaction

Best String of Randomly Aggressive Comments

who do you think you are

I don’t know, Christina Perri. Who am I?

what’s wrong with you

Probably a lot.

you have a lot of nerve


Yup.

can’t you do anything right

That is indeed the question.

Questionable Compliment of the Week this is exactly American accent

yes, we ARE going to ignore the rest of the picture and focus on the comment, thanks for asking

As I’ve mentioned once or twice before, the Chinese are quite proud of their language and its 5,000 (footnote?) years of continuous (seriously, footnote?) history. So even though what we call Mandarin and is more accurately called putonghua is a reasonably modern invention based very heavily on the regional language of the people who were in power when it came time to codify modern “Chinese,” there is nonetheless a pretty big obsession with the *proper* or *standard* accent here in China. If you’re on TV, you’re expected to be speaking very, very standard putonghua – like, Siri-levels of standard.

I’m sorry, Dave. I didn’t understand you.

So when studying English, Chinese people are naturally quite interested in what constitutes a proper/standard English accent. Interestingly, British English is still light years ahead of American English in China’s battle of the textbooks, recordings, etc. – despite the fact that a.) most parents investing in early English education are doing so in the hopes of sending their kids to America and b.) we’re supposedly living in a post-colonial world where the yoke of imperialism has been thrown off and China is no longer forced to adopt all things British.

I should be clear to my British readers (and editor): It’s not that I have anything against your lovely and sophisticated-sounding accent – even if it was (much like Mandarin) invented quite a bit more recently than you’d have us believe. It’s great and charming etc. It’s just amusing to me that Chinese students everywhere are learning about rubbish tips and lorries and how the letter “r” is more of a suggestion than anything else even as their parents fill out their Harvard applications 15 years in advance.

[Editor’s note: This is our national response to the above paragraph]

But on the American English side of things, I am constantly told that my English is very *standard* sounding. Now, it’s true that I’m from the middle of the East Coast and don’t have any particularly strong regional accent, but it’s also worth pointing out that I’ve had parents and colleagues tell me they specifically prefer my “accent” to that of African-Americans and Asian-Americans who sound exactly like me.

The problem with judging what constitutes “standard” when you have a data set of, you know, four or so people, is that a.) you simply can’t judge accurately and b.) you inevitably allow other meaningless factors (skin color, attractiveness, blond-ness of hair) to seep into your judgment of what makes a “real” foreigner.

Holy Sh@t Moment of the Week 你真的很幽默

You might think someone calling me funny isn’t much of a big deal. But guess who this turned out to actually be?

that’s the one!

Will report back when and if there’s more to report.

All-Time Best Description of What I’m Doing Narcissism in the early morning

You know what you just did?

Dumb Assumption of the Week You have a gun in your house

I say “dumb,” but only with the assumption that the commenter knows and has chosen to ignore the fact that I’m located in Beijing (it shows your location on the picture they have to click to enter your streaming room, so that assumption isn’t much of a stretch). More generally speaking, however, it’s getting pretty hard to laugh off the idea that I must like guns because “Americans are crazy about their guns.”

We in the West are quick to label to the Chinese as *brainwashed* on a whole host of issues, but it’s pretty remarkable how quickly people here arrive at the inescapable logical conclusion of the gun control argument: um, your Constitution was written when guns fired one single inaccurate bullet once every five minutes, so how does it make any sense that you don’t have new, modern rules for something like an AR-15? Isn’t an AR-15 as different from a musket as a rocket launcher is from an AR-15? You can’t buy a rocket launcher, can you?

Truly Unique Question of the Week Mormon is a cult do you agree?

Yup.

 

More from the weird and wonderful world of livestreaming in China:

One Week to Go: Here’s Everything You Need to Know About “Unconference” 2050

A bold new event entitled 2050 is bringing together some of the brightest minds from across China and beyond for a weekend of activities, discussions, and parties in Hangzhou next week — and RADII is a part of it.

WHAT IS 2050?

The 2050 Conference is a voluntary organization initiated by Dr Jian Wang, chairman of the Technology Steering Committee at Alibaba Group Holding Limited. The aim is “to make the world pay more attention to young people’s innovations. Young people’s views on the future may impact the world greatly by 2050. So it is exciting to see what happens when 20,000 young people who love science and technology gather together.”

Click here to register for RADII at 2050.

WHAT’S GOING ON?

Held at Hangzhou’s Cloud Town, 2050 will feature parties, sports, camping, AI vs human competitions, gigs, speaker sessions, and lots more. Issues up for discussion range from driverless cars and flying transportation, to “how technology can create greater gender equality” and a “blockchain stand up show”. There’ll be an “exploration space”, “camping under the stars”, and an array of social events and activities.

You can find the full run down of events on the official 2050 website here.

RADII will be an active participant at 2050, hosting our very own INNER CIRCLE Reunion event and our inaugural FUTURE OF X speaker forums, dedicated to delving into the trends and phenomena that are transforming life and society in China today.

Our weekend of programming will feature keynote speeches from M WOODS co-founder and post-internet generation art collector Michael Xufu Huang on THE FUTURE OF CULTURE IN THE DIGITAL AGE, two-time Grammy Award winning musician Dana Leong on THE FUTURE OF MUSIC, and co-founder of Light Chaser Animation Studios (dubbed the “Pixar of China”) Yu Zhou on THE FUTURE OF “MADE IN CHINA”.

We’ll also be holding an expert panel discussion on THE FUTURE OF CONSUMPTION, with Adam Chen (Founder/CEO of CREATEC and Chairman of Shanghai Creative Collective), Emily Cheng (Founder of STW赏游 Platform/Culture & Heritage Columnist for China Advertising 中国广告), Zak Manion (Innovation & Analytics Associate Director at ABInBev) and Adrian Lai (Founder of social e-commerce platform Yumi), moderated by Brandnographer founder Ruby Chui.

To kick off the weekend, RADII, Brandnographer, AGLA and Shanghai Creative Collective will host a social event — 2050 INNER CIRCLE — on Friday, May 25th, bringing together our speakers and thought leaders from each of our organizations for drinks, networking, and good times, followed by a conference-wide party featuring music by DJ TOY.

HOW DO I GET IN?

All participants for our FUTURE OF X events and for the INNER CIRCLE Reunion will need to purchase tickets for 2050, but register through us by either clicking that link or scanning the QR code here and we’ll send you a 50% off ticket link.

Click here to register for RADII at 2050.

General entry tickets for the whole of 2050 are priced at 660RMB, or 330RMB for students.

WHERE EXACTLY IS IT?

Cloud Town can be found at number 7 Shanjing Lu, Hangzhou (云栖小镇山景路7号).

Buses will be laid on for participants between Cloud Town and Hangzhou East Railway Station and Xiaoshan Airport as well as between Cloud Town and 2050’s recommended hotels – you can find a full schedule here.

Click here to register for RADII at 2050.

MORE INFO

For more information on 2050, including a full run-down of RADII events there, please see the page below:

Photo of the Day: Ningbo Museum

Today is World Museum Day, a celebration of knowledge-serving institutions that’s been in the calendar since 1977. Museums across China often go big for the day, offering free or discounted entry and holding special events. Our photo theme this week is Masterful Museums — dedicated to showcasing some of the country’s most visually stunning museums.

In December, it’ll be ten years since the Ningbo Museum swung open its doors on a striking design that would contribute to Wang Shu becoming the first Chinese citizen to win the renowned Pritzker Prize for architecture in 2012.

Part of what makes the museum’s structure so remarkable is that its jagged outline and seemingly warped curves are comprised of bricks, tiles and other building materials from traditional Jiangnan (“south of the river”, the lands below the lower reaches of the Yangtze) architecture.

As the museum’s official website has it:

The design is a conceptual combination of mountains, water and oceans. Features of traditional Jiangnan residences are integrated into the museum design by decorations of the outer walls with old tiles and cement-covered bamboos. The first floor of the museum is constructed as a whole part, while the building starts to tilt on the second floor, giving the whole building a mountain and also a boat shape. This design alludes to geographical features in Ningbo as well as the importance of maritime trade in its history, thus making the museum a symbol of Ningbo history and culture, as well as a delicate and creative exhibit in itself.

When the award of the Pritzker Prize to Wang was announced, jury chairman Lord Plumbo said that,

“The question of the proper relation of present to past is particularly timely, for the recent process of urbanization in China invites debate as to whether architecture should be anchored in tradition or should look only toward the future. As with any great architecture, Wang Shu’s work is able to transcend that debate, producing an architecture that is timeless, deeply rooted in its context and yet universal.”

The Ningbo Museum is a perfect example of that sentiment.

Photo: Ningbo Museum.

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Meet Liu Chuanjian, “China’s Captain Sully”

Liu Chuanjian — a former Air Force pilot and trainer who became a Sichuan Airlines captain in 2006, after retiring from the CPLA — has been all over Chinese social media and English-language news over the past few days, following an epic emergency landing he and his co-pilot made at the Chengdu airport. On May 14, the right-front windshield on Liu’s aircraft, which had just taken off on Flight 3U8633 from Chongqing to Lhasa, cracked at high altitude, and was blown off the plane by air pressure. Liu and his co-pilot — who was partially sucked out of the cockpit — successfully made the emergency landing in Chengdu 20 minutes later.

“We’re trained for emergency situations like this all the time, and I’ve been a pilot for over twenty years. When it happened all I was thinking about was just handling the flight landing well to guarantee the safety of all passengers and cabin crew,” said Liu in a quick interview with TV news show Sichuan Observation. “It was like when you’re driving at 50 kilometers an hour, and suddenly the car is going 100 kilometers an hour, and your hands are out of the window.”

Liu’s co-pilot went to the hospital after the landing — he was halfway out of the cockpit when the window blew out, and suffered facial scratches and a sprained wrist.

Liu’s co-pilot

Liu said that operating an Airbus A319 flight flying at 800 km/h while carrying 119 passengers at an altitude of over 10,000 meters (approximately 32,800 feet) and no windshield resulted in low cabin pressure, blasting wind, sub-zero temperature, and extreme sun exposure. Therefore, the landing has been seen as a miracle, and Liu praised as a hero who did something unprecedented. He’s been dubbed “the Chinese Captain Sully” by netizens.

Liu’s wife, Zou Han, told Chongqing Morning that she learned of the accident from the news. When she called her husband, before she found out how severe and dangerous it had been, Liu simply said, “The plane is broken. I’m busy.”

In the aftermath, The Beijing News asked professionals a question that’s been on the mind of many online commentators: why did the window shatter, and why wasn’t this prevented by routine inspection?

According to the Beijing News report, the Airbus A319-100 aircraft in question was purchased in 2011, and has flown for 19,912 hours without any problems. The windshield had never been replaced, and hadn’t been inspected for 15 days prior to the accident.

Technical experts sent from Airbus have arrived in Chengdu to help with the investigation. Although Captain Liu handled the emergency more than professionally, if the incident was caused by a manufacturing irregularity or a failure of inspection, the public expects the companies to apologize and make it right. This is only the latest such scandal for Sichuan Airlines: the company was interviewed by the Southwest Regional Administration of the Chinese government’s Civil Aviation Administration in 2017 following several safety incidents.

In an article in The Paper (link in Chinese), military commentator and popular science writer Tian Chen “agreed with Captain Liu that this is not exactly the same as what Captain Sully did [in his] emergency landing on the Hudson River, but more like the incident that occurred to British Airways Flight 5390 in 1990.”

A report by Reuters also made this comparison: “In 1990, one of the pilots on British Airways Flight 5390 was blown partially out of the cabin window after its windshield blew out at 23,000 feet. He survived the incident, which occurred on a BAC-111 jet.”

Indeed, China is not alone in facing such issues of flight security. Last month, “the pilots of Southwest Airlines Flight 1380 had to deal with a 737 that suddenly banked left on its own,” an anomaly that resulted in the death of one passenger, according to CNN, and two months ago, Fox News reported that a “JetBlue flight from Puerto Rico to Florida was forced to make an emergency landing Sunday after the cockpit window cracked.”

While pilots all over the world are well trained, more safety measures should be adopted to make sure that no passengers will ever have to go through the terror that faced the passengers of 3U8633 — even if some of them still found the courage to snap a selfie:

Cover image: China Daily

Photo of the Day: Dinosaur Egg Geological Museum, Wuhan

Friday 18th May is World Museum Day, a celebration of knowledge-serving institutions that’s been in the calendar since 1977. Museums across China often go big for the day, offering free or discounted entry and holding special events. Our photo theme this week is Masterful Museums — dedicated to showcasing some of the country’s most visually stunning museums.

Wuhan’s Dinosaur Egg Geological Museum on the slopes of Qinglong Mountain made it onto a number of architecture “best of” lists when it opened in 2016, including Dezeen’s “10 Best Public Buildings in the World”. And deservedly so. Designed by a team from Huazhong University of Science and Technology, it’s a stunning structure to take in, snaking its way over the uneven hillside in small, easily navigable sections.

With “bamboo textured walls”, natural ventilation, and chimney-like skylights, it’s a work of architecture that doesn’t overly disrupt its surroundings — and is as much of an attraction as the exhibits held within.

Photo: TH7.cn

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Meet the Co-Founder of the “Pixar of China” with RADII at 2050

RADII and Brandnographer, in partnership with AGLA and Shanghai Creative collective, present the inaugural FUTURE OF X forum at Hangzhou’s 2050 Conference for youth in science, technology, art, and design, taking place May 25-27th, 2018 in Cloud Town.

Alongside China’s continued rise on the world’s economic stage, homegrown brands, cultural output and consumer goods are looked upon more favorably than ever.

Yu Zhou, co-founder of Beijing’s Light Chaser Animation Studios, speaks to this phenomenon through the lens of China’s fast-growing animation sector, where a newfound sense of creativity, entrepreneurship and innovation are revealing how the “Made in China” tag has become cool.

Founded less than five years ago, and often referred to as the “Pixar of China,” Light Chaser’s output is on a par with its 40-year-old predecessor, but with a distinctively Chinese flair.

Date May 26th, 2018

Time 3:00PM – 4:00PM

Register now to join this exciting event via the link below:

For more on RADII’s FUTURE OF X series at 2050, see here: