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Victoria Yang

2008 Nov 19 Beijing's Octopus: The Things You Can Do with an Yikatong



The Beijing Municipal Administration and Communications Card or Yikatong is in need of a nice catchy English name. Beijingologist David Feng's Beijing Super Pass is a good first attempt, but it doesn't quite have the same ring to it as Hong Kong's Octopus or London's Oyster. Despite the lack of a nifty moniker, the handy little card has proved popular with Beijngers and visitors to the city since it became possible to ride on most of Beijing's public transport in 2006 by simply swiping the card. Yikatong became even more popular when in January 2007 card users were given discounts on the city's public buses (it now costs a minimum of 4 mao to ride if you swipe but 1 kuai if you're paying cash) and when paper tickets were done away with on all of the capital's subway lines. Prior to the Olympics, despite the occasional controversy, close to 20,000,000 cards had been sold.

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2008 Nov 18 Tuesday Film Roundup: Karate Kid in Beijing, Babylon A.D. and Red Cliff II

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Film News

According to Variety, Beijing has been chosen as one of the cities in which Columbia's remake of the 1984 classic Karate Kid will be filmed. The film will star Will Smith's son Jaden and is expected to start shooting early next year.

Keep reading below for more Beijing-related film news and screening times for all the English-language films being shown in Beijing tonight.


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2008 Nov 06 The Decline in Standards at CCTV

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If you watch the video below you’ll see a veteran presenter of CCTV 1’s flagship 7pm news broadcast involuntarily letting out a small burp while reading the news on Monday evening. The rapid spread of the trivial footage across the web is testament to both the eagle-eyes of the media-watching public and also their new found ability to shine a light on embarassing mistakes by uploading clips to various video sharing sites. Zhang Hongmin's burp is the latest in a long line of gaffes from CCTV presenters and below we’ve gathered together clips and images of some recent on-air bloopers that have led many to bemoan the decline in standards over at CCTV.

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2008 Nov 05 Partying in Beijing: What's Changed and What's Stayed the Same?



Australian author and Asialink Writer in Residence at The Bookworm Linda Jaivin, will be talking about and reading from her new book, A Most Immoral Woman (which is due to come out in March next year) at the Bookworm tonight. The book is a fictional recreation of a rather spicy episode in the life of the wonderfully complicated Australian journalist and adventurer George 'Chinese' Morrison (on a side note, Jane Macartney, The Times' correspondent in Beijing, delivered the annual Morrison Lecture two weeks ago - details here). The event marks the author's last public appearance as the writer in residence at the Beijing Bookworm. So, if you haven't had a chance to get down to hear Jaivin talk already - or even if you have - be sure not to miss what should be an entertaining and hilarious evening. If you're unfamiliar with her work, take a look at Fiona Lee’s interview with the author for some idea of what to expect. Personally, I regard The Monkey and the Dragon as one of the best China books around. Tickets are required, so it’s worth calling the Bookworm to confirm that there are still some spare seats.


While researching the historical novel that she'll be reading excerpts from tonight, Jaivin spent a lot of time peering into the journals of foreigners who lived in Beijing around the turn of the 20th Century. Given this, and her presence in Beijing as a foreign journalist for much of the 1980s, we decided to quiz her on the history of laowai life in the city and particularly about how various foreigners who lived in the capital during different eras amused themselves. Keep reading below for her replies to our queries about how laowai partied in Beijing during both the Legation Quarter days at the turn of the 20th century and the tumultuous 1980s. Jaivin also offers a few observations of how things have changed in today's "Olympic city."

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2008 Oct 28 Tuesday's Film Roundup

Film News

Documentary Screening: My Beijing Birthday

James Fallows alerted us to the screening of what looks like a very interesting documentary taking place in Beijing tonight. A short introduction to the documentary can be found at the official site or over at James Fallow's blog. To give you a quick idea of what it's about, the documentary follows the mandarin proficient Howie Snyder as he returns to Beijing a dozen years after studying Cross Talk with a group of Chinese kids. The film is a collage of footage taken back when he was studying and new clips of the "new" Beijing and of his former class mates and teachers.
You can view the trailer here.



Oct 28
Documentary Screening: My Beijing Birthday
6pm. Saatchi & Saatchi, The Penthouse 36/F Central International Trade Centre Tower C, 6A Jianguomen Wai Avenue

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2008 Oct 27 DIY Halloween Costumes

 

This Friday is Halloween meaning you only have four days to get to work on a costume that could win you thousands of kuai and other great prizes at the huge range of Halloween-themed parties going on around town next weekend. China is a wonderland for those with a fetish for dressing up. If you’re feeling creative, any market and RMB 50 should suffice. If you need a bit more direction, we’ve compiled a list of some of the best places to go shopping for that prize-winning costume:

Alien Street Market
Laofanjie Shichang, Yabao Lu (south of Fulllink Plaza), Chaoyang District.
老番街市场, 朝阳区雅宝路

Beijing Wantong Market
2 Fuchengmenwai Dajie, Xicheng District. (6804 6283)
北京万通批发市场地址:阜成门外大街2号

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2008 Oct 21 Tuesday's Film Roundup: Roman's Holiday

 

Film News

Polish Film Festival
Organized by the Polish Filmmaker Association and the China Film Archive, the 2008 Polish Film Week kicks off this coming Friday with a special screening of the Oscar award-winning film, The Pianist. Director Roman Polanski will be present at the screening and will answer questions from the audience after before the film.

Polanski, whose fame as a fugitive has tended to overshadow the great films he has made – our favorite is Chinatown - will also hold a master class over at the Beijing Film Academy.

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2008 Oct 21 From the Gallery: Images from the Beijinger 7th Anniversary Party, Modern Sky, Midi, Diesel XXX Party and More

Head over to the Beijinger Gallery to view some of the great images that we've snapped at various events over the past few weeks. We've just uploaded pics from our 7th Anniversary Party, Midi 2008, Modern Sky, the Diesel XXX Party, the Grand Opening of Drei Kronen 1308 and Eric Abrahamsen's talk at the China Culture Center.

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2008 Oct 07 Linkin Park China Tour Cancelled

Update: It's official, Linkin Park have announced that they've cancelled all five dates of their Asia tour. This includes the concert that was to have taken place in Beijing on Oct 19.

Rumors are spreading that Linkin Park are going to be the next big international act to cancel their Beijing show in a year already chock-full of high profile no shows. A call to the Emma ticketing office was met with the ominous response that "ticket sales have been temporarily suspended" and a refusal to give any more details. A note on the band's official site also mentions the cancellation of a show on Oct 6 "as lead vocalist Chester Bennington has sustained a back injury and is under doctor's orders to rest."
 

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2008 Oct 07 On the Road: Petrol Prices Up, Personalized Plates and Cops on Electric Bikes

Petrol Prices Up
At midnight last night the price of the regular #93 fuel went up by 8% about 3%. It now sells for RMB 6.37 a liter and a liter of #97 will set you back RMB 6.78. The price hike was announced by the Beijing National Development and Reform Commission, who put it down to the higher cost of producing the superior quality Euro IV standard gasoline which is now required to be used in all of Beijing’s vehicles. This measure was adopted in March this year to help the city achieve its air quality goals. The Beijng News quotes energy experts as saying that the price adjustment will not be nationwide at present. This is the first price rise since petrol went up 16% in June this year.

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