InsideGFW

Stories from inside the Great Fire Wall

Shanghai’s Bluegrass Boy

Walk into Southern Belle on a Wednesday night and you’ll probably see 28-year-old Tom Pang sitting alone on the terrace smoking. He doesn’t have a band, there’s no upright bass or banjo in his set, but Pang strums Shanghai’s best bluegrass. (more…)

, , , , , ,
December 13, 2011 at 11:30 am Comments (2)

Shanghai’s bicycle repairmen

Published in the Nov issue of That’s Shanghai. Click on the link for a much better layout and some pictures.

Pushbike handymen are a dying breed in downtown Shanghai

In downtown Shanghai it’s getting tougher to spot street-side bike repairmen. The switch to electric bikes and scooters, coupled with the pretty price of city living, makes it tough for guys that only work on bicycles.

(more…)

, , , ,
December 1, 2010 at 8:04 pm Comments (0)

Cai Guo Wei, The Pocket Hukou Owner

#That’s the full length feature story of That’s Shanghai ‘s Oct cover story.

Those who have been keeping an eye on my blog may find this article similar to the Interview Of the Homeless People. Yes, they are both in the bottle picking business, they both cannot afford a home here in Shanghai, and they both live at the very bottom of society. But there are some key differences between the homeless people from Anhui and the pocket Hukou owners who were born and grew up in Shanghai. This is where Cai’s story begins.

(more…)

, , , , , , , , , , , ,
November 11, 2010 at 1:15 pm Comments (0)

Huang, The Not-So-Professional Beggar

If you’re hanging out late at night on Xingfu Rd (or “happy street” as I like to call it), you may run into an old lady named Mrs. Huang. Unlike the other beggars and flower sellers waiting for you outside bars and restaurants in Shanghai, Huang is not aggressive or dishonest. Although she has had much experience begging in Shanghai, it is certainly not her chosen profession. She is just trying to survive and provide for her family. (more…)

, , , , , , , ,
October 9, 2010 at 2:36 pm Comments (0)

Feng, The Super “migrant” Worker

I met Feng on Wu Jiang Rd, formerly the famous street food street before the EXPO. You could access all kinds of food even in the middle of the night, BBQ, noodles, rice, sea food, beer…every thing, cheap, quick, good, casual. But earlier this year it was completely demolished, the old street food street is gone. It became a big trash heap full of rubble and surrounded by walls covered with EXPO printings of beautiful, successful business women/man, happy child/seiner citizens, and weirdo foreigners with a photoshopped helmet for no reason. One block away, Wu Jiang Rd becomes a place full of expensive, up-scale, foreign-looking restaurants, cafes, dessert shops, candy shops, Nike, big malls, etc. It has security guards wondering around 24/7, and Feng was sleeping on a well designed wooden chair in the middle of the pedestrian area. (more…)

, , , , , , , , ,
September 16, 2010 at 5:12 pm Comments (0)

China’s Top Twitters

The article below was written by Leslie Jones and me, it was posted on urbanatomy.com. Please go to here for a better edited version and pictures of those famous people.

_______

For Chinese netizens hungry for information that won’t make it into tightly-controlled traditional media outlets, Twitter is one of the best resources going – along with an assortment of blogs and the forum 1984 BBS. In July 2009, after riots in Xinjiang, the micro-blogging service was blocked. Now, it can only be accessed via proxy server inside China. (more…)

, , ,
August 5, 2010 at 8:10 pm Comments (0)

An Interview with Homeless People

Yesterday I was cycling to The Camel to watch the America VS Ghana football game. While biking through Ju lu road, I saw a Cheng Guan vehicle parked beside the street. Some Cheng Guan were driving some homeless people away from their camping spot.

These homeless people were kind of different from the normal ones. They had bikes with three super big bags on the rear axle of each bike. It seemed like they were doing some kind of garbage recycling for a living.

After evicting them from their spot, the Cheng Guan got into their vehicle and left. I followed, waited until they found another place and settled in, then I went forward to have an interview with one of them. (more…)

, , , , , , , ,
July 8, 2010 at 4:51 pm Comments (3)

Chun Ge and Androgyny, The Skywalker that brings in hope

Chun Ge and Androgyny, The Skywalker that brings in hope
Don’t panic from the title. If you are trying to prompt democracy or human-rights in China, you will get a better chance if you support androgyny. It doesn’t mean that androgynous people are naturally supporting democracy, no. So why does androgyny have anything to do with democracy and human-rights?

(more…)

, , , , , , , ,
June 26, 2010 at 12:31 pm Comments (0)

Liu Yi Qian: Still possible to succeed in China?

“He is a real Buffet menu in China” people say about Liu Yi Qian.

From time to time people say that the chances to succeed in China are unfair, The government controls all the resources and could easily smash individuals, but the existence of 47 years old Liu Yi Qian seems to be a tough argument to refute. He was born into a normal family and has already become a successful Chinese entrepreneur.

“I will not let any chance of making a great profit slip away” he has said. At his school, teachers always told their students to study hard and every day (study for a better social status) and university students are greatly respected by society, but young Qianyu said to his peers: “You guys keep on studying, I am going to quit school and start making money.”

After quitting middle school he went into the shoe trade for ten years working at a small family factory where he learned that the easiest way to make money is by letting other people do the job. So he taught the workers to make different parts of shoes that he then assembled together. “I could make more than 100 RMB every day.”

In the mid 1980s, taxis were really rare and the people in the cities were always waving their hands to try to catch one even with the possible charge of 50 to 60 for a three to four kilometer drive. So he spent 16,000RMB to get a driver’s license and bought two cars to run a taxi business with his brother for two years. Then after that he opened a shop in Yuyuan market.

The Chinese stock market first opened in the early 90′s when the people did not understand stock and trade very well, so some of stocks’ price went sky high. Liu took this chance and bought 100 shares of the Yuyuan market at 100 RMB per share, and sold it one year later when the price was 10000 RMB per share.

After he found out that money is the easiest way to make more money, he started reselling stock licenses (it’s like a lottery, if you get the right number you would have the right to buy stock) in 1992. From calculations he discovered that ten percent of the licenses will get the right number and could be sold for the price of 6000 RMB. So he bought a lot of licenses at the price of 30 and sold those with the right numbers for 6000 RMB and made a fortune.

After saving up enough capital, he started his own company Xin Liyi. This was a holding company with four employees and it’s only function was to buy corporate shares not available to individuals. With this company he controlled the shares of several holding companies and insurance companies which helped him to increase capital and buy more companies. Now he is the #256 richest man in China according to the Hurun rich list of 2008.

There is a story about how when once a government official wanted to have an interview with Liu at the Shangri-La hotel in Shanghai and where he had turned up wearing a t-shirt, jeans and sneakers, the mayor had felt really uncomfortable about it. “They gave me a suit and shoes and made me wear them” said Liu.

Liu also seems to be very much a family man. Every day he will go back to his home to see his wife and son. “I always felt uncomfortable when I was not at home” Liu said. “My wife looks out for the family a lot and in my office there are pictures of my wife and mother hanging everywhere” he added in addition.

“Yes, I made a lot of money from the stock market, but the largest profit I ever made is from art. I do not know anything about art. “I bought this because I wanted to have it; I want to take it away from other people and I like this kind of feeling” Liu said after buying a 4,365,000 RMB ancient Chinese painting.

Some people say that Liu is the living example of the Chinese dream, as even within such an unfair society, Liu has achieved his dream and become a tycoon.

But what liu says about this? I interviewed him last day and when I asked him does he think the Chinese young man could achieved their dream now, he told me ‘No, time is different now, at my time everybody is the same, nobody had the money and we all had the same basis, but it is different now. The society was already finished its classification, people who born with nothing do not have that kind of chances anymore.

Jack's Weekly Updates

, ,
March 20, 2010 at 12:17 pm Comments (0)

Bad Behavior has blocked 8322 access attempts in the last 7 days.