Monday, April 30, 2007

Shanghai Style

After two days in Beijing, it was off to Shanghai for a couple more days of interviews. There was even less time for touristy stuff in Shanghai than there was in Beijing. I always used to be jealous of my wife's business trips, but they're not exactly fun. My trips have one advantage over many of hers: when she's at a trade show, she probably doesn't get to see much of the city. I'm moving from building to building and neighborhood to neighborhood all day, so I at least get to see a bit of the city I'm in.

I did get to go fairly high up in Shanghai's Jin Mao Building, the tallest building in the PRC and the fifth-tallest in the world.


The building is in Shanghai's New Pudong Area, a, well, new area east of the old downtown.


Pudong was nothing but farmland 15 years ago, and much of it is still under construction. The explosive growth -- I learned this at one of my interviews -- is the result of income tax incentives given to foreign investors who wanted to develop the area. Those incentives, along with other corporate income tax incentives, will be abolished January 1, 2008. This post is starting to sound disturbingly like my story, which can't be good news. You can buy a copy of my magazine for HK$640 -- about US$80. It is on sale at Hong Kong International Airport, believe it or not.

Shanghai is a scenic city, especially the older quarters, and the air was refreshingly clear most of the time I was there. The Bund is probably Shanghai's most famous sight:


(The main advantage of going to meetings high up in office buildings is that I get some decent photos from time to time.) Famous as the Bund is, the Pearl TV Tower is definitely a more iconic view of Shanghai:


Every time I got in a taxi and looked out the window, I felt like I was in Detroit: I can't recall the last time I was surrounded by so many Buicks, most of them badged not with a simple "GM" nameplate, but with a special "Shanghai GM" nameplate.


On my last day in Shanghai, I visited a local supermarket. I had wandered in and out of supermarkets aimed primarily at foreigners, with lots of imported goods at high prices, but I found only one where the customers were primarily local. Still, there were lots of familiar brands, just marketed in somewhat different flavors:


I didn't try them, but I was curious what "Italian Red Meat Flavor" would taste like.

On my way back to Hong Kong, I got to ride Shanghai's famous maglev train, which covers 30 kilometers from Pudong to the airport in just over seven minutes and reaches a top speed of 431 km/h -- 268 mph -- midway through the journey.


The train left precisely on time, exactly 56 seconds after I shot this photo:





Monday, April 23, 2007

Mao and Me


I'm back from China and have been gradually getting my story worked into shape. Since my return, I've written somewhere on the order of 10,000 words, which is at least a good excuse to have not gotten the blog updated. The other problem is that I probably would have done some updating while in Beijing and Shanghai, but the government sees Blogspot as an enemy of the state and hides it behind the Great Firewall of China.

I had no idea what China would be like. I've never been a Sinophile. It's never been a place of much interest to me, but I was glad to have the opportunity to visit and, while I'm still not exactly a Sinophile, I'm looking forward to going back someday.

My trip to China was not the typical tourist trip. I built in a few hours here and there to wander around and see things, but most of my view of China was from upper floor conference rooms and the backseat of taxis. I did manage to learn a lot about China's new corporate income tax law, and am probably now the office expert on that subject. I will not bore you here, but will be happy to send you my masterpiece if you're having trouble sleeping at night.

I went to Beijing on Easter Monday. Since that's a holiday in Hong Kong, I went early in the day in hopes of seeing a bit of the Forbidden City and Tiananmen Square. A bit is exactly what I saw. By the time I got through customs and immigration (the immigration form lists one of the possible reasons for visiting China as "to settle down"), figured out the taxi queue, rode the 60 km into the city from the airport and got checked in to my hotel, it was already pushing 3:30, about an hour before the Forbidden City closes.

One cool thing I did see on Monday was at the airport, where I saw an old Soviet-made Air Koryo jet waiting at a gate. Beijing is one of the few places in the world where you can see the North Korean airline, which operates just a few flights a week from Pyongyang. As Americans are pretty much out of luck when it comes to getting a North Korean visa, this is the probably the closest I will come to seeing the Air Koryo fleet.

The one thing I was not prepared for was the distance between places in Beijing. On my map, it looked like everything would be close together and easy to get to. Things were definitely further apart than I thought they would be.

On Monday, I made it to the outside of the Forbidden City and then on to Tiananmen Square. I probably could have found time to see a bit of the Forbidden City, but my interests lie more in modern political history than in ancient Chinese architecture.


While inside the gates, I took a number of photos of soldiers drilling. I don't know if they're from the People's Liberation Army or some local or national police force. My knowledge of official Chinese uniforms is completely lacking in this regard.



After a quick ride on the subway -- just to get the hang of the system before I headed off for my first meeting on Tuesday -- it was back to my hotel where, in a nearby mall, I found dinner at Sizzler. Yes, yes, I went all the way to China and ate at Sizzler. But, as I told Shelly when she raised this point, I live in China. I also found a Dairy Queen, which I haven't seen in months and months since the one near our house in Manila closed. Best of all, I didn't have to share a Blizzard with Shelly. Instead, I had a small plain cone all to myself.

When I got back to my hotel room -- in hopes of posting these photos -- I started looking around at the electrical outlets. I found this beast right next to the desk:


The one on the left is a standard Hong Kong -- and Great Britain -- outlet. The one on right can accommodate several different plugs. The top, for example, could take an American plug, as long as it didn't have the grounding plug. Of course, the 220v electricity might fry whatever you plug in it didn't have its own converter, like most laptops have.

The street near my hotel was full of shops and pharmacies, including one where I saw the whole staff, clad in their white labcoats, doing their morning workout to music blasting over a loudspeaker. Having lived in Japan for three years and having taken part in this morning ritual a time or two, this did not shock me. If it had, I probably would have thought to get my camera out in time to take a photo. Instead, I got a nice shot of some interesting Chinglish, which I took to mean "We're open during renovations":


And that was about the end of the tourist portion of my visit to Beijing. The rest of the trip revolved around lots of walking, subway rides and taxi rides from one office building to another. I did, however, get the occasional cool view from the 34th floor conference room, like this one of the main north-south artery crossing the main east-west artery. Wouldn't you know it, my next destination after I took this photo was to the north, which is to the left in this photo.


Part of the coloring in this photo comes from the tinted windows in the conference room (I cleaned that up a bit in Photoshop), but most of it comes from the fact that Beijing is an amazingly polluted city. Rumor has it -- from Shelly, who says it came from "word of mouth" -- that Beijing will be shutting down all the surrounding factories something like five weeks in advance of the 2008 Olympics to give the smog a chance to clear out.

Photos of Shanghai should be posted soon .... maybe tonight, maybe tomorrow, but soon.

Sunday, April 08, 2007

Eating Spicy Piglet in Macau

Spicy piglet .... I couldn't convince Shelly to try it, but it was actually quite good. It would have been easy for her to try, as it was all over the gift shops in Macau, where we spent the first half of our glorious five day Easter holiday weekend.

The spicy piglet seemed to be pounded thin, cooked in some fashion, and then glazed with some kind of sauce. It was not unlike beef -- or pork -- jerky. Shelly warned me that I was eating some kind of weird street meat that had not been kept at a healthy temperature, but I did manage to not get sick. The stack of meat to the left of the spicy piglet has somehow been translated as "Wild Boar of Meat."

This was my third trip to Macau, and only now have I finally seen most of the tourist spots I wanted to visit. We arrived early Thursday afternoon and headed for the rural Coloane fishing village, which I really enjoyed when I visited in February. After having a cup of tea, we went for a wander and I showed Shelly the spot where I first saw China, eight weeks ago. Here I am, all excited about Zhuhai, which we could only barely see across the channel:

Coloane is an old fishing and junk-making village which is now turning more to tourism. There are a number of restaurants in town, and it's nice to stroll along the waterfront. You can also buy all sorts of dried fish. Sorry, Fat Choy, we didn't bring one back for you:

Perhaps the most interesting thing we saw in Coloane was this ferry from Zhuhai. It chugged over to a concrete slope and six or eight tourists hopped in. An immigration official watched them board the boat before heading back to his office.

After a wander, we hopped on an extremely overcrowded minibus and headed to another old village, this one with a much more colonial feel. Macau is changing so quickly -- in 2006, it had more gambling revenue than Las Vegas -- that most of the territory no longer has the "old" feel I felt when I visited in 1996, but some of the old charm still exists. In Taipa Village, for instance, there are five villas built in 1921 to be the summer homes of wealthy Macanese. The villas are now a museum, including one that looks much like it might have in 1921.

The Church of our Lady of Carmel also made a nice early evening photo:

We spent Friday at museums, including the really fantastic Macau Museum, where Shelly demonstrated how well she had paid attention by answering five of five questions correctly and receiving her own personalized certificate. Despite two tries (3 of 5, then 4 of 5), I couldn't get one of my own. (I knew important ones like the fact that the Portuguese first met the Chinese in Malacca [not Macau] but not that some kind of Chinese puppeteers stand up rather than sit down. Psssh.) You can bet that I heard about who won for a good while after we left the museum.

We spent the rest of Friday wandering through an interesting neighborhood called Barra, where we saw a temple to the god of fishermen and a woman walking a dog which was wearing not only a sweater, but also a pair of pants (sorry for the bad photo ... it was near dusk when they wandered by):

As we were leaving town today, we had lunch in a high-end department store, then walked next door and saw three chickens hanging in a kitchen window:

It's not exactly how I'd prepare my chicken...

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Busy Week(s)

My first two weeks have gone well, but have been busy, busy.

I've cranked out 8,000 words spread over two stories (well, one feature story and one set of news briefs). I've learned about corporate governance, Indian employee stock option plans, Japanese patent law and a host of other topics, most of which are surprisingly interesting to me.

Did you know that China recently passed a law giving private property the same protections as public property? Did you know that Japan recently completed a high profile criminal trial in just over 12 months, when a comparable trial in the past might have taken eight years? Did you know that the Khmer Rouge trials have been delayed because the Bar Association of the Kingdom of Cambodia is demanding foreign lawyers pay huge fees to the Bar in order to take part in the trials? It may not be interesting to you, but it has been to me.

Plus, I'm traveling next week, sooner than I had anticipated. I'll be in Beijing for two days and Shanghai for two days, interviewing lawyers, accountants and other business types to learn all about China's new corporate income tax law, which is also -- perhaps, again, surprisingly -- a fascinating topic. I seem to have found a great niche!

Plus, every night when I wait for the bus at Statue Square, I get this view:


That's the Bank of China Tower rising over the Legislative Council (Legco) building. My commute costs about 90 U.S. cents a day for a 20- to 30-minute, double-decker bus ride each way, depending on traffic. When will I ever again have such an incredibly cheap commute?

Monday, April 02, 2007

Flowers, Flowers

Shelly texted me this weekend, urging me to get down to the Mandarin Oriental Hotel with our camera, telling me that there were loads and loads of white roses and other flowers on the corner, all in tribute to some guy named Leslie.

She wasn't kidding.

Turns out that it was a memorial for Leslie Cheung, a Hong Kong-born singer and actor who committed suicide by jumping off the roof of the hotel April 1, 2003. Cheung was one of the founders of Cantopop (Cantonese pop music) and his memorial service was apparently a huge deal: tens of thousands people from around the world came to Hong Kong in the middle of the SARS scare for the service (which, according to Wikipedia, was also called "Yellow Pneumonia." Hmmm.)