Lucky ducks

I’ve been in Beijing for almost two months and had not yet eaten the famous Beijing kao ya (Peking roast duck, duh). Until tonight. A few of my colleagues took Chris and me to a nearby branch of Bianyifang. Most people are more familiar with Quanjude, but Bianyifang goes back further in history — like […]

The economy of beer

Chinese beer has its fair share of critics (loaded with preservatives, bland, low alcohol content, etc.), but what are the alternatives? It’s either no beer or expensive imports. But Chinese beer also has a really weird pricing system that doesn’t seem to be governed by a normal market economy. Here is what you can expect […]

Word of the day

Oh, man, I’ve been one-up’d by one of my Chinese colleagues! Its main functions include selling postcards and philatelic products, customizing postcards and stamps and offering free seals of scenery of Tiananmen. Did any non-stamp scholars/collectors know what “philatelic” meant?

Chinese opinion pieces

Here is an example of a routine polishing job: Democracy and freedom, as essential elements of a modern civil society, have already been recognized by the Chinese government… Recognized, though apparently not put into practice. But a little recognition can go a long way. At any rate, the piece it comes from was written by […]

A day at the park

China.org.cn sent me over to the Olympic Green last Wednesday for free. Impressions: The Bird’s Nest seems really small from the inside. The track and field were covered up from the concert the night before, so it was hard to imagine how they fit 10,000 athletes on it. The Water Cube is the cutest little […]

A few oldies

Perhaps some of you will remember the first real press release I worked on, the one about turtles and magnetic homing that actually got picked up by a fair number of (biggish) news outlets. It was turned into a short piece for UNC’s research magazine, Endeavours, which apparently got me mentioned in the dean’s blog. Yeah, so […]