Who Are You?

Unless you have been to China, this one is hard to understand.

China is a place that tries to be “collectively meticulous.” I remember that in the summer of 2007 – to show effectiveness and cost efficiency - the government mandated that all thermostats were to be placed at 78 degrees while it was in the high 90′s outside. And this is in a city where shirts and ties are mandatory for business attire. Talk about uncomfortable business settings! All hotels and all city and government buildings were sweltering and not a single person I met complained about the heat.

Or even in the best hotels, when you turned your browser to NYtimes.com, a “that page doesn’t load” message would appear. Or when you would be watching CNN and suddenly the screen would just go dark for 45 seconds as a censor decided that something on the news wasn’t appropriate for folks to see. Or go to Google and type in “Tiananmen Square” and all you get is nice travel information of the city center. No info on the student uprising that the entire world experienced on CNN.

The medium and the message are still controlled pretty tightly throughout China.

China partially built this Olympics around its own athletic prowess and former gold medal winner Liu Xiang was the poster boy. The collective pressure on this man to achieve greatness was unfathomable. If he had raced and lost, I can’t imagine the pressure and ridicule he would have faced. By not racing, he was actually better off. He will be a martyr in the country. He didn’t lose. His gifts are free to be debated by all. He will forever be ”could have, should have, would have” and in China that kind of debate is a good thing.

Is It Just Me?

Do some of these big events – like women’s gymnastics - seem to have a lack of enthusiasm and passion around them?

Maybe it is because when an event is live here at 9:00 pm it is only 9:00 am in China and the arenas aren’t surprisingly filled with people? Or maybe it is because the Chinese folks aren’t as partisan as people from other host nations. They are too polite? In a nation of more than 1 billion people, why are there so many empty seats? I don’t get it. Why are the venues so quiet?

The Most Watched Basketball Game of All Time

One day, early in the morning while visiting China, I went for a walk. The streets of Beijing were quiet except for a basketball court about a half a mile from the Forbidden City. There three full court layouts were filled with kids playing hardcore hoops with about 500 kids awaiting the “next” game.

China loves basketball. There are NBA stores everywhere. You see ads with Kobe, LeBron and Gilbert on buses and on big signs everywhere. You see Chinese students walking around with jeans and NBA jerseys.

When the Houston Rockets play on television, China stands still.

More than 300 million people play the game. Think of that. The entire population of the United States is 300 million.

The opening game between China and the US could have the largest audience ever for a sporting event. CCTV and Shanghai Media Group reach a billion plus people in mainland China alone. Wow. The US had better come to play.

Tom Shales

I think Tom Shales has the best taste of any media columnist in the business.

I can’t remember the last time I read something of Tom’s and thought, ”What is he thinking on this one?”

And he nailed it again in this column on last night’s Olympic Games Opening Ceremonies. The scale, artistry and technical HD wizardry last night was truly something to behold. It was also scary to know that China could pull it off. That was a statement to the world. ”We are big. We are populist. We know how to use technology. We have the most man power. We have the best economy. Don’t mess with us but come and meet us.”

Wow. That was something. My family and I really enjoyed it. Having been to China so many times and getting to know so many people there, I am very happy for them. Welcome to the world stage. You did a great job last night and you know how to produce mega scale performance art.

So in the One Week That I Took Off From Blogging, We Learned That…

  • Chris Clark is feeling better and getting ready for training camp;
  • That David Steckel will be playing for the Caps for two more years at least;
  • That “On Frozen Blog” wanted to run marketing; merchandising sales and media management for the Washington Capitals;
  • That the weather and smog in China is pretty bad this time of year and would affect the Olympians as I predicted a year ago;
  • That more than 5,000 virtual movie theaters have been opened and operated by fellow filmanthropists working with SnagFilms. And – if you can believe it – more than 7 .5 million views of SnagFilms have happened in less than 30 days;
  • That the new Facebook design was a bit troubling for us;
  • That Gilbert Arenas wanted sharks for his home aquarium;
  • That the new Batman film really is great;
  • And that taking one week off from blogging can recharge the batteries. Welcome back.

Humbling but as Predicted

China has passed the US in internet users, more than a quarter of a billion people are on the net in China. I noted this day would come four years ago after my first trip to China. And China is growing at a fast clip while the US usage is slowing. Is there any field we can remain #1 in this new economy?

Bad Bad Karma

I have friends in China. They are working hard to help the people affected by the powerful earthquake that has killed tens of thousands of people and destroyed countless homes and lives. China is a powerful nation but it is made up of a billion individuals that are all trying to pull together for a common good over this natural disaster. People are suffering. This is a major human relief effort around a serious natural disaster. The last thing these volunteers need is a “has been” Hollywood starlet to be commenting on their efforts or the reason for the suffering of these families in need. This comment will kill her career in China and the international market is about the only place Sharon Stone still “sells”. I am not surprised at all by the Chinese reaction to her comments. Imagine if someone equated ”karma” to what happened to the people in New Orleans over Hurricane Katrina. Despicable.