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Sorry, I think I forgot to set my alarm

flickrpics2006.jpgFour months. That’s a hell of a long time for a site to go without a post. Good thing it’s only been three months and 28 days since I last updated this site. Whew. That was close. (And for those of you who have been checking this site periodically during the down time, yes I am still engaged and yes Ozzie is still really cute … and much bigger. I got several emails from people wondering if there was something wrong with their internet browsers — Dan, your site never seems to change. Mostly, though, they just wanted to know how Ozzie was doing.)

I don’t have a good excuse for the lack of recent activity on this space other than the truth: For a jobless man I’ve been exceptionally busy. Something had to get neglected. It ended up being this site. You can see the fruits of some of my labor over at Shanghaiist, which has grown dramatically since I last mentioned it here. We now get around 4,000 unique visitors a day, and numbers keep going up. An editor at one of Shanghai’s English-language magazines recently told me she considered Shanghaiist to be “a force” in the city. Although, to be fair, we were in a bar and it was loud — she could have easily said “a farce.”

Also, I have a pretty big feature on Shanghai coming out in the July/August issue of Budget Travel. That took up some time, not so much the writing part, but the research part. I had to recommend about 50 places/activities in around 2,500 words. The story is called “My Shanghai is Better than Yours” — their title, not mine — and I should be having a related “live” chat on MSNBC.com (Budget Travel is owned by Newsweek). I’ll keep you posted on the details.

Finally, I’ve been busy with another major project that I’m pretty excited about — unfortunately, I’m not at liberty to discuss it in detail right now. Give me a few weeks and I’ll tell you all about it.

In the meantime, why don’t you check out some of my photos that have piled up over the past quarter of a year. Here are some of my recent albums over at Flickr:

There is more, actually. But it will have to wait. I am typing on a PC that likes to shut down without any notice. I have learned to “save” often. Why am I on a PC? Well, we bought it through Taobao after my iBook broke. Then, a few weeks later, Bliss’ iBook broke. I have managed to go through two iBooks in about a month. Goddam logic boards.

Bliss and I will be in Miami and Savannah — yes, another vacation — next month and I’ll be buying one of these.

That’s not the only new technology I’ll be using next month. Expect some major changes to this website. I know I’ve said that before … but it’s for real this time.

Enough about me — how have you guys been doing?

05.25.2006, 4:41 PM · Diary, Photos · Comments (3)

Chinese New Year in Shanghai is crazy (see for yourself)

chinesenewyearshanghai2006.jpgChinese New Year in Shanghai. I have to imagine there is nothing quite like it in the world. It is loud, chaotic, beautiful, violent, smokey, exhilarating, drunken, dangerous and red. It is 2:59 a.m. and I can still hear fireworks in the distance. They started before dark Saturday evening and built to a riotous climax at midnight. We’re talking fireworks — not firecrackers[1] — the big, light-up-the-sky kind. And they are set off in every neighborhood, from almost every street corner, and often right in the middle of the street. Again, again and again. The city glows. It ignites. It howls and cackles. It is warlike in a way. It is a spectacle that begs to be experienced.

But, I understand that is not possible for all of you. So, I’ll try to give you a taste. We watched the madness from a great location, the rooftop of a tall apartment high-rise downtown. I won’t say the exact location, because the way we accessed the roof was a little … um … sketchy. But it was worth it. Here are two video clips, one from the bottom of the building, and one from the top:

View from the ground, 11:59 p.m. (10.9 MB)
View from above ground, 12:06 a.m. (7.6 MB)

I took several photos, too. And some of them were actually almost in focus. Actually, a couple ended up looking pretty cool:

Chinese New Year in Shanghai album at Flickr

Brad has some truly spectacular fireworks photos, too. They start right here.

Okay, I need to get some sleep. I’ve sobered up now, and I have a feeling the war is going to resume outside my window in a few hours. Each morning starts with a bang for the better part of week. Gotta love Spring Festival — or else it will drive you crazy.

Happy Year of the Dog, everyone!

Direct link to the photo above right here. No one was hurt during filming.

[1] But, yes, there are plenty of firecrackers, too.

01.29.2006, 2:57 AM · Diary, Photos, Video · Comments (5)

Soon, you too can compete in the Masters Cup!

andreagassishanghai.jpgI scored some sweet Masters Cup tickets on Monday thanks to Shamus — who always has a VIP ticket for something — and the friendly people at Haworth office furniture. The brand new Qi Zhong Stadium is nice, really nice, a proper stadium. It has air conditioning, which immediately makes it better than most of the sports arenas in China. You have to wonder, though — why is it almost in Anhui Province? OK, it’s just a 100 kuai cab ride from city center, but weren’t there some vacant plots of land or bulldozable neighborhoods, say, 20 minutes from the city instead of 50? It’s a hike. And what are they going to do with a tennis stadium the other 51 weeks out of the year?

Anyway, the building is worth seeing even if the tennis no longer is. I managed to see Andre Agassi’s only match before he joined Andy Roddick, Marat Safin, Lleyton Hewitt and Rafael Nadal and withdrew from the tournament. Really, the way he played, his exit from the tourney was only a matter of time. Nadal came out to court to apologize to the fans for not being able to compete due to a foot injury. He could of at least limped! So, now we are left with Roger Federer and these “masters”: Guillermo Coria, Nikolay Davydenko, Ivan Ljubicic, Gaston Gaudio, David Nalbandian, Mariano Puerta and Fernando Gonzalez. Half the field is from Argentina … not that there is anything wrong with that.

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11.16.2005, 5:38 PM · Photos, Sports · Comments (3)

7,000 photos moved from Gallery to Flickr … easily

danwashburnflickr.jpgIn preparation for the major redesign Frank has in store for Shanghai Diaries, we had to figure out a way to transfer all of the photos from our existing photo gallery to my space over at Flickr. Gallery is a fine app, but I just find Flickr much easier to use. And Flickr seems to be more adaptable, too — Frank’s already done some cool stuff with it over at Shanghaiist. We both like the community aspect of Flickr, as well.

Anyway, I figured the Gallery-to-Flickr switch would be a time-consuming nightmare. Actually, I expected I would have upload all my pre-Flickr photos — some 7,000 of them — from scratch using iPhoto. And I was dreading this, because many of the photos from early in my digital days are not very well, um, organized. Thankfully, Frank stumbled upon this page, where a guy offered up $200 to the first person who could solve the very same problem we were dealing with. Someone delivered, Frank installed the script, I started the transfer process before I went to bed one night … and next morning I had 7,598 photos in 69 photo sets (albums, tags and captions survive the transfer, as well) over at Flickr. For free. Pretty slick.

The one downside is that since these photos were tranferred from Gallery and not uploaded directly from iPhoto, they are small. For some reason, I only uploaded pics to Gallery at a 400 or 500 pixels max for height and width. Sorry.

If you’d like to check out my photos from the past three years, head to my Flickr page. Here are some direct links to some of my recent photo sets:

There are about sixty other photo sets that I don’t feel like typing in links for. They include all the photos from my 18-province trip through China and plenty of photos from outside of China: Cambodia, Georgia, Hawaii, Montana, New York, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C. and Wyoming. Check it all out here.

10.16.2005, 9:39 AM · Internet, Photos, Site News · Comments (1)

This National Day holiday I …

hakkaroundhousesfujian.jpg

10.09.2005, 4:53 PM · Bars, Culture, Diary, Food, Music, Observations, Photos, Sports, Television, Travel · Comments (2)

This post is not suitable for all audiences

chinesemaninflatablewoman.jpgYou haven’t truly “done Shanghai” until you’ve watched a frail 80-something-year-old Chinese man lean on his cane and inspect the brown-skinned selection of CyberHUSTLERs — a “throbbing, vibrating Cyberskin vagina and anus” — at the China International Adult Toys and Reproductive Health Exhibition at the Shanghai International Exhibition Center in Hongqiao. Because it felt like something that had to be done, I headed to the Sex Expo on Sunday, the final day of its three-day run in Shanghai. The convention was starting to wind down, and some booths had already been vacated, but I still had enough time to peruse what I assume to be the usual assortment of rubber body parts, pills, lingerie, whips, chains and frightening inflatable females. And really, once you’ve seen one She Shell Mini Clit Climaxer, Vibrating Anal Probe or Cock Cage with a Tickler Top, you’ve seen them all.

As expected, there were plenty of amusing signs and packages, like the naughty candy maker promoting its “forever lickable forms, the peckers and the nipples” and the woman on the cover of a Vibrating Vagina box who pleads, “Intromit me!!!”

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08.03.2005, 7:25 PM · Observations, Photos, Video

I knew I should have worn my Testaverde jersey

shanghaihiphop.jpgI was going to write something here about how I don’t get the whole Chinese hip-hop thing, how it’s a rather unoriginal way for Chinese youth to express their individuality, how it would be nice to see these kids clinging to something more Chinese, something that could grow in China organically, the way rap did in America in the 1970s. I was going to write all that — but then I realized to do so would be stupid and hypocritical. These kids have just as much right to their rap music — maybe more — as little white Danny Washburn did in lily-white Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania in the 1980s. And I listened to rap music. Lots of it. I hooked up my stereo to a TV cable and was able to get Power 99-FM from Philadelphia. So I knew about all the new rap and R&B before even the guys at the record store on Main Street. It made me feel special. I liked being different. Eric B and Rakim were some cool motherf**kers, and because Follow The Leader occupied my Walkman, so was I. What’s more absurd: And honor student in rural Pennsylvania listening to gangsta rap or city kids in China flashing gang signs for photos?

The kids I saw last night at the Shanghai Hiphop II Party at Club Fusion had the style down, alright. In fact, it looked as though the event was cosponsored by Champs Sports and IcedOutGear.com. (Actually, it was cosponsored by ShanghaiNing.com and Sony-BMG, which helped release the Shanghai Rap CD that Friday’s partygoers got for free.) Where can you get cool retro NBA jerseys in huge sizes in Shanghai? Ask this guy. And if you’re a Christian in need of some bling, this guy might be able to point you in the right direction. And what of the music? Hard to say. I couldn’t understand any of the lyrics, save for the odd “baby girl,” “check it,” “murder” or “word up.” Actually, most people in China wouldn’t have been able to understand the lyrics. They were in Shanghainese, which is cool, because the dialect is at risk — fewer and fewer young Shanghainese are learning it. The beats, however, were universal — and, often, very tired and familiar. The only thing original about the music was the language. But give these guys some time. It’s early yet. And hey, Shanghainese rap is already less annoying than Vanilla Ice.

Links:
42 of my photots from Friday night on Flickr
All Flickr photos tagged “shanghaihiphop”
My videos from the show on YouTube (Direct links to the three clips: Bamboo Crew, Super Rap Crew, Super Rap Crew slows it down)
Shanghai Rap page on ShanghaiNing.com, with downloadable songs
Shanghai blogger Josh reviews Shanghainese rap songs

More at Shanghaiist.

07.30.2005, 9:01 PM · Audio, Music, Observations, Photos, Video · Comments (3)

Luxury cars, pro golfers and dirty underwear

The nice thing about covering a professional golf tournament sponsored by BMW is that there’s always a chance you might catch a ride home in a BMW. That happened to me three times during the Asian Open, which concluded Monday — a day late because of rain — at Tomson Golf Club in Pudong.

On Sunday, I shared a 7 Series Sedan with a caddie and two golfers who were competing in the tournament … and I had no idea who they were. I didn’t want to ask — I thought that would be insulting. It would also have been a little embarrassing. I mean, I was wearing a media badge — I was writing about the freaking tournament — so you would think I should be able to recognize the competitors. But I couldn’t. You’d be surprised how little golf you actually watch when covering a golf tournament.

A little internet digging told me that the professional athlete seated directly in front of me in the passenger seat was Richard Sterne. The professional athlete to my left — seated on the hump seat — was Wade Ormsby. “I’ll sit in the middle,” he offered. “I’m small.”

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05.04.2005, 2:38 PM · Humor, Observations, Photos, Sports · Comments (1)

China’s top golfer demands more domestic support

Zhang: Playing for PRC an “ordeal”

Coverage of the BMW Asian Open, a professional golf tournament co-sanctioned by the European Tour and the Asian Tour. A version of this story appeared in the May 1, 2005 edition of the South China Morning Post (subscription only).

by DAN WASHBURN

SHANGHAI — China’s top-ranked golfer Zhang Lian Wei criticized his government and Chinese companies Saturday, delivering an emotional post-round press conference that elicited applause from members of the Chinese media covering the BMW Asian Open at Tomson Golf Club.

Zhang, who turns 40 on Monday, said he has never received any state funding during his historic 11-year career. He added that he has zero domestic sponsors.

“It’s such an ordeal playing golf in China over the years,” Zhang said, his voice cracking at times. “It’s tough, it’s difficult and it’s lonely. I know golf is not an Olympic sport, but I think the sports authorities should at least have shown some kind of support, like air tickets or something, to show their appreciation of my contributions to Chinese golf.”

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05.03.2005, 1:20 PM · Photos, Sports, Stories · Comments (2)

Els to fans: Put your phones on vibrate

Coverage of the BMW Asian Open, a professional golf tournament co-sanctioned by the European Tour and the Asian Tour. A version of this story appeared in the April 30, 2005 edition of the South China Morning Post (subscription only).

by DAN WASHBURN

SHANGHAI — There are, by the most recent count, some 330 million mobile phones in China, so it’s not too surprising that one of them happened to be five feet away from Ernie Els as he lined up a putt Friday during the second round of the BMW Asian Open at Tomson Golf Club in Shanghai.

Els was at hole No. 6 and, already at 13-under for the tournament, enjoying a rather commanding lead. He was putting from 10 feet for his third consecutive birdie, his fifth on the first six holes of the back nine.

And then that darn phone rang.

Els stopped his putt in mid-swing, turned around and smiled at the phone’s owner, a middle-aged Asian woman. Others weren’t so kind. Fans yelled at her in English and Mandarin. She managed to stop the ringing — and then the phone rang again.

“It happens a lot more over here,” said Els, the world No. 3. “It seems like everyone has a camera and everyone has a mobile phone that can also take pictures. Most of the time I take it in stride, but hopefully it doesn’t happen too often over the weekend, because it is a bit of a distraction. You want a bit of quiet over the ball.”

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05.03.2005, 12:20 PM · Photos, Sports, Stories

This post has absolutely nothing to do with Japan

It’s about soccer

Or footie, as the cool kids call it these days. Sunday evening, Cecil, Gavin, Marina and I headed over to Hongkou Stadium to watch some China Super League action. Shanghai Shenhua vs. Inter Shanghai, to be specific. This is called a derby. But it’s pronounced darby, I think. Now would be a good time to admit something: Living in Shanghai, I believe I have learned more British English than I have Chinese.

When I was around six years old, my mom bought me some new pajamas. The shirt had a picture of two guys playing soccer on it. And, since some 6-year-olds are stupid, it also had the word “SOCCER” printed in big bold letters. I threw a fit. Screaming. Crying. Why? Because I’m an American, Godammit! We hate soccer.

And then my family moved to England. The West Midlands. Sutton Coldfield. I attended the Penns Combined School — uniform required. Everything changed. I wore Adidas Sambas. I played Subuteo. I collected soccer sticker albums. I pulled for Aston Villa. I played soccer, excuse me, football — with a tennis ball, on blacktop — during recess. (I also played marbles, something called conkers … and got sent to the headmaster’s office because I somehow convinced a fellow second-grader to, inside our Ally McBeal-style co-ed bathroom, pull her knickers down. I still feel bad about that. Kind of.)

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04.27.2005, 1:22 AM · Observations, Photos, Sports, Video · Comments (2)

Tens of thousands take to the streets of Shanghai

Huge crowd has fun hating on Japan

Click here for photos of today’s anti-Japan march in Shanghai.

[UPDATE: Video clips of the march are here, here and here.]

So, I ended up going to Shanghai’s anti-Japan march this morning anyway. Going against the advice of a Chinese friend who told me the protest would be “very dangerous.” Going against the advice of the American government which warned U.S. citizens that China’s blanket hatred of all things Japanese could mutate into acts of violence toward all things foreign. I picked up the protest near People’s Square at around 9:30 a.m. expecting to see lines of Shanghai police, worrying slightly that my camera could get confiscated, not necessarily because it is a Japanese-made Canon — although that thought did cross my mind — but because I figured Shanghai authorities, desperately worried about the image of China’s most international city, would be doing everything in their power to limit the event’s exposure to the outside world.

Well, nothing of the sort happened. There were no lines of police. There were some, of course. But the majority of police that I saw today were smiling and laughing and marching along with the protesters. No one said a thing about my camera — not one of the police officers atop their Yamaha motorcycles, definitely not the Chinese student who wanted me to answer a question into his Sony video camera.

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04.16.2005, 3:50 PM · Observations, Photos, Politics, Video · Comments (100)

Your man in Yunnan

Everything you need to know or Everything I know or Everything I felt like typing

Mediocre things come to those who have no choice but to wait. I am talking about my most recent batch of photos from Xishuangbanna. Not that the month-and-a-half-old photos (all 117 of them) are bad — actually, I think some of them turned out pretty well — but the image quality of the versions I added to the photo gallery is a little subpar, in my opinion. The reason? I started to use this iPhoto plugin called iPhotoToGallery. It really does make the uploading process a lot easier, but the tradeoff is that your photos look like crap. Until they clean up the crap, I won’t be using it again. But I won’t be re-uploading anything, either — just don’t have time. Still, the photos should give you a good feel for ‘Banna, which, after two visits, is one of my favorite spots in China — because the place, not far from Burma and Laos, is like a vacation from China. A slice of Southeast Asia without having to go through an airport security check.

I don’t have time to the write the long, vivid travelog that a trip to Xishuangbanna warrants (my time is currently occupied by a longer, hopefully vivider[1] travelog), but I would like to leave you with a few brief Yunnan travel tips:

Tip one: Go to Yunnan. You will love it.

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04.12.2005, 9:50 PM · Observations, Photos, Site News, Travel

“Golly gee, I really think your phone is neato!”

Hmmmm. Can you tell which one is me? (Click on the photo for a closer look.)






And no, this is not an April Fools joke. [UPDATE: And now I have proof — the television version of the ad (1.54MB QuickTime movie file). Can’t Photoshop that.]






Special thanks to Even at Workhouse Film for hooking me up with a copy of the ad. [UPDATE: And special thanks to Hung at Washabi for providing the video.]

[UPDATE II: I totally forgot to direct you to the photos from the shoot for this ad. They start at the bottom of the page … after the photos of me with amazingly big, bad hair.]

04.01.2005, 6:39 PM · Humor, Photos, Video · Comments (13)

Guest Diary: Eleven airplanes and one bottle of bai jiu

I’ve known Brian Dominguez since the late 1970s, when we both were very tiny people. Since then, I have grown to be a normal-sized human being, and Brian … well … let’s just say that my girlfriend Bliss — 5-foot-2 and petite — outweighs him. Despite his stature, I still consider Brian one of my best friends in the world.

Brian and his wife Jill — actually two inches shorter than Bliss — spent 14 days in China starting on February 20. I traveled with them … and we went all over the damn place. Starting and finishing in Shanghai, we hit Beijing, The Great Wall, Kunming, Lijiang and Xishuangbanna. Brian and Jill brought some amazing weather with them. They also brought an amazingly huge medicine bag. Jill is somewhat of a hypo … a hypo … Jill is very careful when it comes to health. (My favorite items from the medicine bag: two sterile syringes and two sets of “sterile” chopsticks. Yes, they brought chopsticks to China. They didn’t use the chopsticks — but I ended up using one of the syringes. Thanks to a poor choice of socks, I had to pop some nasty blisters after a two-day hike in ‘Banna.)

Anyway, the purpose of this post was to welcome you to read Brian’s journal from the trip. Brian’s mom has described his collection of entries as “voluminous.” I’d say that’s accurate. There are also plenty of photos on that page, several of which were “borrowed” from yours truly. If you’d like to comment on anything in Brian’s Guest Diary, you can do so as a comment to this post. Brian’s site is not a blog.

03.24.2005, 7:45 PM · Guest Diaries, Photos · Comments (3)

Great Wall hike leaves me at a loss for words

A little more than two weeks ago, I hiked a five-mile stretch of the Great Wall, from Jinshanling to Simatai, with my friends Brian and Jill. And boy, it sure was great. It was rather cold and had been snowing and, in fact, our trip had been canceled twice by the friendly people at the Beijing Downtown Backpackers Accomodation due to inclement weather conditions. But after I explained to them that Brian and Jill traveled all the way from a small southern town called Atlanta just to see the Great Wall — and I think at that moment cute little Jill mustered up a tear or two — they relented and agreed to take us on a private trip … for the same price we would have paid had we gone with a group. I thought that was great of them. We paid 155 yuan per person, which included one entry ticket and round-trip transportation for the journey, which was 2.5 hours each way. I thought it was a great deal.

We pretty much had the wall to ourselves, which was great. The sky was great, clear and a perfect blue, which meant visibility, too, was great — we could see snow-covered mountains for miles. Just great. The locals who live near the wall are great. They’re willing to walk the wall with you, and they’ll even offer to sell you things — books, postcards, T-shirts and the like — along the way. They ensured us that their prices were great. (Actually, given the slippery conditions on the wall that day, it really was great to have some people familiar with the route along for the hike — someone had to catch Jill when she fell. If she would have gotten injured, it wouldn’t have been great.)

So, here they are. My 41 photos from the Jinshanling to Simatai hike of the Great Wall. I think that they are … um … hmmmm, what word could I use to describe these photos? … uh … I think these photos are OK.

Also, Brian and Jill will likely be using one of these Great Wall photos — one of the ones featuring them — as their 2005 Christmas card. If you could help them make their choice by commenting on the photo you like best … um yeah, that would be great.

03.13.2005, 9:49 PM · Diary, Observations, Photos, Travel · Comments (1)

It’s the Great Pumpkin (head), Chairman Mao

The first batch of Beijing photos is in the Gallery.

I generally don’t go out of my way to see dead bodies. In fact, over the course of my life, I have tried to limit my encounters with corpses as much as possible. I don’t attend viewings. And if a funeral happens to be open casket, I try my best not to look. So, I haven’t seen many dead bodies in my life. In fact, I only distinctly remember two — and they were both spied, on separate occasions, through windows of Shanghai taxi cabs. Unlucky bicyclists. Heavy heaps on black streets, glowing red and blue from the lights of a nearby police car. Dead bodies. Or at least very, very sleepy ones.

Thus, I have a hard time explaining my eagerness to see a dead Chairman Mao. Perhaps the impulse is fueled by the same deep down demons that, each and every day, lure me to read the latest developments in the Michael Jackson case. (He licked the kid’s head!) Regardless, on my second day in Beijing last month, I made a B-line for Mao’s big mausoleum in the middle of Tiananmen Square. Brian, Jill and I checked our bags and cameras and froze in line with dozens of others, followers and freak-show enthusiasts alike. And let me tell you, it was worth the price of admission.

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03.11.2005, 10:10 PM · Diary, Observations, Photos, Travel · Comments (2)

Traveling in China makes me sick

And, How do you do Shanghai in just two days?

I have a cold. Again. Pretty sure it’s the same one that joins me on all my travels through China. I’ve started saving him seats on buses and trains.

But I’m back in Shanghai now … for the forseeable future … finally. Since last July, I have spent a total of 60 days in Shanghai, the city that I’m supposed to call home. First there was The Trip. Then Hawaii. Then, and most recently, there was a manic two-week, seven airplane sprint through China with friends Brian and Jill, visiting from Atlanta.

I guess I’m still recovering from that one. But it was worth it. It was a rather spectacular two weeks, beginning with a snow-covered hike over a remote five-mile stretch of the Great Wall and ending with a dusty stroll through tiny villages and pineapple fields in sub-tropical Xishuangbanna. Brian and Jill saw more of China in two weeks than many China residents see in a year. Granted, it was the Cliff’s Notes version — but hey, Cliff’s Notes got me through college.

Over the next several days, I’ll take you on the trip via the comfort of your computer. No China germs. Just photos. I plan to upload a new batch every day until they’re all gone. I took more than 700 photos on the trip. Don’t worry — I’ll edit them down.

First, before things get really exciting, we start in Shanghai. A couple dozen pics that take you to the airport, my favorite old neighborhood and the usual places tourists go when they visit Shanghai and only have a day and a half: People’s Square, The Bund, Jin Mao Tower, Oriental Pearl Tower, Yu Yuan, Xiangyang Market … and a hell of a lot of shopping locales.

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03.09.2005, 12:35 AM · Diary, Observations, Photos · Comments (3)

I’m dreaming of a white … New Year’s Eve?

Decades ago, I’ve been told, snow actually wasn’t that uncommon a sight in Shanghai. But years of pollution have the city’s climate out of whack, so now the white stuff is a rarity. But yesterday afternoon and evening it came — the most snow I’ve seen in two years here. It was four days too late — and, to be fair, was only what would be considered a dusting back home — but it is the closest I’ll coming to walking in a winter wonderland in a city whose winters are often bitterly cold and maddeningly gray.

I snapped some photos of the wintry scene last night as I walked to my gym. I saw a city unprepared for snow: unshoveled sidewalks, a kid playing in a pile of snow with slippers on his feet, and someone else, in short sleeves, making a snowman with his bare hands. According to Shanghai Daily, yesterday’s snowfall was the first time Shanghai’s downtown neighborhoods had been “blanketed with the white stuff” in six years. I guess it depends on what your definitions of blanketed and downtown are. I took this photo last January in Zhabei District. Regardless, there is still snow visible from my window today — it really brightens the city up — and for the first time, it feels like the holidays for me here in Shanghai.

And with the holidays in mind, I must go. I’m being told I need to shave and shower — now — before heading out for the night. Gotta look my best for all those drunken photos. Speaking of which, watch your step tonight if you’ll be boozing it up in Shanghai. I have yet to see a snow shovel in this city — and all that snow has turned to ice.

Happy New Year!

Click here for photos.

Also … Speaking of white stuff, I reprised my recurring role of “White Man No. 1” earlier this week in a television commercial for a new NEC mobile phone that gets TV reception. I took some photos of the shoot. Sadly, there are no photos of “White Man” — too busy “working” — but I’m working on getting some.

12.31.2004, 6:37 PM · Photos · Comments (4)

Photos: Take a walking tour through Old Shanghai

I went on a meandering, self-guided, six-hour walking tour of Shanghai yesterday, paying special attention to the city’s old Western and East-meets-West architecture (or what’s left of it). I somehow managed to take 161 photos during the trek. And I have posted 67 of them in the Photo Gallery for your perusal.

Click and you will see domed Russian churches, the old estate of a newspaper magnate, an art deco hotel, and loads of longtang neighborhoods, shikumen archways, mops, doors and windows.

Enjoy.

threedoors.jpg

07.08.2004, 6:54 PM · Photos · Comments (2)

Photos: Hangzhou, Jesuits and Jazz

Marco Polo called it paradise, but I haven’t had much luck with Hangzhou. Not Hangzhou’s fault, really. It’s the rain. I’ve been to Hangzhou twice and it has rained both times, paradise shrouded in gray. But much of what I have seen through the mist I have liked. And what I saw Saturday made me glad that Hangzhou will be the first stop on The Trip, when it finally starts in the middle of this month.

I met up with my former student Arthur on Saturday. I’ll be staying with his family while in Hangzhou during The Trip. I told him about the relationship between rain and my visits to his hometown. He paused, thoughfully, and then responded:

“Very much like Wimbledon, I think.”

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07.05.2004, 11:53 PM · Photos · Comments (1)

Shanghai music scene gets mo’ better

It’s taken me a while, but I have finally found good live music in Shanghai. I’m going to have fun exploring the city’s resurgent jazz scene. It may not be indie-rock — my music of choice back in the States — but it still rocks, in its own way.

My girlfriend’s brother, A.J. Khaw, an accomplished jazz pianist living in Miami, is in town for a couple weeks. We didn’t have time to set up any gigs, and as it turns out we didn’t need to. One night earlier this week, we headed over to the Cotton Club and Club JZ — and A.J. ended up on stage in both places. Check out the photos.

I’ve also seen decent live shows at the House of Blues and Jazz, but the atmosphere there is a little too sterile for my taste. To properly enjoy jazz and blues, I believe, you need to be at a place where the smoke hangs in the air and your feet stick to the floor. And, ideally, sticking to your ribs would be some good Southern barbecue.

Not sure if the pulled-pork sandwich will ever make its way to Shanghai. But right now, the jazz music is enough for me.

07.02.2004, 7:15 PM · Music, Photos · Comments (2)

Tracking The Shark

click here to check out my photos from day two of the bmw asian open, a pga european tour golf tournament held this weekend at shanghai’s tomson golf club in pudong.

i followed the group that included greg norman (otherwise known as “the great white shark”) and zhang lian wei, arguably china’s top pro golfer. last year, he became the first chinese golfer to win a european tour tournament.

most of these photos were taken on the sly, as photography by fans is strongly frowned upon. and imported security personnel communicating through earpieces, looking like members of the aryan nation or perhaps extras from sprockets, loomed and chastised those who dared to disobey their directives.

camera nazis notwithstanding, i must say that, after several years spent covering sports for newspapers, i’m having fun just being a sports fan again. it no longer feels like work.

anyway, enjoy the photos.

05.15.2004, 2:54 PM · Photos, Sports · Comments (1)

mmmmmmm. georgia.

well, i’m back.

and i’m tired.

so feast on these georgia photos until i wake up.

it could be a while.

goodnight.

05.11.2004, 12:33 AM · Georgia 2004, Photos · Comments (2)

‘we just got hitched!’

click here for the first batch of photos from my current stay in the peach state.

this new album features more than 125 photos from brian and jill’s wedding weekend in albany, georgia.

and these pics will do nothing to disprove the notions that americans love shooting guns, getting drunk and making babies.

i’m in jesup now. heading back to atlanta later this afternoon. then it’s off to gainesville mid-week.

(note: you can leave comments on photos if you feel the urge. just click on the photo you’d like to comment on and then click the “add comment” link below the photo.)

05.05.2004, 1:43 AM · Georgia 2004, Photos

what happens in moganshan, stays in moganshan

well, it stays in moganshan until someone posts the photos online.

beer pong.

hiking.

dancing.

football.

flowers.

frogs.

moganshan.

check out the photos

04.21.2004, 2:51 AM · Moganshan, Photos

flying high for amoi

fresh from flirting pictures comes video footage of one of my latest cameos in a chinese television commercial. this one, for amoi electronics, was filmed back in january at shanghai’s wei sheng studios.

check it out here: amoi.mpg (warning: this file is around 15mb in size. it could take a while to load.)

photos of the shoot: click here

another ad i was in: adHIGH.mov (6mb)

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04.10.2004, 8:00 PM · Observations, Photos, Video

old building, cold beer

added some new photos here and here.

the first batch is of the mei long zhen restaurant on nanjing xi lu, a secluded and spectacular spot in one of the city’s busiest areas. the second batch of photos is of people drinking alcoholic beverages.

so, enjoy. but remember, beware THE CLAW!

04.10.2004, 7:57 PM · Photos

where the hell have i been?

in a cave? well, yes. but only part of the time.
NOTE: i added a couple hundred new photos the other day. follow the links found in the text below to see them.

you know it’s been a long time when you start getting text messages from your students telling you to update your website. so here you go, bonny.

over the past several weeks, i chose to concentrate on money-making ventures — you know, freelance writing and standing next to cars — instead of this website.

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03.11.2004, 1:06 AM · Guangxi, Movies, Observations, Photos, School, Sports · Comments (4)

new photos: flying and fireworks

happy new year.

and happy new year.

i owe you two of those, i believe. one for parts west. one for parts east. i’ve been incommunicado since way back in 2003 — no matter what calendar you go by. i am such a bad blogger.

but at least i carry a camera. and that’s what i’m here to tell you about today.

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01.26.2004, 3:25 AM · Photos, Site News · Comments (1)

who needs mistletoe and eggnog?

not my students, that’s for sure. they’ve got plenty of other ways to fill a christmas party. on christmas night, johnson and i headed to a student hangout called quickly at shanghai university’s baoshan campus. we were greeted by smiles, santa hats … and games galore.

click here for all the party photos.

i also attended a festivus party recently. although i forgot to take photos during the party, my camera got loose to capture some of the aftermath. and it wasn’t pretty. evidently, after the “airing of grievances” and the “feats of strength,” another festivus tradition is getting stupid drunk.

12.28.2003, 7:47 PM · Photos, School · Comments (3)

christmas eve in china (at an irish pub)

12.24.2003, 11:33 PM · Photos

specialization

12.24.2003, 11:32 PM · Humor, Photos · Comments (5)

cambodia :: photos :: the faces of cambodia

for all of dan’s cambodia photos, click here.

for all of dan’s cambodia photos, click here.

12.12.2003, 6:51 PM · Cambodia, Photos

photos!!!

halloween - 09.jpg
johnson and dan traded clothes for halloween.

click here for photos of a chinese halloween party at an “american” sports … cafe? i don’t know. that’s what they call it. anyway, you’ll get to see one of shanghai’s scariest cab drivers — and that’s saying a lot.

other photos added recently:

* city scenes: including the long lost cricket fighting photos!

* campus life: i just can’t walk past those fish without taking a photo! johnson wears a shirt that says “latino” to my class!

enjoy!

(i’m going to go fix the exclamation mark button on my keyboard! seems to be sticking!)

11.06.2003, 12:49 AM · Photos · Comments (4)

finally


photo: shannon shue
click here for photos from xinjiang. they’re not all from me this time. five jarring days on the back of a horse didn’t agree with my digital camera. actually not even two days did. my camera now rattles when i shake it. thankfully, several other cameras also made the trip. and sometimes i was even allowed to borrow them. the photos end after page 27. more could still be added.

(if you care, my camera is currently in the shop right now. this explains the dearth of new photos here recently.)

later this week, i will begin posting my xinjiang travelog. i plan to do this day-by-day, diary style. lots of stories to tell. xinjiang is — um, well — different.

11.03.2003, 12:51 AM · Photos, Xinjiang · Comments (1)

muslims, raisins and knives … oh my!

yes, i’m back from xinjiang. yes, it was a great trip. yes, i will write about it soon. yes, i will post photos soon, too.

but i’m suffering from a cold and a slow internet connection. i hope to have both problems remedied by mid-week.

until then, please enjoy this sampling of photos i culled from the hundreds i still need to sort all the way through.

oh, if you were wondering, the name “good cheap tent” only proved to be two-thirds correct.

10.14.2003, 12:29 AM · Photos, Xinjiang · Comments (2)

u.s. tour complete!

the final installment of pennsylvania photos takes you in and around philadelphia, the city of brotherly love. and fittingly, it starts off with photos of my college friends — brothers, of sorts — getting really, really drunk. and then you’ll see all that historic crap … and chinatown, of course. click here

then we head to montana — big sky country — where the big sky was full of smoke and my longtime friend justin married laura, who, by the way, hails from mongolia. (they met at montana state university, where they both are getting doctorate degrees in subjects far too complicated for normal folk like me.) expect to see lots of drunk people — do you see a trend? — and horses and mountains and bison and elk. took a side trip to yellowstone and the grand tetons. click here

for all of my not china photos, click here.

09.14.2003, 11:35 AM · Photos, Summer Tour 2003 · Comments (1)

new york stories

“excuse me. could you please tell me how to get to chinatown from here,” i asked the young waiter at the italian restaurant.

“just walk that way,” he replied, pointing down a soho street. “um …”

he paused, and looked slightly troubled by what he was about to say.

” … keep going until you start to see lots of, um, chinese people. you’ll know when you are there.”

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09.10.2003, 10:08 PM · Photos, Summer Tour 2003, Video

tooth pic

“we’d like to thank yao ming for loaning us his teeth for today’s demonstration.”

submit your caption! click the comments link below.

09.07.2003, 9:28 PM · Humor, Photos · Comments (1)

yeah, it’s got a hemi

click here for the first installment of pennsylvania photos, featuring, in order of appearance, hirefrank.com, audrey, a lady with a microphone, sam, ansley, a guy with bad jokes, big ass trucks, lots of people hanging out in, on, in front of and — more commonly — underneath big ass trucks, fat kids in an inflatable truck, fat kids in an inflatable pool, a fat guy who probably isn’t a professional, one very lucky chocolate-covered banana, a smelly baby and some crazy guys on big bad bulls.

07.24.2003, 2:03 AM · Photos, Summer Tour 2003

it’s real good

good friends. good food. kick-ass southern rock. big-ass tattoos. a newpaper-reading cow. and a statue of a confederate soldier who is really a rough rider from the spanish-american war.

what more could a person ask for from four days in georgia?

click here and you will see:

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07.21.2003, 1:25 AM · Audio, Music, Photos, Summer Tour 2003 · Comments (2)

dc talk

so i’m sitting here watching late night television … again. on leno, i saw sir sean connery shake hands with a rapper who goes by the name chingy. surreal. (and no, i don’t watch leno, but sometimes suffer through five minutes of his lame schtick while waiting for conan to come on.) and now on elimidate, some ass clown just uttered this classic: “when they found out i was a fireman, their panties burned off them.” if you’re living in china right now, this is the kind of sublime crap that you’re missing on american tv.

but that’s not what i’m writing to tell you about. i’m writing to tell you to look at the 39 photos i uploaded from my recent visit to my nation’s capital. click here and you will see:

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07.18.2003, 4:09 PM · Photos, Summer Tour 2003, Television

i’m still alive

finally uploaded the final 126 photos from hawaii. i’m home now, back in beautiful bloomsburg, pa. i’ve got lots more photos — from georgia, d.c. and the monster truck festival right here in bloom — that i hope to get to this week, as well. i’d also like to start writing again. it’s on my list of things to do, right behind mowing the lawn, taking out the garbage and washing the dishes. oh, it’s good to be home.

click here to see the new photos.

07.17.2003, 6:29 AM · Photos, Summer Tour 2003

aloha … again!

uploaded 44 new photos from hawaii, including my visit to the very politically incorrect island known as chinaman’s hat (pictured). asian person’s head piece just doesn’t roll off the tongue as easily, does it? waded across the pacific and climbed all the way to the island’s peak in search of those words i promised you in my last post … but i came up empty. going snorkeling at hanauma bay today — i’ll let you know if any words float by with the fish. click here to see the new photos.

06.19.2003, 6:35 PM · Photos, Summer Tour 2003

aloha!

for the first installment of photos from hawaii, click here. i will try to add some words to accompany the images soon … but right now i’d rather go back to the beach.

06.17.2003, 5:54 AM · Photos, Summer Tour 2003 · Comments (1)

fountain power

This lady is going to keep her arm raised until you write a caption for this photo! Don’t make her suffer — click on the comments link below and let your creativity flow.

05.29.2003, 8:53 AM · Humor, Photos · Comments (9)

taxi driver: “no psychos”

taxi450.jpg
make this photo your desktop image!

Dazhong Taxi Co., Shanghai

Passenger Notice

Rule No. 2: “Passengers are not allowed to carry with them any contraband goods, smoke, spit, or to dump inside taxis. Psychos or drunkards without guardians are prohibited to take taxis. Be sure to check your belongings when you get off.”

Standard Service Process

“A. Pasengers get on — ask for the destination — choose the roads — open the taxi meter
B. Reach the destination — pause — quote — print
C. Settle the taxi fare — declare the amount received from the passenger — give back change — give receipt
D. Passengers get off — remind — check — say goodbye”


Click here to hear the recorded voice you hear when you enter a Jinjiang taxi — the nice white ones — in Shanghai. The English part starts after 16 seconds and says: "Hello passenge. Welcome to take Jinjiang taxi. We will provide service for you with all my heart. Our call number is 62155555 (inaudible). Wish you have a pleasant journey."

03.21.2003, 5:37 PM · Audio, Humor, Photos

blue eyes, not black

Just to clear up some confusion: I am not the poor bloke with a black eye in one of this site’s former featured photos. That is my friend Glen. I was the photographer.

To see the photo click here.

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03.07.2003, 1:59 AM · Photos · Comments (5)

merry christmas! (to you and you)

12.25.2002, 1:39 PM · Humor, Photos · Comments (1)

About

Shanghai Diaries is a website about Shanghai, China ... and lots of other stuff. Voted Best Mainland China Blog in the 2004 Asia Blog Awards.

Editor: Dan Washburn

Related: Shanghaiist and Mudan Boutique

Dan is a freelance writer living in Shanghai. More about Dan.

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