Chinese Olympics, pole aerobics and fish pedicurists
The Beijing Olympics are in the center of the world's attention, exemplifying what the Chinese leadership has deemed the "peaceful rise". We take a quick look at smaller consumerist happenings in and from China.
There is no question that the "peaceful rise" doctrine is mostly a PR exercise. But although there are significant nationalist overtones, there can be no question that China occupies a much smaller role than it could, especially when compared to the mighty US of A, which is being left behind, as China will very soon surpass it as the world's foremost manufacturing power.
For years, China has been mocked for the decrepitude of its leadership, as they used to have some of the oldest leaders in the world. Yet these leaders managed to steer it on an ascending course. By contrast, the American leadership post Clinton has been intensely polarizing and has set the country up for what some see as the steepest decline in a very long time, if not ever. Bush has undoubtedly attracted far more attention from late night comedy shows than the Chinese leaders could ever hope to see. We'll try to correct this oversight by looking at some recent Chinese trends.
(1) Pole Aerobics
One recent meme that is catching on in China is pole aerobics. China does not have as many strip clubs as North America, and as such, these aerobics come without the negative conotations.
Xiao, 26, who works as a supermarket manager, is one of a growing number of women experimenting with China's newest, and most controversial, fitness activity: pole dancing. "I used to take a normal aerobics class, but it was boring and monotonous," Xiao said. "So I tried out pole dancing. It's a really social activity. I've met a lot of girls here who I'm now close friends with. And I like that it makes me feel sexy."
The woman who brought this to China, Luo Lan, has parents in the academia and struggled with more than 20 jobs before starting this school. Some think that this meme is emblematic for transformations happening in the Chinese society.
(2) Fish Pedicures
Another new trend, this time brought by a Chinese family business to the USA, involves getting rid of dead skin using garra rufa, a special kind of fish. This treatment was first used in Turkey and from there was adopted in several Asian countries.
Ho said the hot water in which the fish thrive doesn't support much plant or aquatic life, so they learned to feed on whatever food sources were available — including dead, flaking skin. They leave live skin alone because, without teeth, they can't bite it off.
Ho, the owner, hopes to start an American franchise for his idea.
(3) China manipulates weather
Those who played Red Alert 2, might recall some of the superweapons of that real-time strategy (RTS) game, including the ability to cause a devasting storm over the opponent's base, equal in destructive power with a nuclear attack. That ability was equivalent to a strange premonition, as other "features" of that game transgressed reality as well. And yet, although weather manipulation was given to the Western Allies in the game, it seems that it's being used the most by the former communist countries. According to Xinhua, China used it for the Games' Opening:We fired a total of 1,104 rain dispersal rockets from 21 sites in the city between 4 p.m. and 11:39 p.m. on Friday, which successfully intercepted a stretch of rain belt from moving towards the stadium,' said Guo Hu, head of the Beijing Municipal Meteorological Bureau (BMB). While there wasn't a single drop of rain over the National Stadium — also known as the Bird's Nest — during the opening ceremony from 8:00pm-12:00am on August 8, the weather services said that Baoding City of Hebei Province, to the southwest of Beijing, received the biggest rainfall of 100 millimeters Friday night, and Beijing's Fangshan District recorded a rainfall of 25 millimeters.
Weather manipulation was previously in the news when Russia used it for its own purposes. Pravda.ru stated a while back:
More recently, a homeowner decided to sue the government when an unexploded bag of cement fell through his roof, nearly demolishing his property.
(4) Olympic condoms
The best ads on Chinese TV promote these days the swimming suit that made so many records fell, but also yet another marker of a new era: condoms. Here is a slideshow of these ads:And really, who can resist Elasun (the condom maker)'s slogan: "Sports make you health"?!?
Sources
1. http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/07/25/asia/25pole.php2. http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/07/21/america/NA-US-Fish-Pedicures.php
3. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-08/09/content_9079637.htm http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/94/379/15693_weather.html
4. http://inventorspot.com/articles/cheeky_olympic_condoms_16765
5. Photos: first by Getty, second by Reuters
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