This is how you lose a major tech company.

Dear Access member,
Weโve got four items for you at the top, and our roundup of the week as well as a summary of todayโs other news below.
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Have a great weekend!
โJeremy
1. Micron: This is how you lose a major tech company.
Paul Mozur of the New York Times tells a dramatic tale (paywall) of employees at a chip-making company in Taiwan scrambling to get rid of USB drives, laptops, and documents before a police raid, or as he put it on Twitter:
This is how you lose a major tech company. First, a Beijing-backed buyout offer. Then friendly Chinese partnership proposals. Then the tech gets stolen. Then when you file a complaint in court, you get hit with investigations in China, your biggest market.
Micron Technology, Inc. is based in Boise, Idaho, and makes semiconductor devices, including dynamic random-access memory, flash memory, and solid-state drives. The Times article says:
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Micron rejected a $23 billion takeover offer from a state-controlled Chinese company in 2015 (paywall). Today, it faces a lawsuit and an investigation in China, which accounts for about half its $20 billion in annual sales.
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After it rejected the offer, Micron โwas the target of the heist in Taiwan, according to officials there and a lawsuit the company has brought against the Taiwanese company that employed the engineers, UMC, and the Chinese company it says wanted access to the technology, Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit Company.โ
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Micronโs lawsuit says the state-backed Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit decided to build a $5.7 billion factory in Fujian Province, and two years ago, โtapped UMC, a Taiwanese company, to help it develop technology for the factory.โ But instead of developing the tech themselves, Micron alleges the company stole it.
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โUMC lured away engineers from Micronโs Taiwan operations with promises of raises and bonuses, according to the Taiwanese authorities.โ The ones who agreed were asked to take Micron intellectual property with them.
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The thieves did a poor job covering up their tracks: Micron โgrew suspicious, according to its court documents, after discovering that one of its departing engineers had turned to Google for instructions on how to wipe a company laptop,โ and then at a recruiting event in the U.S. where Jinhua and UMC were trying to recruit Micron staff, using โPowerPoint slides that used Micronโs internal code names.โ
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Other companies โmay face predicaments similar to Micronโsโ โ the Times cites a ย chip produced by state-owned Yangtze Memory Technology Company (YMTC), which one analyst said โis virtually identical to Samsungโs, which makes it pretty clear theyโve been copying.โ
2. Hainan follies: Quickly censor the news about the uncensored internet!
After reports in April of a new type of free trade zone on Hainan Island, and possibly even legal gambling, on June 6, the Hainan provincial government published a โthree-year action plan to promote the internationalization level of Hainan’s tourismโ (ๆๅๆตทๅๆ ๆธธๅฝ้ ๅๆฐดๅนณไธๅนด่กๅจ่ฎกๅ tรญshฤng hวinรกn lวyรณu guรณjรฌhuร shuวpรญng sฤnniรกn xรญngdรฒng jรฌhuร ).
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The plan aims to increase tourist arrivals by 25 percent annually to at least 2 million by 2020. The target number of inbound international flights is 70 by the end of this year, 85 by the end of 2019, and 100 in 2020.
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50,000 foreign service workers will be needed to enhance the tourism industry, and the provincial government will maximize use of Hainanese locals who have studied abroad. The citizens of 59 countries will be able to visit Hainan without a visa, and other enticements for foreign visitors and investors are mentioned. There are also incentives for foreign investment in tourism-related sectors.
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Advertising on international TV networks is part of the plan: The BBC, CNN, and CNBC are named, as Hainan will also promote itself on social media platforms, including Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, and YouTube, all of which are, of course, blocked in China.
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The plan calls for the establishment of zones where โforeigners can get regular access to foreign popular social media platforms Facebook, Twitter, and YouTubeโ (ๅคๅฝไบบๅฏๆญฃๅธธไฝฟ็จๅฝๅคๆต่ก็็คพไบคๅชไฝ่ธ่ฐฑFacebookใๆจ็นTwitterใไผ้YouTube wร iguรณrรฉn kฤ zhรจngchรกng shวyรฒng guรณwร i liรบxรญng de shรจjiฤo mรฉitว liวnpว, tuฤซtรจ, yลutรบ).
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Hereโs where the story takes a hilarious turn: Today, various media, apparently led by state-owned but feisty The Paper, reported on the plan, highlighting the clause about access to foreign social media.
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โThe plan though quickly faced some criticism on Chinese social media,โ reports Reuters, quoting a Weibo user, who uses the handle โlate night catโ: โThis is an entirely blatant, contemptible, imprudent, low behavior of reverse racism. This is garbage!โ
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By 8 p.m. Beijing time, the Hainan provincial government had removed the plan from its website, and stories on it by media such as The Paper had all been deleted. You can still find them on Googleโs cache: Hainan government plan, The Paper story.
โSeparately, the provincial government in May unveiled its โ100-Day Campaign to Attract Businesses,โ in which it identified a series of A-list names and organizations in the corporate world it plans to talk to,โ including Warren Buffett, โU.S. media giant Time Warner, storied British public school Eton College, South Koreaโs Samsung and global law firm Baker & McKenzie.โ Thatโs from the South China Morning Postโs story on the deleted Hainan government report.
3. Erasure of non-standard Mandarin in Shanghai
Tianyu M. Fang reports for The China Project that the word waipo (ๅคๅฉ wร ipรณ; maternal grandmother) is under attack in Shanghai.
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The state-owned Shanghai Education Publishing House erased the term from a second-grade textbook, and replaced it with the term laolao (lวolao ๅงฅๅงฅ), which has the same meaning but is more commonly used in northern China โ *ahem,* where Beijing is located.
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Waipo is widely used in southern China, including Shanghai, but Beijing has sought to promote โstandard Mandarinโ (ๆฎ้่ฏ pวtลnghuร ) since its introduction in 1955, to the detriment of local linguistic cultures.
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More than 100,000 people read this WeChat article (in Chinese), which originally ย exposed the change.
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โThis kind of change is a form of cultural hegemony,โ a popular Hong Kong journalist named Luwei Rose Luqiu wrote on Weibo (in Chinese).
Read more about the case on The China Project.
4. Will Chinaโs dodgy internet detox clinics benefit from WHOโs decision?
Gaming addiction is now officially classified as a mental health condition by the World Health Organization (WHO). This is good news for Chinaโs many digital detox camps, which have called internet addiction a disease for years. Some of these camps rely on abusive treatments to โcureโ their โpatients.โ
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In the draft version of the 11th International Classification of Diseases (ICD) released by the WHO on Monday, โgaming disorderโ โ an addiction to playing video games โ is, for the first time, formally recognized as a mental health issue by the agency, classified together with gambling under โdisorders due to addictive behaviorsโ and characterized by behavior like โcontinuation or escalation of gaming despite the occurrence of negative consequences.โ
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Many Chinese parents have long been convinced that excessive gaming is an actual disease. Seeing a lucrative opportunity in these parentsโ fear and panic over video games, internet addiction “boot campsโ began to proliferate in China a few years ago.
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Usually without clinical qualifications, these camps reinforce the โgaming addiction is a mental disorderโ argument and use controversial methods to correct the behavior of their โpatients.โ As exposed by a wide range of news publications, some of these facilities treat teens with electroshock therapy and other forms of physical punishment.
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In 2017, an 18-year-old teenager died days after he was sent to an internet detox facility in Anhui Province (see BBC report). While the incident prompted the central government to draft a law to crack down on such abuses, similar institutions can still be found across China.
With the WHOโs decision, these camps will be more appealing than ever to parents worrying about their childrenโs obsession with video games. โWe need to make sure that gaming addiction is becoming a condition that will encourage people to pay more attention to mental health, rather than give these camps opportunities to flourish again,โ the Beijing News warned in a commentary (in Chinese).
โJiayun Feng
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Our whole team really appreciates your support as Access members. Please chat with us on our Slack channel or contact me anytime at jeremy@thechinaproject.com.
โJeremy Goldkorn, Editor-in-Chief
Here are the stories that caught our eye this week:
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Tit-for-tat tariffs went into effect in the trade war that was โignitedโ a week ago, escalating after the U.S. imposed $50 billion in tariffs on June 15 and China quickly retaliated in kind. Along with a proportional tariff response, the Peopleโs Daily declared that it had lost all faith in the โrude and unreasonable, selfish and headstrongโ Trump administration.
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Donald Trump then prepared to go all in on his tariff-first strategy, announcing on June 18 that he was preparing $200 billion in additional taxes, followed by another $200 billion after that if China did not back down. China promised โqualitative measuresโ in response โ i.e., harassment of American firms, restriction of American tourism in China, or even boycotts of American goods โ as China does not import enough from the U.S. to equivalently tax even $250 billion in goods, let alone $450 billion.
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The trade war did not stop Google from investing half a billion in Chinaโs second largest ecommerce firm, JD.com, one of the largest moves yet in China by the Silicon Valley giant, which has maintained a low profile there since 2010.
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Kim Jong-un made his third trip to China in three months, furthering his Trump-aided transformation from a reclusive and isolated leader to an important player on the world stage. China has apparently become more comfortable with its relationship with the North, announcing the visit as it happened and loosening some sanctions in recent weeks, though Beijing remains worried that North Korea-U.S. communication could weaken the Northโs loyalty to itself.
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Xi Jinping offered economic know-how to Kim, who inspected the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences โ an institution responsible for many of the important aspects of Chinaโs own economic reform decades ago โ on June 20. Analysts are divided on whether there is a sincere desire in the North for economic reform, but if it were to happen, China would be the source of much of the necessary money and knowledge. Some observers interpreted the presence of Premier Pak Pong-ju, the top economic official in North Korea, as a sign that Kim is seriously interested in working with Xi.
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Jiangxi Province put restrictions on abortion, requiring that all women who wish to have one after 14 weeks of pregnancy jump through regulatory hoops. The regulation is targeted at preventing gender imbalance at birth, but many on Chinaโs internet saw the move as oppressive to women or an excuse to not address the provinceโs rampant gender discrimination after birth.
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Chinese healthcare companies could quickly become behemoths, as the government has cut red tape, and venture capital investment in the sector has exploded from $1 billion in 2013 to $11.7 billion in 2017, according to McKinsey & Co.
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Australia-China relations sunk to new lows, as Beijing delayed wine imports from its once-friendly Pacific trading partner. Beijing and Canberra are at odds over media coverage โ China is apparently upset that Australia canโt just censor criticism of it in the media โ in addition to having grievances over attacks on Chinese living in Australia, and an expected Australian ban on Huawei participating in the countryโs 5G mobile phone network.
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Chinese state media celebrated after the U.S. withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council, furthering a globally popular narrative that the U.S. is abdicating world leadership and China is seeking to fill it in some fashion.
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Cambodiaโs client state relationship to China was nearly completed this week, when Cambodian officials asked China for more than $100 million in military gear, and China obliged.
โLucas Niewenhuis
BUSINESS AND TECHNOLOGY:
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Stock market wobbles
Asian stocks end ugly week with China on the edge of a bear market / WSJ (paywall)
โChinaโs Shanghai Composite Index dropped 0.2%, recovering slightly after steeper losses in early trading.โ
China takes an edge in stocks to a trade war / Bloomberg (paywall)
Chinese stocks are flirting with bear market territory as trade worries fester / CNBC -
American business in China
Which American CEOs did Xi Jinping meet in Beijing? UPS, Pfizer, Goldman all on the list / SCMP
โAmerican executives from the likes of UPS, Pfizer, Cargill, Prologis and Goldman Sachs were at a gathering in Beijing when President Xi Jinping called for multinationals to help fight โprotectionismโ and told them China would remain open for business, according to images in state media reports and on social media.โ -
Why gamers are up in arms over Steamโs China deal
Gaming platform Steam rolls into China / Magpie Digest
The Chinese gaming community has reacted extremely negatively to the news of the game Steamโs official release in China, because it will partner with a local company over which the government will have much more control. -
Education companies
VIPKID valued at RMB 20 billion after its $500 million Series D+ / TechNode
โChinaโs largest K-12 online education startup VIPKID announced that it has completed its Series D+ round of financing, raising a staggering $500 million โ by far the largest round ever secured in the online education sectorโฆ The investment has bumped VIPKIDโs valuation up to RMB 20 billion [$3.07 billion].โ -
Drone police
Changchun law enforcement use drones for city management / TechNode
โGovernment officials from Chaoyang District in Jilinโs Changchun City established its Drone Law Enforcement Unit (ๆ ไบบๆบๆงๆณไธญ้) in May, with the new division actively taking on city management duties. Drones with cameras are connected via a smart remote operation system equipped with an iPad-like screen. Trained law enforcement officers control the drones to patrol, monitor, and investigate areas where human forces are unable to access.โ -
Gray rhinos ?
China confirms it transferred ownership of Anbang Insurance to government / WSJ (paywall)
โThe China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission has approved the transfer of 98.23% of Anbang to China Insurance Security Fund, according to a statement Friday from the regulator.โ -
Xiaomi
For Xiaomi, simultaneous listings may have been too much / Caixin (paywall)
โSmartphone-maker Xiaomiโs decision to put off its much-anticipated issuance of Chinese depositary receipts (CDRs) is likely due to concerns that the securities would have been subject to too much volatility if they had started trading at the same time as the companyโs initial public offering (IPO) in Hong Kong.โ -
On-demand bike industry
Bike-sharing growth hits the brakes / Caixin (paywall)
โAfter experiencing a massive boom in 2017, Chinaโs bike-sharing market is expected to shift into a slower lane this year, a report said.โ
POLITICS AND CURRENT AFFAIRS:
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Threats and perceived threats from China
U.S. military source: Suspected Chinese lasers targeting US aircraft over the Pacific / CNN
โChina’s Ministry of National Defense dismissed media reports concerning the recent incidents, according to a piece published in the Chinese state-run Global Times tabloid.โ
American military aircraft targeted by lasers in Pacific Ocean, U.S. officials say / WSJ (paywall)
โOfficials said all the incidents occurred in and around the East China Sea, typically where the Chinese military or other Chinese civilians operate.โ
Feds: Man smuggled anti-submarine warfare devices to China / AP
China escalates hacks against the U.S. as trade tensions rise / Wired
โIn 2015, the United States and China agreed to a digital truce that banned hacking private companies to steal trade secrets…. Attacks in the last few months originating from China have also targeted U.S. satellite and geospatial imaging firms, and an array of telecoms.โ
Axios-SurveyMonkey poll: Americans fear China more as North Korea fades / Axios-
62% of Americans are concerned by China’s economic power, 51% by China’s technological advancement, and 35% by its military strength.
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38% of Americans think Trump’s trade war with China will be good for jobs, and 58% think it will hurt jobs.
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Among Republicans: 71% think good for jobs, 26% think bad for jobs; Democrats: 11% and 87%; Independents: 32% and 66%.
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Beijing interference with Australian media
The story China went to furious lengths to stop from airing / News.com.au
โOn the line was Ms. Saxian Cao, the Head of Media Affairs at the Chinese Embassy in Canberra, and she was laying into the programโs Executive Producer Kirsty Thomson. โYou will listen! There must be no more misconduct in the future!โ Ms. Cao reportedly shouted into the phone.โ -
American vs. Chinese leadership
Opinion, by William Nee: With the U.S. gone, the world must keep an eye on Chinaโs human rights / Inkstone
Online polls show 97pc of Chinese reject accepting refugees / Asian Correspondent
โThe poll, which began circulating on World Refugee Day Wednesday on the local social media platform Weibo, found that 97.7 of almost 9,000 respondents said they are opposed to China resettling foreign refugees, state newspaper the Global Times reported.โ -
Hong Kong urban planning
Dozens of blocks in Kowloon City neighborhood targeted for redevelopment in latest Hong Kong urban renewal push / SCMP -
Taiwanese diplomacy
Taiwan leader Tsai Ing-wen tells visiting U.S. scholars Beijingโs โbullyingโ is to blame for tensions / SCMP
โDuring a meeting at her office with scholars from a Washington-based think tank led by Richard Bush, a former unofficial U.S. envoy to Taiwan, Tsai said nonstop suppression from the mainland had only pushed Taipei to work more closely with the United States.โ Meanwhile, Taiwan Dailyโs top story today (in Chinese) is about former president Li Teng-hui ๆ็ป่ผ visiting Okinawa, and says a possible meeting between Li and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is โattracting attention.โ -
Frowning at India
Mamata cancels China trip as ‘political meetings at appropriate level’ not confirmed / Times of India
โTill yesterday, everything was going on well, but unfortunately the Chinese side could not confirm the political meetings at appropriate level as informed by our Ambassador in China.โ
SOCIETY AND CULTURE:
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Animated film
Hong Kong sci-fi film mixes robots and Chinese opera / BBC
โFeaturing flying warrior robots and guitar-toting opera singers, Hong Kong animation Dragon’s Delusion aims to break stereotypes of Chinese culture.โ -
LGBT
Coming out to my parents in China by video / NYT (paywall)
A young Chinese women in New York recorded a FaceTime call with her parents back in China as she revealed to them that she is queer. The accompanying article notes that โestimates show that only 5 percent of Chinaโs gay community is fully out.โ -
Archaeology
Long-extinct gibbon found inside tomb of Chinese emperor’s grandmother / NPR
โThe northern white-cheeked gibbon is a critically endangered ape native to China, Vietnam and Laos…. Scientists have discovered a new species of gibbon, now extinct, that lived in China as recently as 2,200 years ago.โ -
Football World Cup
The many faces of Chinaโs soccer fanatics / Sixth Tone -
China coverage language debates
Op-Ed: Your use of โnetizenโ hurts responsible China coverage / Whatโs on Weibo -
Censors battle against ASMR
Why China has banned videos of people whispering / Guardian
โShort for โautonomous sensory meridian response,โ ASMR was first used online in 2010, and describes the tingling, relaxing or sleep-inducing feeling that some people get when theyโre watching videos. Suspicious of ASMR and its effects, the Chinese government has decided to ban the phenomenon, ordering the removal of ASMR videos from their biggest video-streaming sites, including Youku, Bilibili, and Douyu.โ
VIDEO OF THE DAY
What is China watching? This week: A 66-foot-long sticky rice dumpling, the worldโs longest glass circular bridge, firefighting drones and robots, and a celebration of International Day of Yoga. What more could you ask for?
ON SUPCHINA
Chinese Corner: Secrets of a female Go champion, and making money from online subcultures, or not
The China Projectโs Jiayun Feng writes a weekly column on what Chinaโs reading each week. In this roundup: Subcultures and the survival of minority interest websites, some questionable notions about womenโs ability to think analytically, โnew gay iconโ Wang Ju, and nostalgia for the simpler times of the 1980s.
China Sports Column: World Cup drawing nearly 100 million prime-time viewers in China
Chinaโs national soccer team remains a disappointment, but the long-suffering fans have more than delivered during this World Cup so far, despite a viewing schedule thatโs about to get a bit worse. Just a little under 100 million viewers tuned in to at least a portion of the 8 p.m. game between Portugal and Morocco on June 20.
The China Project News Quiz, June 16โ22: China turns on Trump, and other news from Dragon Boat Festival week
What’s up in China? Test your knowledge of the news with this fun eight-question quiz, and then tweet your score to @supchinanews! Check back every Friday for a new challenge.
The Peopleโs Republic of Chai-Na
In the campaign to turn Beijing into a โhigh-levelโ international city, the Chinese government is determined to finally stamp out any and all manner of informal settlements, whether they are inhabited by artists or by migrant workers. How do artists in Beijing cope with the inevitability of eviction and demolition?
China Unsolved: Who poisoned Zhu Ling?
A talented student, a mystery illness, an obvious suspect. Decades later, the notorious case of the poisoning of Zhu Ling โ and the accusations against Sun Wei โ still refuses to die.
Japan’s World Cup win was โAsia’s victory,โ says Chinese newspaper
Japan made history on Tuesday when it defeated Colombia 2-1 in Saransk, Russia, becoming the first Asian team to ever beat a South American side in the World Cup. Let’s take a look at the polar opposite reactions of two major Chinese newspapers.
Sinica Podcast: The saga of CEFC and Chinaโs push into Central and Eastern Europe
Martin Hรกla, a China scholar from the Czech Republic and founder of Project Sinopsis, which seeks to inform the Czech public about China and its burgeoning role in the region, joins Kaiser Kuo in Prague to discuss the story behind the rise and fall of a mysterious Chinese company called CEFC.
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Subscribe to the Sinica Podcast via Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or plug the RSS feed into your favorite podcast app.
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Access members get the Sinica Podcast early! Just put this RSS feed directly into your podcast reader โ contact us if you need assistance.
TechBuzz China: Meituan, the Super App That Won Against a Thousand Clones
Meituan-Dianping, one of Chinaโs most valuable private companies, is the result of a $15 billion merger between the Groupon clone Meituan and the Yelp predecessor Dianping. How did it become so successful?
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Subscribe to TechBuzz China on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher, or click here for the RSS feed.
Xi Jinping and China get the John Oliver treatment
John Oliver devoted a 20-minute segment on a recent episode of HBO’s Last Week Tonight to China, focusing much of it on Xi Jinping and his two major ambitions: the Belt and Road Initiative (including Chinese media’s ham-fisted attempts to promote it) and his anti-corruption drive. As far as mainstream American parodies of the Chinese government go, this one is pretty good.
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John Oliver was later, predictably, censored from the Chinese internet.
All the different zongzi one can eat during the Dragon Boat Festival
Duanwujie ็ซฏๅ่ โ the fifth day of the fifth month on the lunar calendar โ is known to English speakers as the Dragon Boat Festival. It’s a day for racing dragon boats and eating zongzi โ glutinous rice cakes โ which these days come in all shapes and sizes, colors and textures. Take a look for yourself.
Inside the Chinese censorship rabbit hole
On Chinese social media, Xi Jinping, ejaculation jokes, and the Relevant Organs parody Twitter account are among the subjects that are no-gos. But what occasionally does get past the censors might surprise you.
Kuora: Mao Zedong and the archetype of the ruthless Chinese uniter
Mao Zedong takes his place in Chinese history as a ruthless uniter, alongside characters like Ying Zheng ๅฌดๆฟ โ better known as Qin Shi Huang ็งฆๅง็, the first emperor of the Qin dynasty โ and Cao Cao ๆนๆ โ the ruler of Wei during the Three Kingdoms period that followed the collapse of the Han dynasty. All three are viewed generally with the same mixture of admiration and contempt.
‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’ resuscitates China’s box office
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom raked in a healthy $117 million in China in its opening weekend, rescuing an otherwise tepid week for the country’s box office. Analysts have pointed out that in the last few years, the Dragon Boat Festival holiday has been dominated by Hollywood blockbusters, with domestic productions having a hard time battling imported films.
The Caixin-Sinica Business Brief, episode 52
This week on the Caixin-Sinica Business Brief: Additional duty imposed on Chinese imports by the Trump administration, Chinaโs economic growth in May, Didi Chuxingโs new policy of โsame-sex rides,” Doug Young on the evolving story of ZTE, and more.
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Subscribe to the Business Brief on Apple Podcasts, Overcast, or Stitcher.
Video:
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The worldโs longest glass circular bridge was completed in Xinmi, Henan Province. It is suspended 360 meters (1,181 feet) above the ground, and is nine meters (29 feet) longer than the Grand Canyon Skywalk in Arizona.
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Firefighting drones and robots are emerging in China, taking on tasks such as scaling high-rise buildings, getting to hard-to-reach areas that firefighters canโt, and locating trapped people.
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China celebrated International Day of Yoga on June 21.
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The largest sticky rice dumpling, or zongzi, of the year was made by 50 people over 13 hours, using 220 pounds of rice and 44 pounds of salt-cured meat. Just in time for the Dragon Boat Festival on June 18!
PHOTO FROM MICHAEL YAMASHITA
Vegetable and fruit market
Vendors sell fresh vegetables and fruits in Xiaguan, Dali, Yunnan Province.
โJia Guo