|
Featured Video
Counterstrike in yuppie BeijingPosted by Jeremy Goldkorn, August 29, 2008 9:23 AM
This video shows a gun battle with characters from the popular game Counterstike, in Beijing's yuppie office and apartment complex Jianwai Soho. It's from Youku's monthly roundup of interesting web videos, which you can read in the extended entry: Youku Video Buzzby Kaiser KuoCounter-Strike Comes to Life Dancing in the Street: B-boys Breaking in Chengdu Wu-Tang Clan: The Real Deal Eclipse on the Silk Road Inner Beauty Outside the Bird's Nest Schwag Nation: The Grabbing Class A Sad Song for Chinese Soccer Significant Autos Youku Search Toppers Top Searched Individuals 1. Lin Miaoke – The little cute little girl who lip-synced her way to notoriety in the Opening Ceremonies 2. Li Ka-shing – Hong Kong billionaire and idol to a generation of would-be moguls 3. Shao Yifu (Run Run Shaw) – Hong Kong filmmaker-cum-philanthropist who has generously endowed a number of Chinese universities and donated a whopping HK$100 million for the Sichuan Earthquake 4. Steven Chow – Hong Kong funnyman megastar 5. Zhao Pu – a CCTV newscaster known for his off-script wit. Zhao started off as a security guard at CCTV and worked his way up 6. Guo Degang – China's most popular xiangsheng artist 7. Li Yapeng – Actor married to songstress Faye Wong, who recently sent Sean Penn on Hong Kong paparazzi hounding his family in Thailand to the acclaim of Chinese netizens 8. Andy Lau - Hong Kong singer and actor who sang next to Jackie Chan at the big Olympic send-off 9. Jackie Chan – He's broken as many bones as Evel Knievel, but he's still popular as ever, singing at the Closing Ceremonies and still making his brand of comic martial arts films 10. Dong Bang Shin Ki – The latest Korean boy band sensation.
1. Tony Leung – the Hong Kong actor who most recently starred in Lust, Caution, has been in the news for marrying his longtime sweetheart, the singer/actress Carina Lau, in Bhutan in July. 2. The Olympic Games – They brought an unprecedented level of international scrutiny and no small measure of controversy, but in the end XXIX Olympiad was a smashing success 3. Liu Xiang – China's sensational hurdler, widely expected to repeat his gold medal performance at Athens, who withdrew from 110 meter hurdles competition for an Achilles tendon injury 4. Beijing Welcomes You – the inescapable but somehow endearing theme song to the Beijing Games, sung by a star-studded lineup 5. Torch – China's relay may have stirred up controversy in some Western cities, but it seems to have stirred up only patriotic passion everywhere it passed in China 6. College – It's back to school soon, and young Chinese want to know what they have in store 7. Yang Liwei – China's Taikonaut hero, who orbited Earth in the Shenzhou VI in October 2005 8. China Football (Soccer) – They broke hearts losses to Belgium and Brazil that took them out of competition after high Olympic hopes 9. Runner Fan – The nickname given to Fan Meizhong, who was for a while the most reviled man in China. This schoolteacher took off to save his neck when the earthquake struck in Sichuan, but has since defended his actions effectively and won some sympathy online 10. Attack on Police – A lone man armed with Molotov cocktails and a knife entered a Shanghai police station in early July, and killed five cops before he was apprehended. A sixth died of injuries sustained in the attack the following day |
Partner Links
Jobs in China
Recent Comments
大门牙 on
Blockages
Joel Marti on
Chengdu bus fire blamed on 62-year-old suicidal gambler
vivian on
Bound feet in China
Sajid on
China first police blog
China Media Timeline
Major media events over the last three decades
Danwei Model Workers
![]() Recommended blogs and new media
Books on China
Foreign journalists in China, from the Opium Wars to Mao : Paul French, author of a book on Carl Crow has written a book about the lives and exploits of foreign journalists reporting from China from the 1820s to 1949.
Earnshaw Books' Tales of Old Peking: Tales from Old Peking is available from Earnshaw Books, and like its sister, Tales from Old Shanghai is a book of fragments of information about periods, events or places in Beijing's history, collaging together pictures and text about eunuchs, concubines, the Lama Temple, Opium Wars, art, emperors, and a miscellany of other interesting topics
Henry F. Pringle's "Bridge House Survivor": Pringle was imprisoned by Japanese forces from October 1942 to August 1945, and Bridge House Survivor, available from Earnshaw Books, is his harrowing account of torture under the Japanese.
Front Page of the Day
A different newspaper every weekday
From the Vault
Classic Danwei posts
+ A short interview with Muzi Mei (2004.02): Danwei interviews Muzi Mei + CCTV vs. classic movies (2006.03): A rundown of several pastiches of Chinese movies appearing online as 大史记 - "The Year That Was". Some from CCTV, others not. With links to video. + Street hawker cries of Beijing (2006.12): Yang Changhe demonstrates hawker's cries in a video shot by Muzimei.
Danwei Archives
Danwei Feeds
Via Feedsky
or Feedburner |





Comments on Counterstrike in yuppie Beijing
haha, those were the days...
Game is so old, but back in the days, man...