PandaPassport
A Canadian watching China.
From Japan.
Site Owner: 1rick
Most Recent Posts from PandaPassport
Fuel headed to quake-stricken Japan from Dalian
via english.cntv.cn This is good to hear. Permalink | Leave a comment »Posted on 25 March 2011 | 7:41 am
Chinese college student discusses having a Japanese boyfriend
When I meet a new person, the atmosphere soon plunged into frost. Usually after each one introduces himself, there is nothing left to say. Every time this happens, our mutual friends always come over to break the ice by starting with “Hey, you know? Her boyfriend is a Japanese!” Once this subject comes out, the uninformed masses must have been intrigued. The conversation immediately becomes heated. It has proved effective every time. via ministryoftofu.com ht @shioyama on Tw...Posted on 5 March 2011 | 2:30 pm
Subaru's sexy Mao advert may hurt its business in China
Subaru are on the verge of sealing a deal with China’s Chery Motors that should see them producing the Forrester in Chery’s new factory in Dalian, but a new advertisement for Subaru’s Trezia model in Italy may well delay any official seal for the joint venture. The Italian advertisement which reportedly translates as saying “a high driving position and superior internal space is worthy of a revolution” with a picture of China’s first chairman Mao in the background but with...Posted on 1 March 2011 | 4:09 pm
Seen on CCTV: F**k you Japan
via tieba.baidu.com From the most recent government censorship instructions: February 20, 2011 From the State Council Information Office: All interactive sites, including on-line forums, blogs, micro-blogs, instant message services, and text message services are requested to note and delete information related to the item “On CCTV’s Soccer Tonight (Zuqiu zhi ye), a sign reading ‘Fuck You Japan’ is displayed in the background on the giant screen.” &ldq...Posted on 24 February 2011 | 7:40 am
Chinese ramen cook gets to stay in Japan, overcomes immigration nit-picking
Presiding Judge Norihiko Sugihara said in his ruling, "Working at a ramen shop, which also requires techniques necessary for Chinese cuisine, should not be considered an activity outside his visa." The immigration bureau insisted most of the dishes offered at ramen shops are noodles, such as miso-flavored ramen, which have been developed in Japan and do not require special Chinese cooking techniques. But the ruling said there are many other dishes that have a lot to do with Chinese cuisi...Posted on 20 February 2011 | 6:39 am
