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-   -   TV broadcast for china 60 anniversary (https://www.revscene.net/forums/591150-tv-broadcast-china-60-anniversary.html)

threezero 09-30-2009 06:02 PM

TV broadcast for china 60 anniversary
 
I'm asking this for my parents.... so they saw the beijing olympic opening in HD on the 52 inch bravia and i swear their jaw was on the ground whole time. I have never seen them pay so much attention to an english programming. they want to know now if the 60th anniversary will be broadcast in HD on any channel. My though is no cause frankly nobody in the western world gives a shit abt china's bday and that they probably won't be granted access to beijing during that time anyways. any ideas?

asian_XL 09-30-2009 06:30 PM

you can watch it online

http://www.cctv.com/english/special/60live/index.shtml


:haha: it's fucking communist...

"COMRADE, HOW ARE YOU DOING?"

"COMRADE, you did a good job!"

threezero 09-30-2009 06:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 1949China2009 (Post 6616100)
YES IS ON SHAW CABLE 183!!

Pheonix TV
no CCTV

I don't think we have pheonix tv, does that come with chinese channel package from shaw?

shaw 183 is that in HD?

if is it, my parent loves you lol.

eFx[A2C] 09-30-2009 06:34 PM

the video isnt working on cctv website ???

asian_XL 09-30-2009 06:39 PM

^ lol...Canadian government banned CCTV?

NimbeeTT 09-30-2009 07:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by threezero (Post 6616105)
I don't think we have pheonix tv, does that come with chinese channel package from shaw?

shaw 183 is that in HD?

if is it, my parent loves you lol.

My dad's watching on 183 right now, it's not HD. And no, im pretty sure you had to add this on to the chinese channel package i think.. i dont remember though.

ilvtofu 09-30-2009 07:20 PM

LOL why hu gotta wear a chairman mao suit =.=

kobefans 09-30-2009 07:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ilvtofu (Post 6616186)
LOL why hu gotta wear a chairman mao suit =.=

that's actually not chairman mao suit, it's called Chinese tunic suit, it was designed by Sun Yat-sen, who is actually KMT。

threezero 09-30-2009 08:15 PM

lol so i guess my parent dont love their country so much. turn on 183, tells us we have to pay 15.95/month to get the channel, they immediately change the channel back to watching their soap opera.

EmOne 09-30-2009 08:34 PM

祖国万岁!

we must now all sing
"中華人民共和國國歌"
!!!!!11!!!!

Durrann1984 09-30-2009 09:32 PM

is it on now?

E-40six 09-30-2009 10:29 PM

is there any where we can download this?

my mom wants it cause i think she's a commie

maxx 09-30-2009 10:31 PM

cool thanks bro, watching it now.. its in russian as well!

SkinnyPupp 09-30-2009 10:40 PM

It's not China's 60th anniversary, it's the Peoples Republic of China's 60th anniversary. Let's all celebrate one of the most fucked up, corrupt, disgusting, genocidal rulers who have ever existed in human history! Yippee!

ienhz 09-30-2009 10:50 PM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Bmacckllq0

:cry:

threezero 09-30-2009 11:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SkinnyPupp (Post 6616524)
It's not China's 60th anniversary, it's the Peoples Republic of China's 60th anniversary. Let's all celebrate one of the most fucked up, corrupt, disgusting, genocidal rulers who have ever existed in human history! Yippee!

that maybe so but to my parent peoples republic is what help them go from eating tree barks to driving benz. but well when they had enough money they gtfo of china anyways to come here lol.

To my parents its a love hate relationship for the people's republic. imo there is always winner and loser under any political regime. China may have some human right issue but its nice not to have monthly critical mass riots and garbage men having month long strikes. you get some and you lose some

Sid Vicious 09-30-2009 11:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by threezero (Post 6616562)
that maybe so but to my parent peoples republic is what help them go from eating tree barks to driving benz. but well when they had enough money they gtfo of china anyways to come here lol.

To my parents its a love hate relationship for the people's republic. imo there is always winner and loser under any political regime. China may have some human right issue but its nice not to have monthly critical mass riots and garbage men having month long strikes. you get some and you lose some

Damn...I'd trade those critical mass protests and garbage strike for my freedom of speech and basic human rights and shitty lead and melamine riddled products anyday!!

so in short, fuck china

liu13 09-30-2009 11:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by threezero (Post 6616562)
that maybe so but to my parent peoples republic is what help them go from eating tree barks to driving benz. but well when they had enough money they gtfo of china anyways to come here lol.

To my parents its a love hate relationship for the people's republic. imo there is always winner and loser under any political regime. China may have some human right issue but its nice not to have monthly critical mass riots and garbage men having month long strikes. you get some and you lose some

spoken like a true china man

it'll always be a love hate relationship so long the CCP exists, brainwashing starts early until generations later

CP.AR 10-01-2009 12:06 AM

Economically, China is a wonderland.

Politically though, its a fucking nightmare. Their media control I would say is probably on par with North Korea, minus the fact that China does allow international news.

RFlush 10-01-2009 07:43 AM

Quote:

Bloomberg News, sent from my iPhone.

Chinese 103-Year-Old Wall Street Emigrant Sees End of Communism

Sept. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Zhou Youguang was a child of 6 when a revolution toppled China’s last emperor in 1912. He was 43 when he says he left a Wall Street banker’s job to help Mao Zedong’s Communists create what he thought would be a democracy after decades of warlord rule, occupation and civil war.

Now 103, he has seen China transformed from a country of 368 million being carved up by foreign powers to a nation of 1.3 billion and the world’s fastest-growing major economy, expanding at an average annual rate of 9.9 percent from 1978 to 2008. He says he still believes China will eventually become a democracy -- in spite of communism, not because of it.

“China will follow the mainstream of the world, sooner or later,” the pajama-clad Zhou said during an interview in the book-lined study of his third-floor walk-up apartment in central Beijing.

His experiences encapsulate the complicated legacy of the Communist Party, which celebrates 60 years in power this week with a military parade past Tiananmen -- the Gate of Heavenly Peace -- where Mao proclaimed the founding of the People’s Republic on Oct. 1, 1949.

While Zhou endured three years of forced separation from his family during the 1966-76 Cultural Revolution, he survived a purge of intellectuals that led many of his colleagues to commit suicide. He was also given the opportunity to devise a new system of spelling out Chinese characters with the Roman alphabet that helped hundreds of millions of Chinese peasants learn to read.

‘Lucky Ones’

“There were very few who returned from America who escaped the catastrophe,” Zhou said. “I was one of the very lucky ones.”

Like China’s leaders, Zhou divides Communist rule into two periods: the first three decades dominated by Mao, who died in 1976, and the second characterized by the opening of China to the world by paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, who died in 1997. While Deng’s era sparked rapid growth, Zhou, an economist by training, considers it a mixed success.

Deng “reformed the economy but didn’t reform politics,” Zhou said. “In the political scene, there was absolutely no change; it was an autocracy.”

That wasn’t the outcome Zhou Enlai promised Zhou in the late 1930s. The two, who aren’t related, met in Chongqing when the Yangzi River city became the wartime capital following Japan’s occupation of Nanjing in 1937.

Meetings of Intellectuals

Zhou Enlai -- who would become China’s premier in 1949 -- held monthly get-togethers with intellectuals, including Zhou, who worked for Sin Hua Trust & Savings Bank, which was founded in 1914 and became part of the Bank of China Ltd. in 2001.

“Zhou Enlai told me at those meetings that the Communist Party was a democratic party,” Zhou said.

Zhou left China for New York at the end of 1946, where he represented Sin Hua at Irving Trust Co., the bank’s U.S. agent, at its Art Deco headquarters on 1 Wall Street. He and his wife, Zhang Yunhe, returned to Shanghai in June 1949, as the Communists neared victory.

“We thought that with China liberated, there was hope; everyone wanted to come back home and do something,” Zhou wrote in a 2008 autobiography.

When he arrived, Shanghai -- occupied by the People’s Liberation Army the previous month -- straddled the communist- capitalist divide. Zhou lived in both worlds: working at Sin Hua and at what is now the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics as a professor. There he and his colleagues, most of them scholars who returned from the U.S., watched as textbooks were jettisoned for new ones reflecting Marxist theories of class struggle.

Common Language

In 1955, Zhou, whose hobby was linguistics, was asked during a Beijing conference to lead a group creating a standardized system of writing Chinese phonetically with Roman letters. The project would supersede a hodgepodge of Romanization systems and was part of a drive that included simplifying the way thousands of characters were written and teaching a common language, Mandarin, in schools throughout the country.

“I said no way, I’m an amateur,” Zhou said. It was too late; the premier, who remembered his avocation from their days in Chongqing, had already called Zhou’s colleagues in Shanghai and told them he wouldn’t be coming home.

Zhou’s pinyin system, which turned “Peking” into “Beijing,” uses markers to identify which of Mandarin’s four tones to use. It became the national standard in 1958 and has helped reduce China’s illiteracy rate to 10 percent today from about 80 percent in the 1950s.

Mao’s Purge

His new career also kept him relatively safe when economics professors, especially those who had lived in the U.S., became targets of Mao’s Anti-Rightist Campaign in 1957 to purge anyone he thought opposed his revolution.

“Every day there were people killing themselves,” Zhou wrote in his autobiography.

Zhou didn’t completely escape persecution. He was branded a “reactionary academic authority” in 1969 during the Cultural Revolution and sent to northwestern China’s Ningxia region, where, already well into his 60s, he spent a year toiling in rice paddies. He was allowed to return to his family in 1972. Since then he’s helped make pinyin a global standard and published books on linguistics.

Zhou never expressed regret in the interview for giving up his New York lifestyle. In 1949, the “common people trusted the Communist Party,” he said. Looking back over 60 years, he now believes the party, which he never joined, “cheated the Chinese people. They destroyed everything, especially the intellectuals.”

That doesn’t stop Zhou from saying that China’s economic boom will someday be accompanied by the democracy he had hoped to help create.

“I’m always optimistic,” he said.

For Related News and Information: Stories on Chinese politics: TNI CHINA POL BN China economic snapshot: ESNP CH Top China stories: TOP CHINA Top Asia stories: TOPA
Good read

SkinnyPupp 10-01-2009 08:14 AM

^^^ I love the suicide euphemism he uses :lol

silk 10-01-2009 08:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SkinnyPupp (Post 6616524)
It's not China's 60th anniversary, it's the Peoples Republic of China's 60th anniversary. Let's all celebrate one of the most fucked up, corrupt, disgusting, genocidal rulers who have ever existed in human history! Yippee!

everytime i posted something you said i turned thread into racial, look at you now.

what a great input on a TV broadcast thread

SkinnyPupp 10-01-2009 08:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by silk (Post 6616857)
everytime i posted something you said i turned thread into racial, look at you now.

what a great input on a TV broadcast thread

Oh I made it racial did I? Ruling parties are about race now? Go away.

Gt-R R34 10-01-2009 09:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tc_terencec (Post 6616612)
Economically, China is a wonderland.

Politically though, its a fucking nightmare. Their media control I would say is probably on par with North Korea, minus the fact that China does allow international news.

the best quote of the entire thread. If you don't give a shit about others and money only, this place is heaven.

q0192837465 10-01-2009 09:57 AM

^well, the way I see it is that China is heaven for money grabbing because the poitics are fuked up.


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