It’s a very bad time to leave Xinhua News Agency. Next week, my department Dui Wai Bu will hold its first Spring Festival party for four years, an event I will miss as I’m due to polish my last Xinhua story today at 7 pm. I have experienced two Chinese New Years at Xinhua and they were both highly sober occasions.
Back in January 2006, I shuffled my first uncertain steps through the gate of the agency compound into an expected land of evil Communist rhetoric and robotic journalists chanting Party mantras, trying to avoid the eyes of those scary armed guards you only associate with Tiananmen Square incidents because you only ever see them looking stern in the newspapers every June 4. Just two days later, I found myself in a lift with a band of people much older than me who called themselves “The Releasers” on my way to a Spring Festival dinner.
It was held on the third floor of the Xinhua canteen. The buffet was like much of Xinhua’s output - high in quantity, low in quality. On a stage stood a microphone into which a string of men in suits spoke of how Xinhua had released many stories in 2005 and would be releasing even more in 2006. We all sat at round tables drinking coke from paper cups. The leaders gathered on the table closest to the stage on which a lady sang excerpts of Xinhua’s best government statements of 2005 to the tune of Mo Li Hua (I admit the lyrics bit is a flagrant lie), drinking red wine from crystal glasses. Every so often a leader would come round to each table and attempt to clink his wine glass with each paper cup of fizz. I reacted by saying what is expected of a cynical foreigner who has just skipped out of a haven of democracy into China, looking for fascinating examples of Communism at work: “Aha, that’s Communism at work.” The person next to me smiled politely.
The following year’s dinner stuck a couple of fingers - one on each hand for added rudeness - up at the concept of celebration, being as it was more dour than Gordon Brown’s attempt to match funnyman Wen Jiabao’s wisecracks over the weekend. President Tian Congming was on a cost-cutting drive so he didn’t even bother to turn up to feel the effects of his penny pinching. The live music had been scaled down to a cassette playing ”Jingle Bells” on repeat. Only one man in a suit spoke of how Xinhua had released many stories in 2006 and would release even more in 2007 (they succeeded, I can vouch for that). The man - actually one of the vice presidents - didn’t even stay for dinner. “The Releasers” had split up - I only had three for company this time. The round tables were now boring rectangles. The only thing that differed from a normal lunchtime on floor three was the slight increase in the number of prawns.
Not this year though. The party will feature salsa dancing, a modelling show and karaoke. I, and I’m being serious now, will be sad to miss it. I am also unable to attend a grand banquet for ”foreign experts” in the new five-floor canteen/leisure complex, the impending opening of which is another striking example of how Xinhua is now loping into the 21st Century in its own special way. Food won’t be served on a regular basis for at least another month because of poisonous paint fumes but my oh my dining will be a very different experience.
The old canteen, as mentioned above, is a true bastion of danwei dining. Not so long ago, the three-floor Xinhua canteen was known as one of the three great halls (san da tang) of Beijing. The saying went like this: “Mao zhu xi ji nian tang, ren min da hui tang, xinhua she da shi tang.” (Chairman Mao’s Memorial Hall, Great Hall of the People, Xinhua Dining Hall.” It held its prestigious status because during the days when food was at times scarce, Xinhua staff always remained well fed. I suppose if you want them to believe what they write when they are telling the people the food supply is plentiful, it helps if they have full stomachs. There are plans to turn the building into a Xinhua museum - I am still mulling over a request to offer my body up for the Pickled Polisher exhibit.
While I certainly do not begrudge a Xinhua journalist a bit of fine living, the new canteen flies hilariously in the face of a story the agency released in June last year, which began like this:
China’s disciplinary watchdog has ordered a thorough investigation into government buildings constructed after January 1, 2005 and those currently under development after the recent scandal in which more than 20 officials were punished for ordering the construction of lavish official buildings.
The Central Commission of Discipline Inspection (CCDI) of the Communist Party of China said the inspection was being conducted to find out whether some government buildings are excessively in terms of size, decoration and number of facilities.
The government has set a limit of 4,000 yuan (512 U.S. dollars) per square meter for the construction of ministerial level buildings.
Unnecessary items include: grandiose atriums, fountains in the floor one canteen that sound like waterfalls - guaranteed to send people scurrying to relieve themselves, an enormous area for the serving of “western” food which most people will ignore as the dishes are double the price and there are only about 30 foreign experts in the organisation who hate to eat bizarre versions of ”western” dishes, a domed glass arena on floor five under which two championship-standard table tennis tables wait to be christened, and a neverending choice of lavish banqueting halls for foreign dignitaries. Someone did tell me how much the whole thing cost but there were so many zeros I’ve forgotten. There is one nice example of conservation though. Outside the canteen, instead of planting grass that needs gallons of water to coax it through the Beijing dry season (ie most of the year), patches of fluorescent green artificial turf have been laid. I think I’ll nick a square on my way out.
On a more reflective note, it has been an eventful two years at Xinhua at least from where I was sitting. Unfortunately, the overall quality of Xinhua’s english-language output is worse than it was 18 months ago, basically because “reporting rights” were in essence taken away from Dui Wai Bu journalists in the summer of 2006. A new department was created called the Central News Desk (CND) and it became the only department officially authorised to contact government ministries. Dui Wai Bu journalists were reduced to translating meaningless six-par stories for fear that ignoring them would incur punishment. The CND reporters are the only ones allowed to attend regular press conferences and the quality of the reporting of them is pitiful for four main reasons: tighter censorship controls on the CND, huge workload governed by a set quota of stories, inadequate training and pure laziness. The establishment of the CND has been deeply unpopular in Dui Wai Bu. The official reason for the move was that government officials were complaining too many Xinhua journalists were showing up at press conferences and asking the same questions. However, I’m pretty sure it was mainly because restricting access to news-making events to one department makes ”media handling” a whole lot easier.
It’s all very frustrating as, individually, many Dui Wai Bu journalists have improved markedly over the last two years - it would seem, because of the flawed structure of the organisation and a total lack of management, the department is suffering from a nasty case of antagonism. In this sense, Xinhua can be a depressing place in which to sit as an observer. It’s not all doom and gloom for the journalists themselves of course. There are many benefits to being a Xinhua employee: prestige domestically, opportunity to travel, comprehensive insurance, access to information and job security (you have to be a spy to get sacked round here). But watching some hugely talented, creative people donning shackles every day is not particularly pleasant viewing. Some may argue: “What do they expect? Their role is to spread governmental love.” But I have met numerous graduates (Xinhua only employs fresh-faced university students so they have no time to develop any style other than “Xinhua-style”), who have joined Xinhua and, after a few months work, almost all have admitted the job is very different to what they anticipated - and not in a positive way.
A few people have emailed me and asked why I haven’t been sacked for writing this blog. I certainly should have been and I would never argue that my actions have been anything other than unprofessional. I nearly did get the boot following this post on the “Homer Simpson and the peanut brain” incident. The bosses of Xinhuanet were more than a little annoyed by the fact everyone else in the agency was having a good guffaw. By the sound of it, the Dui Wai Bu bosses backed me up for which I am extremely grateful. In a misguided attempt at defending the upkeep of this blog, I think it’s fair to say Xinhua is not your average workplace and there is very little professionalism on display in many quarters of the agency. As a foreigner, you are never included in the day-to-day operation of the department and are never officially told about structural changes that directly affect our work. In fact, foreigners are not directly employed by Dui Wai Bu - that’s the role of the Foreign Affairs department. Instead, we rely on the “reporters” themselves to supply us with a steady drip of information and we fit the pieces together. Also, there are a few Chinese colleagues in Dui Wai Bu who keep blogs - one put an internal Xinhua document on his website (I won’t embarrass with a link). It landed him and his entire section - collective punishment is favoured - a hefty fine. Last year, the leaders issued a regulation requiring any journalist with a blog to register it with the higher authorities. I was not informed.
Anyway, enough of defending the indefensible. Why was I allowed to carry on writing it?
1) I was writing in English so therefore off the radar of the leaders.
2) Who cares what a foreigner thinks about state media censorship anyway? (maybe this should be number one) It’s only a blog with a limited readership after all. Now if I had landed a column in the New York Times …
3) People in Dui Wai Bu are very open-minded - I have been amazed at how many people have supported it. I was even told some posts were used as training tools for new graduates. Some people really disapproved of it but I never experienced any open hostility.
4) One polishing comrade suggested it would be more embarrassing to sack me than to leave me be. I’m not sure about this one - if editors did think this way, they were misguided. The “I was sacked from Xinhua” post would have done the rounds on the blogosphere and then that would have been that.
5) I didn’t mention the spying scandal or the mini-Mandelson episode.
Anyway, enough of this self-indulgent behaviour. I could bore for hours on this subject as has become apparent by the length of this post. A quick note of thanks to my Dui Wai Bu comrades - thanks for putting up with me for two years and I hope things improve before all your hair turns grey. It’s been fun. I’m booked onto the Hong Kong-bound train tomorrow and not returning to Beijing for a month. Will probably continue to post a couple of things over the coming week.
nanheyangrouchuan | 22-Jan-08 at 10:43 am | Permalink
Thanks to some freedom loving Chinese and some righteous minded foreigners in China, the Bilderberg armies, the US, Japan, SK and Taiwan have the coordinates of the SA-10 defense grids around Beijing and Shanghai. Now the financial and cultural centers of China can be smashed should China misbehave in Asia:
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE East of Beijing
40 06′54.81 North 116 59′20.93 East
98 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE South East of Beijing
39 48′24.03 North 117 02′41.20 East
57 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE South of Beijing
39 34′36.38 North 116 45′38.33 East
59 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE South West of Beijing
39 22′44.91 North 116 07′51.48 East
85 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE West of Dalian - Yingchengzi PLAAF base
39 00′18.46 North 121 24′00.15 East
30 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE North of Shanghai
31 49′23.95 North 121 51′00.70 East
13 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE North of Shanghai
31 29′24.70 North 121 16′42.86 East
11 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE south of Shanghai
30 52′53.32 North 121 52′16.48 East
16 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE southwest of Shanghai
30 50′17.81 North 121 33′41.35 East
10 ft. Elevation
PLA SA-10 SAM SITE Gangtou
25 34′34.88 North 119 27′15.44 East
52 ft. Elevation
PLAAF SA-10 SAM SITE AT Luocheng
25 01′59.45 North 118 48′26.19 East
54 ft. Elevation
Alex the Valiant | 22-Jan-08 at 3:03 pm | Permalink
It’s always sad to say goodbye and delightful to be liberated. Guess your absence from now on will be a source of nostalgia thus makes Xinhua a less favored place for me.
And you’re gonna miss the party? Oh Jesus. Great loss coz they are now a step away from persuading me to perform for all’s entertainment. xD
With the best of my wishes. Enjoy your enviable freedom.
Alex the Valiant | 22-Jan-08 at 3:19 pm | Permalink
Ah, and, though without your permission I made a link of your blog to mine under introduction words of “Chris the ex Xinhua “Language Polisher”’s blog on the absurdity of our professional life amid bureaucracy and clumsy news-making.” –Let me know if the phrasing is inappropriate.
Danwei | 22-Jan-08 at 6:18 pm | Permalink
Danwei Picks: Anhui’s most grateful citizen…
Danwei Picks is a daily digest of the “From the Web” links found on the Danwei homepage. A feed for the…
Mackers | 22-Jan-08 at 11:20 pm | Permalink
All the best, Chris, in your future life - this blog is one of the most entertaining and enjoyable around, especially for those of us working in the Chinese media. We share the joy, we share the pain. Oh, and please email me - I have a good contact for your freelance endeavours. So long, and thanks for all the fish…
Simon | 23-Jan-08 at 12:58 am | Permalink
Thanks for all the fascinating posts - really enjoyed reading them.
Incidentally, being left out of the loop, as you were (11th paragraph), is an almost universal experience for low-ranking foreigners in any Chinese organization.
Charlie | 23-Jan-08 at 3:12 am | Permalink
From my experience at the CD - it’s most definitely number two…no one really cares quite enough in the grand scheme of things.
If you’re at a loose end in HK gimme a shout and I’ll buy you a beer
Wiss | 23-Jan-08 at 7:40 am | Permalink
Strong work, good luck on your new ventures.
wk | 24-Jan-08 at 3:25 am | Permalink
Ever thought about working for VOA/Freedom Asia/The epoch times?
I want to know what American style propaganda looks like
Lazy Aussie | 24-Jan-08 at 12:34 pm | Permalink
I’ll miss your Xinhua
Chris O'Brien | 24-Jan-08 at 4:08 pm | Permalink
Thank you all for the kind comments once again - and for being interested in reading about Xinhua as much as I was interested in writing about it. In answer to wk: no, they are more likely to sack me.
Stuart | 25-Jan-08 at 8:16 am | Permalink
“I didn’t mention the spying scandal or the mini-Mandelson episode.”
Now would seem an appropriate time.
Thanks for the enlightenment, Chris.
Chris O'Brien | 25-Jan-08 at 12:18 pm | Permalink
Thanks, Stuart. Actually, I think I’ll keep those gems to myself. Just to clarify, “mini-Mandelson episode” doesn’t refer to a Dr Evil-style experiment.
Dad | 25-Jan-08 at 5:49 pm | Permalink
Well Chris, another chapter ends. From my parental perspective it’s been great reading through your life at Xinhua. Yes, it has been a bit of an emotional rollercoaster in that we at home have wondered whether you would have your collar fingered by the ‘thought police’.
Let’s hope that Xinhua, in the not too distant future, will eventually be able to report more factually.
“All power to your pen”
Justin | 25-Jan-08 at 6:22 pm | Permalink
Is that really you, Mr. O’Brien? Nice seeing you
And to Chris: Good luck again, on the road.
China Law Blog | 26-Jan-08 at 11:28 pm | Permalink
Nice. Your insider blogging will be sorely missed.
MAC | 27-Jan-08 at 2:52 am | Permalink
This is very disappointing news, but I suppose you shouldn’t have to continue to suffer for everyone else’s amusement and enlightenment. Good luck.
John Le Fevre | 27-Jan-08 at 10:08 am | Permalink
Good luck and best wishes Chris. It’s been entertaining reading your blog.
jens | 28-Jan-08 at 10:55 pm | Permalink
Thank you for some very enlightening and amusing reads from the inside of Xinhua.
And if you are in Shanghai, I would be delighted to buy you not only one beer.
chinese buddhist | 31-Jan-08 at 1:00 am | Permalink
I THEEEENK Mr.O’Brien’s business plan includes quick trips to book publishers & Hollywood: “SPY JOURNALIST/ ”
‘LANGUAGE POLISHER’ IN CHINA: How I was Fired by XINHUA!” Tearjerker-cum-thriller…
Congratulations Chris! You will be laughing all the way to the bank.
Chris O'Brien | 31-Jan-08 at 11:52 am | Permalink
Thinking more tragicomedy actually.
chinese buddhist | 01-Feb-08 at 3:16 am | Permalink
?tragicomedy only. Nah… Must aim for TOP dollar, always.
(Leave the kid stuff to nanhegrouch & ilk.)
ShaMao'er | 15-Feb-08 at 7:17 am | Permalink
Thanks for all the great insight.
Aloha from Hawaii | 15-Feb-08 at 2:43 pm | Permalink
Chris, I am sad to know you have left Xinhua. I used to benefit a lot from your polishing. Good luck with everything ahead of you!
Steve Bloom | 15-Feb-08 at 3:32 pm | Permalink
Chris, this is OT but I’m very curious as to what the discussion has been in China about the nasty winter. GW theory says we should expect extremes like this (i.e., less cold overall, but sometimes worse when we get it), but is that the reported view from the climate scientists there?
Danwei | 22-Feb-08 at 7:38 pm | Permalink
Danwei Picks: A propagandist speaks…
Danwei Picks is a daily digest of the “From the Web” links found on the Danwei homepage. A feed for the…
chinese buddhist | 23-Feb-08 at 2:13 am | Permalink
WOW! Congatulations Chris, you must the TOAST of battle-scarred foreign journalists! Or bottle-scarred, as some say? Anyway, don’t forget that I sort of “foretold” all this for you. Or maybe DECIPHERED you. Don’t forget your fellow polishers, in your “hour of glory”! Anyone else need a fortune-teller?!
Diego | 24-Feb-08 at 11:47 am | Permalink
So, you’re out now. Good for you, man.
I didn’t know you had a blog. I just now randomly ran across it. Your posts are great.
Did you or Nina ever get comfortable with the guitar?
max00 | 24-Feb-08 at 11:21 pm | Permalink
this is definitely SOMETHING about XINHUA of how it’s working…
i’m wondering who’s gonna replace you?
Paul | 25-Feb-08 at 2:05 pm | Permalink
Congrats on escaping the state-run system. I long for the day sometimes when I can actually say that! All the best… and good luck!
Extremely concerned | 28-Feb-08 at 6:23 pm | Permalink
Come on, O’Brien, give us some more!
东东 | 11-Mar-08 at 2:36 pm | Permalink
Did i say i like reading your blog?
Do not stop, please