Latest Posts
Sino-Japanese relations and more
Wikipedia Today we have been adding on request some country-specific categories, like the sino-Japanese relations. We did have already a section on ‘international relations’, but with some exceptions (like William Overholt) that description was too vague, we discovered. We have been adding section on Africa, the USA, India and Japan.EuropeRead More →
Setting off a media career – Zhang Lijia
Zhang Lijia Our best-seller author Zhang Lijia is going to tour Australia to promote her book “Socialism is Great!” and is treating the domestic media with some great interviews.After ten years on the Chinese factory floor and a study in Great Britain, Zhang saw back in China the start ofRead More →
Director IMD World competitiveness center joins China Speakers Bureau
Stephane Garelli Stephane Garelli, director of the IMD World Competitive Center and professor at IMD and Lausanne University, has joined the China Speakers Bureau as a speaker.Each year economists and policy makers watch IMD in Lausanne as his center announces the annual ranking of the competitiveness of countries in theRead More →
Top-10 most sought speakers in August
Shaun Rein The China Speakers Bureau is only for a bit more than a month online, so getting a top-10 of most-sought-speakers is a bit of a tricky thing. Not all of our speakers have been online for the whole month and still quite a few are still waiting toRead More →
Olympic emotions show a different country – Kaiser Kuo
Kaiser Kuo Sobbing Chinese have killed one global misconception about the country, the supposed lack of emotions they display, says Kaiser Kuo in an interview with Reuters. “Liu Xiang’s coach sobs uncontrollably on television after China’s national hero hobbles out of the hurdles. Spectators weep in the stands. “Four womenRead More →
Accepting new speakers
via Wikipedia At the China Speakers Bureau we are going to open up for new speakers again. Getting assignments in is our priority, but we also do not want to keep our gates closed for qualified speakers, as we have done in the recent past.Do note our basic requirements though.Read More →
China Daily steals and manhandles article
Zhang Lijia When people compare the China Daily of twenty years ago with the Chinese English-language publication of today, they might think that things have improved. They might have, but they are still not well.Jeremy Goldkorn‘s Danwei points at an article by the Chinese author Zhang Lijia, where she defendsRead More →
China’s creative imperative – starting to read
Image via Wikipedia In my quest for interesting new angles and possible speakers for the China Speakers Bureau I have started to read a book I received yesterday from the publisher Wiley “China’s Creative Imperative: How Creativity is Transforming Society and Business in China” by Kunal Sinha, working for Ogilvy,Read More →
Shocked by American ignorance – Zhang Lijia
Zhang Lijia Celebrity author Zhang Lijia expresses in the Korea Times her amazement about the ignorance on China she noted when she was on a recent book tour in the United States, and tells why she support the Beijing Olympics: Zhang Lijia, author of the New York Times bestseller, “SocialismRead More →
The first Web2.0 Olympics – Kaiser Kuo
Kaiser Kuo The Beijing Olympics will be the first one facing a full scale web2.0 exposure and Ogilviy’s new media guru Kaiser Kuo looks at his weblog at the dilemma’s: There’s ample irony, and for some perhaps a certain poetic justice, in this — that the capital city of aRead More →
China is ready for democracy – Arthur Kroeber
Arthur Kroeber China is ready for democracy, but its ‘middle class’ is opposing it, writes Arthur Kroeber on Tuesday in the Financial Times.In debates the emerging consumers and the Chinese governments most media depict both as opposing forces in the struggle for more democracy, but according to Kroeber they areRead More →
Forget “The Great Firewall of China,” please
Kaiser Kuo Kaiser Kuo’s plea to foreign correspondents attending the Beijing Olympics to forget the cliches about China, made it today to Reuters. “I think the highest blood boiler for me is the phrase ‘coming-out party’,” he told Reuters after writing a tongue-in-cheek column warning the media of the pitfallsRead More →