Frank Langfitt http://wutc.org en China Builds Museums ... But Will The Visitors Come? http://wutc.org/post/china-builds-museums-will-visitors-come Shanghai did something last fall that few other cities on the planet could have even considered. It <a href="http://www.theartnewspaper.com/articles/Two-huge-staterun-museums-open-in-Shanghai/27225">opened two massive art museums</a> right across the river from one another on the same day.<p>The grand openings put an exclamation point on China's staggering museum building boom. Tue, 21 May 2013 18:39:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 22169 at http://wutc.org China Builds Museums ... But Will The Visitors Come? Vietnam's Appetite For Rhino Horn Drives Poaching In Africa http://wutc.org/post/vietnams-appetite-rhino-horn-drives-poaching-africa Africa is facing a growing epidemic: the slaughter of rhinos.<p>So far this year, South Africa has lost more than 290 rhinos — an average of at least two a day. That puts the country on track to set yet another record after <a href="http://www.traffic.org/home/2013/1/10/rhino-poaching-toll-reaches-new-high.html">poachers killed 668 rhinos in 2012</a>.<p>Behind the rise in killings are international criminal syndicates and global economic change. Mon, 13 May 2013 19:05:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 21789 at http://wutc.org Vietnam's Appetite For Rhino Horn Drives Poaching In Africa Rat 'Mutton' And Bird Flu: Strange Days For Meat Eaters In Shanghai http://wutc.org/post/rat-mutton-and-bird-flu-strange-days-meat-eaters-shanghai The past couple of months have been unsettling ones for meat eaters in Shanghai.<p>In March, more than 16,000 dead pigs <a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2013/03/14/174302750/shanghais-dead-pigs-search-for-answers-turns-up-denials">showed up</a> in a stretch of the Huangpu River — a main source of the city's drinking water.<p>Local officials insisted both the water and the city's pork supply were safe, but they never explained exactly how the pigs died or how they ended up in the river. Wed, 08 May 2013 06:50:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 21543 at http://wutc.org Rat 'Mutton' And Bird Flu: Strange Days For Meat Eaters In Shanghai These Days, More And More Chinese Have Driven A Ford Lately http://wutc.org/post/these-days-more-and-more-chinese-have-driven-ford-lately General Motors has been <em>the</em> American car company in China. Even when GM was in bankruptcy, the Chinese continued to view Buick as a high-status, luxury brand.<p>But now Ford, an also-ran in the market for years, is making a push to change all that. Thu, 25 Apr 2013 07:25:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 20977 at http://wutc.org These Days, More And More Chinese Have Driven A Ford Lately Will Lightning Strike Twice For K-Pop's PSY? http://wutc.org/post/will-lightning-strike-twice-k-pops-psy <p>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ASO_zypdnsQ</p> Sun, 14 Apr 2013 14:13:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 20512 at http://wutc.org Will Lightning Strike Twice For K-Pop's PSY? A Symbol Of Korean Cooperation Becomes A Political Casualty http://wutc.org/post/symbol-korean-cooperation-becomes-political-casualty This week, <a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/04/08/176547565/north-korea-to-shut-jointly-run-factories-may-test-missile">North Korea closed off</a> the last avenue of economic cooperation with its rival, South Korea. Pyongyang says the closing of Kaesong — a joint North-South industrial complex — is temporary.<p>But the move is a big symbolic blow on the Korean peninsula and a potential disaster for some of the South Korean businesses that have invested there.<p>Take Tiger Park, for instance. Thu, 11 Apr 2013 19:15:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 20415 at http://wutc.org A Symbol Of Korean Cooperation Becomes A Political Casualty A View From South Korea: The North Is 'A Playground Bully' http://wutc.org/post/view-south-korea-north-playground-bully Nearly two decades ago, a North Korean official threatened to turn Seoul into a "Sea of Fire." South Koreans responded by cleaning out the shelves of supermarkets and preparing for an attack that never came.<p>On Tuesday, North Korea <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=176635574" target="_blank">urged tourists and foreign companies to leave South Korea</a> for their own safety, saying the two countries are on the eve of a nuclear war.<p>But this time, as <a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/04/09/176647412/north-koreas-warnings-bore-more-than-alarm-those- Tue, 09 Apr 2013 17:03:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 20305 at http://wutc.org A View From South Korea: The North Is 'A Playground Bully' Shanghai's Dead Pigs: Search For Answers Turns Up Denials http://wutc.org/post/shanghais-dead-pigs-search-answers-turns-denials More than a week has passed since thousands of dead pigs were first discovered floating in a river in Shanghai, but authorities have yet to explain fully where the pigs came from or why they died.<p>Fourteen of the pigs had tags in their ears identifying them as coming from Jiaxing city, in neighboring Zhejiang province. Getting to the bottom of the pig story, though, is tough. Thu, 14 Mar 2013 17:27:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 19274 at http://wutc.org Shanghai's Dead Pigs: Search For Answers Turns Up Denials Young Chinese Translate America, One Show At A Time http://wutc.org/post/young-chinese-translate-america-one-show-time Every week, thousands of young Chinese gather online to translate popular American movies and TV shows into Mandarin. Some do it for fun and to help people learn English, while others see it as a subtle way to introduce new ideas into Chinese society.<p>Among the more popular American TV shows on China's Internet these days is HBO's <em>The Newsroom</em>. One reason is an exchange between a college student and a news anchor played by Jeff Daniels. Thu, 07 Mar 2013 21:59:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 19001 at http://wutc.org Young Chinese Translate America, One Show At A Time How To Sneak Into A Chinese Village When Police Don't Want You There http://wutc.org/post/how-sneak-chinese-village-when-police-dont-want-you-there On occasion my job requires me to sneak into a Chinese village as I did earlier this week to report <a href="http://www.npr.org/2013/03/05/173495434/chinese-farmers-fight-against-government-land-grab" target="_blank">a story on a rural uprising</a>. This does not come naturally. I'm 6-foot-2 with gray hair and blue eyes and don't look remotely like a Chinese farmer.<p>The village in question is called Shangpu. It's in south China, and farmers there have barricaded their community and are demanding free elections. Wed, 06 Mar 2013 16:47:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 18926 at http://wutc.org How To Sneak Into A Chinese Village When Police Don't Want You There In China, Not Everything Has Changed http://wutc.org/post/china-not-everything-has-changed A lot of journalism about China focuses on the country's rapid and stunning changes, but equally telling are the things that stay the same. I did my first story on China's re-education through labor camps back in 2001.<p>I met a former inmate named Liu Xiaobo for lunch in Beijing. Liu, soft-spoken and thoughtful, had written an article mourning those who had died in the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown. Sun, 24 Feb 2013 10:04:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 18452 at http://wutc.org In China, Not Everything Has Changed Ex-Inmates Speak Out About Labor Camps As China Considers 'Reforms' http://wutc.org/post/ex-inmates-speak-out-about-labor-camps-china-considers-reforms Shen Lixiu's story is numbingly familiar.<p>Officials in the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing knocked down her karaoke parlor for development. She says they then offered her compensation that was less than 20 percent of what she had invested in the place.<p>Shen complained to the central government. Local authorities responded by sentencing her to a "re-education through labor" camp for a year. Once inside, Shen says, camp workers tried to force her to accept the compensation.<p>"I refused to sign my name," says Shen, 58, who has salt-and-pepper hair and wears a plum-colored, padded coat. Fri, 22 Feb 2013 08:20:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 18379 at http://wutc.org Ex-Inmates Speak Out About Labor Camps As China Considers 'Reforms' A Chinese Army Outpost That's Tucked Into Modern Shanghai http://wutc.org/post/chinese-army-outpost-thats-tucked-modern-shanghai Some people in Shanghai — especially the foreigners — think the city's new Pudong section of town is dull, without character and profoundly unfashionable.<p>Twenty years ago, Pudong was mostly farms and warehouses. Tue, 19 Feb 2013 18:50:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 18246 at http://wutc.org A Chinese Army Outpost That's Tucked Into Modern Shanghai Auntie Anne's Pretzels In Beijing: Why The Chinese Didn't Bite http://wutc.org/post/auntie-annes-pretzels-beijing-why-chinese-didnt-bite The lure of the China market is legendary. The dream: Sell something to 1.3 billion people, and you're set.<p>The reality is totally different.<p>Ask the MBAs from the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School who tried to launch Auntie Anne's pretzels in China. The result is a funny, instructive and occasionally harrowing journey that is now the subject of a new book, <em>The China Twist</em>.<p>Wen-Szu Lin and Joseph Sze's venture began as an appealing tale of taking the American soft pretzel to the Middle Kingdom. Mon, 11 Feb 2013 08:33:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 17879 at http://wutc.org Auntie Anne's Pretzels In Beijing: Why The Chinese Didn't Bite Move Over James Bond, China Has An Unlikely Box Office Champ http://wutc.org/post/move-over-james-bond-china-has-unlikely-box-office-champ Movies are big business in China, and 2012 was another record year: Theaters raked in about $2.7 billion, pushing China past Japan to become the world's second-largest market.<p>Those blistering sales were expected; China's ultimate box-office champ, however, was not.<p>Hollywood blockbusters usually do well in China. And last year, competition was stiff, including a new installment of Tom Cruise's <em>Mission: Impossibl</em>e franchise, as well as <em>Skyfall,</em> the latest James Bond flick.<p>But neither of these heavyweights topped the box office. Thu, 07 Feb 2013 22:08:00 +0000 Frank Langfitt 17779 at http://wutc.org Move Over James Bond, China Has An Unlikely Box Office Champ