AltWeeklies Wire

Fired Up On the Shanghai Sizzlenew

This delicious chaos of city that's turned Mao into Mickey Mouse and trains into bullets leaves Beijing -- and Toronto -- in its dust.
NOW Magazine  |  Michael Hollett  |  08-25-2008  |  International

Is Beijing Ready for Prime Time? No Waynew

I've been living in Beijing since the beginning of July, covering the mad month-long preamble to the Games. My experience has been the polar opposite of what I had read and seen in news stories about how the Chinese are ready and willing to accommodate the Olympic athletes, coaches, spectators, media, and volunteers.
Boston Phoenix  |  Sara Faith Alterman  |  08-07-2008  |  Sports

Runner Matt Tegenkamp Looks Forward to His Olympic Momentnew

If Madison's Matt Tegenkamp is feeling nervous about running the race of his life at the Olympics in Beijing next month, he's not showing it.
Isthmus  |  Jason Joyce  |  07-28-2008  |  Sports

Large Questions Go Unanswered at Olympic Trialsnew

There were four "elephants on the track" at the Olympic Track & Field Team Trials: banned substances, corporate sponsorship, the shroud of ugliness over the Beijing Olympics and the way we deal with these underlying issues while simultaneously cheering on the U.S. athletes at the Trials and Summer Olympics.
Eugene Weekly  |  Chuck Adams  |  07-10-2008  |  Sports

Photographer Paul Duda Captures China's Cultural Landmarks as They're Destroyednew

Duda has been documenting the way things used to be -- before the 2008 Olympics spurred a national call for modernization of Beijing -- and the way things are now, with crumbling walls and loose bricks around every corner. "I got to photographing these areas in Beijing without any prior knowledge they were going to wipe it out," he says. "Then I went back and realized they were gone, so I just kept going back, kept re-photographing."
New Haven Advocate  |  Laura Yao  |  06-03-2008  |  Art

Where Should the Focus of Olympic Protest Lie?new

The pre-emptive repression of political speech of Olympic athletes is mind boggling. The entire reason the Olympics are even in Beijing is political in nature -- an effort by the West to embrace China as a 21st-century economic and military superpower. So why shouldn't athletes be allowed to voice protest?
Philadelphia Weekly  |  Dave Zirin  |  05-05-2008  |  Sports

Baby Talkin' Big Brothernew

The Chinese have a new face for the police state.
Seattle Weekly  |  Knute Berger  |  04-19-2006  |  Commentary

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