AltWeeklies Wire

American Consumers and Growers are Left in the Dust as China Goes Organicnew

Even as demand for organic food continues to explode, organic farmers in America are getting thrown under the beet cart they helped build. The Chinese are taking over the market share, especially of vegetables and soy, thanks to several American-based multinational food corporations that have hijacked the organic bandwagon they only recently jumped onto.
Weekly Alibi  |  Ari LeVaux  |  07-07-2009  |  Food+Drink

Shot Puts and Handjobs: It's the Olympics!new

Isn't it long past due that the Olympics included a Shark Jumping event? The whole sweaty spectacle vaulted into inconsequence years ago.
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Jim Washburn  |  08-15-2008  |  Sports

Can the Chinese Olympics Induce the Traditional International Hug?new

I'd like to believe that the controversy that follows any Western discussion of China — be it over Tibet, Darfur, or human rights in general — can become part of the international hug that every Olympic gathering aims to be and not the central distraction (violent or otherwise) we remember from Beijing '08.
The Memphis Flyer  |  Frank Murtaugh  |  08-08-2008  |  Sports

Give Beijing a Breaknew

In the "one world, one dream" spirit of the special family-reunion feelings that fill my heart just once every four years (because the Winter Olympics are lame), I request a 16-day moratorium on China-bashing, at least where their crap environmental record is concerned.
Los Angeles CityBeat  |  Coco Tanaka  |  08-08-2008  |  Sports

Oodles of Chinese Noodlesnew

How to make sesame peanut noodles and hot-and-sour noodle with shrimp.
Illinois Times  |  Julianne Glatz  |  08-07-2008  |  Food+Drink

Stretch Your Chinese Food Experience Beyond Cantonesenew

Undoubtedly Olympic athletes will stick to strict dietary regimens in Beijing — at least until they're done competing. Here's hoping other Olympic visitors will experience some of Beijing's vast array of culinary treasures. Includes recipe for mu shu pork.
Illinois Times  |  Julianne Glatz  |  08-07-2008  |  Food+Drink

Giving Away the Gamesnew

A top-secret government memorandum issued by General Administration of Press and Publication, Communist Party of the People's Republic of China and obtained by the Phoenix gives the press its marching orders.
Boston Phoenix  |  James Parker  |  08-07-2008  |  Comedy

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

A Culinary Postcard from China on the Eve of the Olympicsnew

After 24 hours in the air, the concept of jet lag seems quaint. I can barely figure out what day it is, much less the time. But despite my disorientation and general mental fuzz upon landing in Beijing, when I see the "Fresh Furit Platter" [sic] on the hotel bar menu, I perk up enough to pronounce it to myself with a Chinese accent.
Missoula Independent  |  Ari LeVaux  |  08-05-2008  |  Food+Drink

How Gilroy Turned a Garlic into the Country's Biggest Food Festivalnew

Today, garlic is as common in food as salt and pepper, but it wasn't always that way. Includes a recipe for babaghanouj.
Metro Silicon Valley  |  Stett Holbrook  |  07-17-2008  |  Food+Drink

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

Twitter Beat the U.S. Geological Survey to China Earthquake Infonew

Earthquakes are notoriously difficult to predict, but the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) does an admirable job of tracking tectonic activity across the world and providing early warnings for people in quake zones. The USGS was able to report on the Chinese event after only a few minutes. Still, it was no match for Twitter.
NOW Magazine  |  Joseph Wilson  |  05-27-2008  |  Tech

Five Ways New Mexico is Connected to the Beijing Olympic Controversiesnew

Tibet, Falun Gong, Darfur, poisoned imports and the threat of pandemics all hang over the games. And while these serious problems will likely continue long past the Beijing Olympics, the event presents the perfect opportunity for the world to protest and, perhaps, for China to listen.
Santa Fe Reporter  |  Dave Maass  |  05-15-2008  |  Sports

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

Narrow Search

Category

Hot Topics

Narrow by Date

  • Last 7 Days
  • Last 30 Days
  • Select a Date Range
  • From:

    To: