Tonight I went to a new class for Tango. The third. It wasn't bad (unlike the last class). And set in a nice ambience despite small. I ended up dancing with an elderly lady who didn't quite follow steps. But t was nice as bumped into someone one the way out, a Japanese guy who had been doing it for 5 years. We went up to the Milonga (which was included in the price). It was nice watching people dance and I still long for the time when i can join in! In the next few months probably. The eldery lady was there and she ended up talking about the big picture of god and the cycle of human evolution which was interesting, even so considering she didn't say shit while we danced. I have started to take more tango classes in order to progress more rapidly.
I have been shortlisted to direct a music video. It's uncommon for a DoP to get into music videos directing. Normally directors are discontent with the DP's they work with and choose to shoot their own stuff. But I have wanted to direct for a while as I started shooting and directing my own projects and others and have liked it immensely. I am a little tired of watching people direct badly and have the urge to do it myself. I think i would be pretty ok at it.
Have to keep moving and progressing...
- J
I went online looking for skate shops in London as I only know of Slam City which has been around ever since I was a teen. I have been meaning to get another board for a while. I did discover that you can buy a board complete online now. No fussing with choosing bearings and wheels and trucks. I looked up about 200 before I found one. Most of the designs are so garish and awful and as the man over the telephone said, 'juvenile'. When I was a juvenile I didn't really have £100 to spend on a board so I got a cheap one which was fine. This time I just got it over the telephone.
Today I was asked by a friend who is directing a car commercial next month if I had 'car stuff' on my reel. Sadly i have shot many interior cars but very little exteriors. It's a four day international shoot with a 160k budget. If I had any decent 'car stuff' on my reel, he would have put me up for it.
I guess I will have to stick with the skateboard for now and work on the car stuff in the mean time.
- J
The most comprehensive collection of news regarding the events in Urumqi on the news site, EastSouthWestNorth:
http://www.zonaeuropa.com/20090706_1.htm
The graphic photographs of death puts things in perspective while the Channel 4 interview with Uighur leader Rebiya Kadeer (By Lindsey Hilsum on July 6) broadens our perspective on how the news is told and perhaps there may be weight in the statements of the CCP when they speak of 'separatists'...
- J
I'm not sure why that even after last year I am still surprised at the reporting the BBC does. It's so biased it insane. Although it does state how many people died as a result of the initial protests by the Ulghurs on Sunday, it continues on to say, 'Groups of Han Chinese armed with clubs then rampaged through the streets in a counter-protest '. There is nothing about Ulghurs weilding knives and batons on Sunday- no of course not, they were just protesting, except 140 people, mostly Han it has been reported (though unconfirmed but doubtful if not true considering) died that day.
I'm not biasing with the Han Chinese or against the Ulghurs, but reporting that is obviously biased needs a watchdog. Read the Guardian for a more balanced view and the article in Open Democracy on the recent history of Xinjiang.
I also found this good article that was written back in April. It speaks a rare view in the western media whose knowledge and attitude about Tibet/China/Human Rights issues are not on autopilot. Ian Buruma says:
"...the Chinese have another argument up their sleeve, which seems more plausible (and more modern). They are justly proud of the ethnic diversity of China. Why should nationality be defined by language or ethnicity? If Tibetans should be allowed to break away from China, why not the Welsh from Britain, the Basques from Spain, the Kurds from Turkey, or the Kashmiris from India?"
The Welsh are the only people from that group that don't have arms. All the others are considered militant/terrorists. The Tibetans in Lhasa didn't have arms either, but they still managed to kill both Han and Tibetans in the riots of March 2008.
Ian Buruma goes on to argue that the oppression is not an ethnic question but a political question of a lack of democracy.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/apr/08/tibet-china
new articles:
http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/the-uighurs-and-china-lost-and-found-nation
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/08/uighur-china-protests-ethnic-violence
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/8140492.stm
- J
In the city of Urumqi, Xinjiang, China, a protest and riot broke out yesterday between ethnic Ulghurs and Han . It is reported that 140 people have died as a result and over 800 people are injured. It is said that it is the most serious riots since the 1989 Tian'anmen Square. How this tragic incident is reported, just as the Lhasa riots of last year where, are of interest.
While the Guardian article concentrates on the sabotage and on the ground perceptions of ordinary people the BBC have chose to take the political and blame angle with a bias towards the Ulghur's and against official China- so much so in the video report that it assumes that state police were responsible for the violence. Though it seems to me, as in the Lhasa riots, that the Ulghur ethnic population were attacking the Han population. After all the eyes on China last year, isn't it silly to assume that official China would order a riot police force to shoot at the civilian population? Doesn't that sound more like propaganda?
The China Daily also places the political in the article though towards the other direction, towards the World Uyghur Congress (WUR) for whom China places blame. The article also takes an eye witness account as well as the possible explaination about the trigger of the riot.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/06/china-riots-uighur-xinjiang
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/8135203.stm
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2009-07/06/content_8384017.htm
- J
also here: http://centraln.blogspot.com/
Thetowncrier 28 Jul 09, 1:52pm (about 2 hours ago)