Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The pictures of Guy Bourdin

With their startling fairytale imagery, the fashion photographer Guy Bourdin's pictures have lost none of their uncomfortable allure. Drusilla Beyfus takes a look, as a new book and exhibition celebrate his work.


Though he died 19 years ago, the French photographer Guy Bourdin, one of the unquestioned innovators in his field of fashion photography, suddenly finds himself part of a hot topic. He was sworn to the printed magazine page. It was his chosen medium of expression throughout his four-decade career. But, goes the argument, with advances in technology and viewers increasingly turning to websites and apps, is there a future for magazine photography?

The case for the defence occurs in a new monograph of Bourdin's work, In Between, curated and edited by London-based Shelly Verthime. In her words, 'He mastered the transient fashion magazine as a stage and a story board.' The material in In Between focuses primarily on work produced between 1955 and 1985 for Bourdin's longest-lasting patrons, Condé Nast's French Vogue and Charles Jourdan, the French shoemaker.

'What you see in Bourdin,' Philippe Garner, a Sotheby's director, has said, 'is a linking of two great themes: desire and death.' Bourdin's first photographs for French Vogue in 1955, some of the most daring fashion images of the 20th century, according to Verthime, featured a model in an exquisitely designed hat photographed among the animal carcases at Les Halles, the Paris meat market.

In one shot a row of eviscerated animals hangs behind the model, who gazes impassively at the camera. His advertising shots for Charles Jourdan alluded to dark fairy tales and horror stories (such as the 1967 photograph depicting three slender legs dressed in brightly coloured hosiery and satin slippers, all roped together and stretched out across a railway line).

Bourdin had a hard attitude to women - in life as well as in his photographs, it seems. His biographers attribute this to his abandonment by his mother in infancy. His wife, Solange Greze, died in inconclusive circumstances in 1969; his lover Sybille Danner committed suicide in 1981. In the studio he was renowned for making extreme demands of his models.

Anthony Haden-Guest, writing in the New Yorker, recounted a French Vogue shoot in which Bourdin had the faces of two models covered in a layer of glue, over which he scattered black pearls. Bourdin decided to go further and wanted to do their entire bodies with pearls. Probably because of overheating, the two models passed out.

Painting was and remained Bourdin's first love, but having received training as a photographer during his military service with the French Air Force, he took to the camera with determination. After introducing himself to Man Ray in Paris he became a protege of the artist and a child of the Surrealist movement. Magritte's familiar image of a bowler-hatted man was subsequently invoked in a shoe advertisement.

In the mid-1950s, having shown his photographs to the editor-in-chief of French Vogue, Edmonde Charles-Roux (Bourdain had no commercial pictures in his portfolio), he was commissioned to try his hand at fashion. It was the beginning of a 30-year relationship with the magazine in which he was accorded almost complete creative freedom. He pushed the boundaries of fashion photography both aesthetically and in terms of their erotic content. In the 1960s his then Vogue editor Francine Crescent brought him together with the business of Charles Jourdan, a connection that lasted for 15 years and which produced arguably his most imaginative images.

The political correctness of the 1980s saw Bourdin fall out of favour; towards the end of his life he was said to have become a recluse. But in the past decade people have looked at his pictures in a new light.

Although not as well known in Britain as his contemporary Helmut Newton - with whom he is frequently (if wrongly) compared - Bourdin is now a major influence. David Lynch, the film director, has acknowledged his input, the photo-grapher Nick Knight has attributed his own 'neo-glam look' to Bourdin, while Glen Luchford, the creator of campaigns for Prada and Calvin Klein, has admitted a creative debt to him. Madonna has described Bourdin's erotic 1970s images as being 'sick and interesting'.

Although many of the sexual taboos that he played with have lost their punch, his work is appreciated now much more as a branch of the decorative arts. During his lifetime he cold-shouldered highly prestigious professional awards and refused to allow his work to appear in exhibitions, book compilations or to sell single prints. What he cared about was producing magazine photography of a quality likely to ensure a future for the form.

Monday, November 8, 2010

What Is The Best Non-Prescription Eyelash Enhancer


Eyelash enhancers are the latest beauty trend these days, and cosmetic companies everywhere are launching products that promise to give women longer, fuller, darker lashes without the fuss of mascara or false lashes. But with all these options, it’s hard to know what really works and what doesn’t.

Luckily, there are reputable beauty sites out there that have put many of these eyelash enhancers to the test. The results for this year’s top-performing eyelash enhancers are in … with iQ Derma’s SmartLash coming in with a solid 5-star rating on Dermstore.com, the #1 online destination for skin care and beauty.

What Is Eyelash Enhancement?

If you aren’t yet aware of this increasingly popular method of achieving longer lashes, eyelash enhancers are formulas that are topically applied to the base of your lower and upper lashes. They can even be used on sparse, thin eyebrows.

Is It Safe?

While prescription eyelash enhancers are often formulated with prostaglandin, a hormone that can cause side effects such as darkened irises (potentially irreversible) and blurred vision, more and more companies are developing safer, non-prescription alternatives that deliver impressive results.

Most non-prescription formulas are hormone and paraben-free. Instead, they’re formulated with polypeptides, amino acids and conditioning ingredients to help rejuvenate lashes and strengthen them against breakage. So you still get longer, fuller, darker-looking lashes and shapelier brows without the negative side effects.

How Soon Can You See Results?

In some cases, users have reported seeing results in as little as 7 days, while others may see results in 4 weeks.

SmartLash, for instance, has published its clinical results, which show that 46% of participants saw a difference in their eyelashes and/or brows in just 7 days while 100% saw a difference in 14 days. They also experienced up to a 68% increase in the appearance of lash length.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Ugg Classic Arglye – Pick of the Ugg Fall Collection


The pick of this years Ugg Fall collection was undoubedly the Ugg Classic Arglye Knit Boot. The Ugg Argyle is a natural progression from the best selling Ugg Classic Cardy range. These knitted boots have been a firm favorite for the last few years and contiue to sell well.

The argyle adds a little extra knitted design making them stand out from the crowd. Available in 4 colors, Black, Cream, Charcoal and Fig (dark purple to you and me!). I am quite suprised that Ugg have foregone the Grey color this year as that was one of the best selling Classic cardy colors.

One suprise and one that best left un commented was the Striped Classic Tall Cable Knit Boot, it seems you really can have too much of a good thing!

Back to the Classic Argyle, as whth all the knitted Ugg boots there go great with jeans and short skirts, i suspec tthis year well see them being worn with floral print dresses and leggins. Hell they’ll go with anything!!

If you loved the Classic Cardy then you will undoubtedly love the Classic Argyle Knit Boot.

However one word of caution Once again I suspect that they will be in very short supply. When the Cardy fist appeared 2 years ago they sold out almost overnight. The only place you could get them was on eBay and the prices there were at a premium.

Get out there and secure your pair today before they are all gone, I suspect that just like the cardy The Classic Argyle Boot will probably appear on Oprahs Favorite Things It is the type of boot that she adores both comfortable and practicle and above all fashionable.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Links à la Mode: The IFB Weekly Roundup

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The Five P’s of Fashion Partying

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China Momentum Continues, But What Does It Mean?

Oct. 10 2010 - 11:25 pm | 1,803 views | 0 recommendations |

China GDP will grow 9.5% to 10% in 2010, and U.S. GDP will grow 2.5%. While GDP growth in China is likely to be between 7% and 9% longer term, U.S. GDP growth will be between 2% and 3%. The differences in GDP growth will affect the exchange rate and relative levels of wealth in China and the U.S. The housing bubble in China continues to be controlled, and property prices in most of the larger cities will increase in the next 12 to 24 months. The defaults that have plagued the U.S. housing market are not occurring in China, and while many houses and apartments lie empty due to speculators, there are shortages of affordable residences in China. While demand for residences will continue to be strong in China, there is the need for a steady increase in salaries to allow a growing base of buyers to pay for higher-priced properties. China has excess commercial properties, and many are highly leveraged, but if the economy can continue to grow at 7% to 9% per year, the excess in most regions can be systematically absorbed. The industrial and financial base in China needs to continue to expand in order to absorb the excess commercial properties. China will steadily increase the consumption of goods it produces, which is consistent with the growth of the middle class to be 30% of the total population by 2020. The increase in internal consumption in China is being done in an orderly and planned way so that large deficits are not built. Who can blame China for managing consumption? The U.S. is clearly not in a good position to advise China how to manage consumption and manage its economy. The growth of China, however, continues to be heavily dependent on exporting. Without exports to developing countries such as in South America and Asia as well as developed countries in North America and Europe, the economy of China would stagnate. With the resulting increase in unemployment, the likelihood of social unrest would be high. The interdependence of supply and demand is being carefully managed in China, but the U.S. is the key foundation on which China and most other global economies depend. If U.S. consumption of goods from China, Japan, South Korea, Germany, etc, drops precipitously, the industrial miracles of these countries collapse rapidly. These countries need for the U.S. to continue to consume. The U.S. is, however, consuming based on borrowing, which can only be addressed by the combination of reduced spending and increased taxes. There is also the option of inflation, which destroys the value of the dollar and the other currencies that are linked to the dollar. We in the U.S. are living in a world of illusion, where the cost of continuing with our lifestyles is escalating rapidly. Measures are being enacted to have China increase the value of the Yuan, and while this can make some of the goods made in China, including the iPhone 4 and iPad, have higher prices for U.S. consumers, the impact on the balance of trade between China and the U.S. in the next 12 to 24 months will be low. The raising of the value of the Yuan can make it less expensive for China to import oil and other commodities but can also increase the price of oil to the U.S. consumers as the value of the dollar continues to decline. Forcing China to increase the value of the Yuan is a no-win situation for the U.S. The U.S. needs to develop new industries to strengthen its exports. While the relative position of the U.S. is weakening, China is becoming more assertive and willing to be confrontational. To date, Japan has been the primary target for the stronger China. This is a new phase of China foreign policy and is probably an early indicator of the positions that will be taken by the new leaders that come into power in 2012. The global economic power base is changing. It is important to understand these trends and have policies to address them. Some of the new industrial policies of China, such as in the high-fuel-efficiency automobile arena, should be of major concern to the U.S., European, Japanese, South Korean, and Indian automobile companies. Under the new agreement, Chinese companies will own at least 51% of the joint ventures, and the foreign joint venture partners will need to provide key areas of technology to even have minority ownership. While this is a very astute approach by China, it will dramatically weaken the ability of the foreign automobile companies to compete in the China market. With high market share of the China market, the Chinese automotive companies will have the financial and technical resources to build strong positions in the global markets. The analysis of China and the actions of the Chinese leaders shows that excellent strategies are generally developed for long-term market domination. While there is the willingness to concede in some areas, there is also strong protection of areas that are considered strategic. In chess, it is the equivalent of giving a pawn to capture a rook. Soon, we have no major pieces left and we are defenseless. When checkmate occurs is a matter of convenience. China is an efficient industrial giant that is managing its internal policies effectively and is also managing its external environment. The strategies of China are well-planned for winning the war on wealth. We in the U.S. have many strengths but are also highly fragmented in our approaches. The U.S. is also too concerned with continuing consumption in the short term and is not taking care of the future of our children and the children of our children. We need to understand China and how we can collaborate with China in building wealth. When the Titanic and iceberg collided, we know what happened. The iceberg drifted to the equator and melted and the Titanic sank. We all need to prosper.


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Monday, November 1, 2010

3 Tips to Keep Your Top Chinese Talent

Oct. 11 2010 - 10:40 pm | 1,232 views | 0 recommendations |

“If you’re not switching jobs every two years, then you’re doing something wrong.” I continue to hear Asia Pacific-based senior executives echo the same sentiment about the career mindset of young Chinese white-collar workers in China. When I worked as a consultant in Beijing, it was clear that my co-workers seemed to be on a constant rotation program among the top multinational management consulting firms operating in China. During my first weeks on the job, I reviewed training presentations blatantly taken from the China offices of McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting Group and Accenture. My co-workers did not seem to mind using this information, because so many had spent significant time at these different firms that to them it was public knowledge and not viewed as proprietary information.

Once you identify, recruit, and train top local employees in China, how can you retain these individuals to ensure they do not leave to work for a competitor taking your company’s proprietary information for a minor pay increase?

There is no surefire solution for retaining talented local employees, but many innovative western multinational firms have developed strategies to keep their prized hires within the firm. Here are three strategies worth considering:

Be flexible about employee titles

In general, it’s not wise to give inflated titles to employees whose skills and responsibilities don’t match up. While the title may initially satisfy an employee, he or she is likely to eventually consider themselves underpaid for the rank and demand more compensation. However, some companies have found a way around this dilemma by committing to a standard company-wide title and pay grade internally, while granting the employee a more appealing outward facing title on their business cards and in the marketplace. As one Asia Pacific CEO at a leading technology firm put it, “if the regional sales manager for China and Taiwan wants his business card to read ‘Greater China Director of Business Development’ I am ok with it, if that’s what it takes for him to stay in the company and continue to hit his sales targets.”

Think long-term when it comes to incentives

Convincing your local talent to buy into the company vision and stick around over the long-term may prove challenging. Nevertheless, you may be able to increase the likelihood your top employees will stay past the two-year mark by tying their incentives to aspirational purchases. The ideal path for a top graduate on the white collar career track is to graduate, get married, and buy a house. In recent years, a second major purchase typically follows home ownership – a car. Understanding this phenomenon, one company set up an incentive scheme for top sales managers. The company would provide an interest free loan to selected employees to buy cars and match a portion of the payments for 5 years. If the employee leaves the company before five years, they would lose the car and the company’s contribution. For those who stick around, they receive a car at a significantly reduced price. This is somewhat similar to companies outside of China issuing stock option plans, in which employees’ options fully vest only after a set number of years working for the company.

Shatter the glass ceiling

The Asia Pacific CEO at most Western multinational companies is often a foreigner from headquarters. Typically, other key positions such as VP Strategy, VP Marketing, even down to middle-management posts are filled by expatriates. This is unsustainable for a business seeking to localize for the long-term. As soon as a key Chinese employee sees a glass ceiling looming above her head, she will opt to join other firms. Interestingly, an increasing number of mid-level managers are choosing to leave Western MNCs for domestic firms. According to Frontier Strategy Group’s 2010 China Talent Engagement Survey, domestic Chinese firms empower their mid-level managers with greater responsibility than their counterparts at multinationals. On average, the typical mid-level manager (age 31-35) at a Chinese firm oversees 13 direct reports, while those at Western MNCs on average only directly manage 9 employees. It is important for top talent to see a clear career path at your company, or else ambitious employees seeking career advancement with increased responsibility may leave for a competing local firm such as Mindray, Baosteel, Huawei Technologies or Haier where there is more potential for career advancement.


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Three Rising Consumer Trends In China

Apart from the headline making stories about China’s growth rate, its currency, and sky-high property prices, three major trends are developing that are changing the competitive landscape in the country. All three, in one way or another, deal with the vast local market which largely exists in China’s interior.

In the broadest terms, approximately 400 million of China’s 1.3 billion population have annual per-capita income equivalent to $8,000, while the remaining 900 million have per-capita incomes one-tenth that amount. The lower income group tends to live in the countryside and China’s interior provinces, whereas the people with higher incomes primarily live in the country’s larger cities.

This vast income disparity in China creates two distinctive markets for almost every product — a high price, high technology segment catering to the country’s more affluent consumers; and a large, purely local market at the low end of the price-technology spectrum.

In the higher price market, which is not too dissimilar from markets one might find in the U.S. or Europe in terms of price, quality and technology, international companies compete with the best of the Chinese companies. Few international companies, though, venture into China’s lower price local market.

Three important trends are now creating a dynamic whereby the lower income segment of China’s population will play an increasingly important role in the country’s future development. As these trends unfold, international and local companies that are able to address both markets will have the greatest amount of success.

1. The local market is getting larger and more important as an increasingly restless workforce demands higher wages and a path to higher income jobs.

Wages are rising and workers in China are no longer content to accept whatever factory bosses in their sole discretion decide to pay them. Today’s workers are better educated than previous generations and aren’t satisfied with assembly-line jobs that offer few transferable skills and little prospect for advancement. They are demanding higher wages, a better work environment and a path to higher income jobs.

Much as Henry Ford’s decision to dramatically increase the wages of the workers at his factories created a new group of potential buyers for the company’s low-priced Model T, rising wages for migrant workers in Chinese factories are increasing the spending power of those at the bottom of China’s income pyramid. China’s local market will continue to grow and will become even more important in the future as a result.

2. As economic development evens out in China, growth will be fastest in the interior, further increasing the size and importance of the local market.

Shanghai’s per-capita income is over eight times that of China’s poorest province, and more than three and a half times that of all but a handful of the country’s other provinces. By comparison, the per-capita income of Connecticut, the wealthiest of America’s 50 states, is less than twice that of the poorest.

Traffic is also becoming a problem in China’s largest cities. Beijing officials estimate that, if the vehicle population continues to increase at the same rate, the average speed will slow to 15 miles per hour in China’s capital city by 2015.

The inner provinces are where growth will be the fastest going forward. The government is encouraging this trend, and many companies are now establishing large manufacturing facilities in the interior that employ hundreds of thousands of workers.

3. As the local market expands, local companies are gaining market share.

As China’s local market expands, and the demand for goods and services extends to a greater portion of the country’s population, local companies are gaining market share at the expense of their international rivals. China is the largest truck market in the world. Yet, local companies produce 98% of the trucks used in the country, and 90% of the diesel engines that power them. In the commercial vehicle market, price and affordability are the key issues. The same goes for construction equipment, where local companies now dominate the wheel loader market and occupy one-third of the market for excavators.

From virtually zero when passenger cars were first introduced, local brands now account for 33% of the cars being sold in China. As demand for cars broadens, smaller, less expensive models, where local car companies are most competitive, increases in proportion to the larger, more expensive models.

Even the newest industries are increasingly being dominated by local companies. In wind turbines, local companies account for 80% of the market, up from 13% in 2004. And the list goes on.

So far at least, the local Chinese companies appear to be benefiting the most from the expansion of China’s local market. Stay tuned.


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How The Internet Plays Key Role In China’s New Long March To Modernization

Oct. 5 2010 - 12:37 am | 665 views | 0 recommendations | National emblem of the People's Republic of China Image via Wikipedia

October 1 marks the 61st anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China. For Chinese, 60 years represent one cycle in the Chinese calendar, which gives this 61st anniversary special significance.

For the first 30 years of the People’s Republic, China was dominated by Mao’s presence and his emphasis on politics and political movements at the expense of almost everything else. In the beginning, the political campaigns began as an inconvenience, but gradually became more extreme, culminating in the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution, which permanently scarred Chinese society in very profound ways. The next 30 years after Mao died were largely about bringing China up from poverty and healing those wounds.

The period from 1978 till today, from an economic development point of view, are a huge success. China has risen from beggar nation status to one of the world’s wealthiest if measured by cash reserves. The Chinese government speaks with a new confidence, which often comes across as worrying, especially to its neighbors in the region, such as Japan, India and the members of ASEAN. In the Chinese officially controlled media, there are endless reminders of how much the government has done to raise Chinese standards of living, and frequently vilifying any criticism of official policy. The official line is that everything will be fine if China continues on its current path of development.

The only problem is that no one in China really believes that continuing previous policy will work. Chinese, through their actions, have made it very clear that they want more than just a higher standard of living and economic growth. Frequently, they feel that they are victims of corrupt local officials who have abused their power to enrich themselves. Furthermore, the system does not have checks and balances through which people can make appeals for justice. Since all political, legislative and executive power is dominated by one institution which has 79 million members, there are no other channels for the average Chinese citizen.

Until now.

In today’s China, the only system which permits some kind of appeal and checks and balances is the Internet. One of the most interesting stories in China which most foreign observers have missed is how the Chinese, in their own very ingenious ways, have adapted the Internet to fit their needs. In a previous article, I talked about how Sina’ s adaptation of Twitter, Sina Weibo, has become a tool for digital petitions to the Beijing central government, completely circumventing corrupt local officials. This presents a special challenge to Sina editors who are in charge of censoring content in real-time on Weibo on the government’s behalf. If they allow the content to go out, it will spread rapidly, creating a huge number of followers and supporters. If they suppress it, they will seem like they are working in collusion with corrupt local officials.

What are they to do?

In another instance, a Chinese author published a novel online, and was arrested and jailed for publishing pornographic content. Many Chinese came to his defense, and in the face of protests which came ONLY on the Internet, the author was released. Please note: because it is very hard for protesters to organize in the real world, Chinese are organizing to protest on the Internet. And they are doing it very successfully.

So, when Google and other western companies protest censorship in China, they really miss the big story. The Chinese Internet represents a channel for Chinese which they have not had before in the first 61 years of the People’s Republic. It represents a channel for protests and representations which did not exist during Mao’s lifetime. And it is VERY effective. This power comes from the Chinese people and their ability to swiftly organize on the Internet.

Google’s failure to grow significantly in China is based on its failure to understand how the Chinese would develop the Internet to suit their own needs. Sina is a company which is under very tight Chinese government supervision, yet they developed Sina Weibo. Why couldn’t Google have developed it? My guess is that Google’s management wasted so much attention and cycles on the government censorship issue that they failed to spot any other opportunities in China.

And western political pundits who support more freedom for Chinese miss the point by complaining about the Great Firewall of China. Most of the sites outside the GFW are in English anyway, a language the vast majority of Chinese just are not interested in. Instead of building more tools to go outside the GFW, they should focus on building tools to make it easier for Chinese to express themselves on the Internet within China. Ironically, Sina has done a much better job at this than Google.

Looking to its next 60 years, it is plain to see that economic development at the expense of everything else will not be sufficient to satisfy most Chinese. They want accountable government and freedom to express their ideas, and to live in dignity. Only when Chinese have free access to information will Chinese society become truly modern.


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Peace Hotel Still Shines But Could Use More Stars

Oct. 23 2010 - 10:48 am | 451 views | 0 recommendations |

It’s not every day that you get to stay in a hotel as legendary as the Peace Hotel in Shanghai. So yes, my expectations were running high.
That’s why I was disappointed when I arrived by taxi to the corner of Nanjing Road and the Bund, and was not immediately whisked inside with my luggage following. Instead, a bellman stood guard over the front entrance trying to keep the prying tourists away and nearly blocking my entrance.
Once inside, things did look up. While my room was not available yet, I was awed to see how the hotel had been transformed since my first touristy visit in 1995 to the historic place. The chandeliers and the white marble floors were glistening, and the staff stood at attention, greeting guests.
I observed as a steady stream of well-dressed visitors paraded inside and took seats at the lounge to order drinks. It seems that the Peace Hotel, closed for two years while a renovation by the Fairmont was underway, was once again the place to be seen. Some parts of the hotel are still a work in progress as I discovered when I walked upstairs to a darkened second floor, and immediately followed and directed back to a lobby by staff.
My room was not one of the spacious, oversized spaces I had peaked in on during my stop here 15 years earlier, but the high ceilings and large windows overlooking the rooftops of buildings along the Bund made it appear larger. Despite the hustle below of tourists in town for the Shanghai Expo, all was quiet and comfortable in here—no surprises.
For some reason I nearly quite fully understood, I was discouraged from using the executive lounge, which was nearly always empty, and directed to one of the hotel’s many restaurants.
I remembered the Chinese restaurant on the 8th floor overlooking the Huangpu River, and was glad to see that it’s kept most of its original feel and has not gone ultra-glitzy like many restaurants and nightclubs along the Bund. One evening, I met up with some San Francisco colleagues and had drinks at the bar while a jazz band of six veteran musicians made harmony together once again. We felt as though we were in our own special club.
One of the joys of visiting Shanghai today is having options like newly refurbished and brand new hotels to stay in. There is no shortage of them now, owing to all the new hotels that opened in time for this year’s Shanghai Expo.
See China’s Five-Star Infrastructure, Underused http://blogs.forbes.com/china/2010/05/26/chinas-five-star-infrastructure-underused/
Even as the skyline fills with more and more luxury hotels – the latest being the Intercontinental, the Peninsula and the Ritz-Carlton – still more are springing up in newly developing areas of the city. One wonders who is going to fill these rooms once the expo closes at the end of the month.
See Growth in China for international hotel chains may be poised to slow: http://blogs.forbes.com/russellflannery/2010/09/23/growth-in-china-for-international-hotel-chains-may-be-poised-to-slow/
I recently stayed at the just-opened five-star Guoman Hotel in yet another up and coming district of the city. My room had a bird’s eye view of a scenic lake inside Changfeng Park. This certainly beat most of the surroundings, largely a construction zone. Indeed, my taxi driver couldn’t find the hotel entranceway among all the roadblocks.
In case you haven’t heard of Guoman, it’s a British hotel group with four landmark properties in London. This is the group’s first of many hotels in China (including Beijing next year) where hoteliers are concentrating their expansion efforts. Certainly, the British heritage meant that the staff had extra-fine training in English skills – always a plus for foreign visitors. Another treat was the iconic London cabs.
Within a year’s time, this whole area will not be recognizable. A shopping mall is going up right next door, and on the other side of the hotel will be a MGM studio and believe it or not, a Jackie Chan museum.
Who says Shanghai isn’t exciting?


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The Great Currency Debate

On Thursday, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Currency Reform for Fair Trade Act, which aims to crack down on Chinese currency manipulation by targeting imports from China and other countries with currencies that are perceived to be undervalued. With a final tally of 348 to 79, the bill was bi-partisan and passed with ease.

The fact that more than 100 Republicans voted in favor of the bill suggests that no Congressman wants to be on the wrong side of the China issue in advance of the November elections. Imports from China are generally blamed for the loss of American jobs overseas and stubborn high employment in the United States. With jobs now the number one issue on the minds of voters, any measure that promises to reverse job outflow, whatever its merits, is viewed as good politics.

Congressional leaders were quick to try and make political hay out of passage of the bill.

“For so many years, we have watched the China-U.S. trade deficit grow and grow and grow,” Speaker Nancy Pelosi said. “Today, we are finally doing something about it by recognizing that China’s manipulation of the currency represents a subsidy for Chinese exports coming to the United States and elsewhere.”

“I believe in free markets and open competition. I believe that American companies and workers can win under those conditions. But the rules have to be fair—and for years now, it has been clear that China’s currency policy unfairly tilts the field in its direction,” Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said in statement. “By deliberately keeping the value of its Yuan low, China is able to sell products here at an artificially low price. As a result, domestic manufacturers — whose prices would be much more competitive if China allowed the market to set the value of its currency — go out of business. And American workers lose their jobs.”

In the great currency debate which is now raging and which threatens to grow wider, June 19 is a key date. That is the day that China, by far the world’s largest currency trader, announced that it would no longer peg the yuan to the U.S. dollar, but would instead peg it to a basket of currencies. What China’s announcement meant in practice is that at the margin, beginning on June 19, China would tilt its purchases in favor of buying assets denominated in the euro, the Japanese yen, the British pound or some other major currency, rather than those denominated in the U.S. dollar. When an investor with $2.5 trillion of buying power makes such a statement, markets tend to listen.

Here is what has happened since.

As of the September month-end, the euro has increased in value by 10.3% against the U.S. dollar since June 19, the pound by 6.3%, and the yen by 7.8%. In fact China’s purchases of yen-denominated securities has heightened trade tensions between Japan and China to the point where the Japanese have complained publicly that China is effectively pricing Japanese products out of the market with its yen purchases, threatening to derail Japan’s economic recovery.

In the broadest measure possible, the United States Dollar Index (“USDX”) has declined by over 9.6% percent since June 19. The USDX measures the value of the US dollar against a basket of currencies that includes the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and the Swedish krona — exactly the currencies that China is most likely including in its own basket and which are now appreciating as a result. The USDX began in March 1973 with a value of 100.000 and has since traded as high as the mid-160s. At its current level of 78.691, the USDX is approaching its 33-year low of 70.698, which was reached on March 16, 2008.

While it is true that China’s yuan has appreciated by less than 2 percent against the dollar since June 19, and the slow pace of yuan appreciation is what has drawn the ire of U.S. policymakers, the fact is that the exchange rate between the yuan and the dollar is only part of the overall currency picture. China is a $5 trillion economy, but the gross domestic product of the European Union is $16.4 trillion, that of Japan is $5 trillion, and that of the United Kingdom is $2 trillion. Against the currencies of all of these countries, the value of the U.S .dollar is anywhere between 2 and 10 percent lower today than it was on June 19. Meanwhile, the dollar continues to weaken as speculation of quantitative easing by the Federal Reserve mounts.

If anything, the U.K., Japan and the ECU countries are being hurt more by U.S. currency policy than they are by China’s. As the economies of these countries struggle to recover, expect the currency debate to widen beyond China’s currency policy, to include the weak dollar policy being pursued by the United States.

As the Beggar the World editorial which appeared in today’s Wall Street Journal so aptly put it:

China’s ambassador to the World Trade Organization, Sun Zhenyu, was speaking for much of the world this week when he said that “We are very much concerned about how the U.S. would take practical and responsible measures to prevent the dollar glut and maintain the stability of the currency.”


View the original article here

Fashion ugg boots is a good chioce for you

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Saturday, July 31, 2010

You'll never regret it


Time is running out for my friend. While we are sitting at lunch she casually mentions she and her husband are thinking of starting a family. "We're taking a survey,"she says, half-joking. "Do you think I should have a baby?"

"It will change your life," I say, carefully keeping my tone neutral. "I know,"she says, "

no more sleeping in on weekends, no more spontaneous holidays..."

But that's not what I mean at all. I look at my friend, trying to decide what to tell her. I want her to know what she will never learn in childbirth classes. I want to tell her that the physical wounds of child bearing will heal, but becoming a mother will leave her with an emotional wound so raw that she will be vulnerable forever.

I consider warning her that she will never again read a newspaper without thinking: "What if that had been MY child?" That every plane crash, every house fire will haunt her. That when she sees pictures of starving children, she will wonder if anything could be worse than watching your child die. I look at her carefully manicured nails and stylish suit and think that no matter how sophisticated she is, becoming a mother will reduce her to the primitive level of a bear protecting her cub.

I feel I should warn her that no matter how many years she has invested in her career, she will be professionally derailed by motherhood. She might arrange for child care, but one day she will be going into an important business meeting, and she will think her baby's sweet smell. She will have to use every ounce of discipline to keep from running home, just to make sure her child is all right.

I want my friend to know that every decision will no longer be routine. That a five-year-old boy's desire to go to the men's room rather than the women's at a restaurant will become a major dilemma. The issues of independence and gender identity will be weighed against the prospect that a child molester may be lurking in the lavatory. However decisive she may be at the office, she will second-guess herself constantly as a mother.

Looking at my attractive friend, I want to assure her that eventually she will shed the added weight of pregnancy, but she will never feel the same about herself. That her own life, now so important, will be of less value to her once she has a child. She would give it up in a moment to save her offspring, but will also begin to hope for more years—not to accomplish her own dreams—but to watch her children accomplish theirs.

I want to describe to my friend the exhilaration of seeing your child learn to hit a ball. I want to capture for her the belly laugh of a baby who is touching the soft fur of a dog for the first time. I want her to taste the joy that is so real it hurts.

My friend's look makes me realize that tears have formed in my eyes. "You'll never regret it," I say finally. Then, squeezing my friend's hand, I offer a prayer for her and me and all of the mere mortal women who stumble their way into this holiest of callings.

Sleeping is linked to an early death


People who sleep fewer than six hours a night are more likely to die early, researchers have found in a study they claim provides 'unequivocal evidence' of a link between sleep deprivation and premature death.

They discovered that people who slept for less than six hours each night were 12 per cent more likely to die prematurely before the age of 65 - than those who slept the recommended six to eight hours a night.

The team from the University of Warwick and Federico II University Medical School in Naples analysed 16 studies involving a total of 1.3 million people before reaching their conclusions.

They pointed out that previous studies had shown that sleep deprivation was associated with heart disease, high blood pressure, obesity diabetes, and high cholesterol.

However, the researchers also found that sleeping too much was linked to an early death.

Those who slept for more than nine hours a night were 30 per cent more likely to die early, the research published in the journal Sleep found.

That directly contradicts research published in the same journal last week which suggested that people who slept for ten hours or longer a night were more likely to live to 100.

This was thought to be because people who lived into extreme old age were healthier and therefore slept better.

However, the authors of the latest research contradicted this and suggested that long sleep was a sign of underlying illnesses such as depression and low levels of physical activity. Some cancer is also associated with sleeping for longer.

Professor Francesco Cappuccio, leader of the Sleep, Health and Society Programme at the University Warwick Consultant Physician at the University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, said: "Whilst short sleep may represent a cause of ill-health, long sleep is believed to represent more an indicator of ill-health.

"Modern society has seen a gradual reduction in the average amount of sleep people take, and this pattern is more common among full-time workers, suggesting that it may be due to societal pressures for longer working hours and more shift-work. On the other hand, the deterioration of our health status is often accompanied by an extension of our sleeping time.

"Consistently sleeping six to eight hours per night may be optimal for health. The duration of sleep should be regarded as an additional behavioural risk factor, or risk marker, influenced by the environment and possibly amenable to change through both education and counselling as well as through measures of public health aimed at favourable modifications of the physical and working environments."

Friday, July 30, 2010

Mars talk to Venus


It’s no secret that men and women communicate differently – but is there really no way to translate Mars talk to Venus speak? Dr. B. Janet Hibbs, a psychologist and couples therapist, says there’s hope as long as you’re willing to adjust your “filter” – a.k.a. the part of your brain that processes what he says, spins it around and reacts to it.


Ready for a practice run? Here are six common communication problems in relationships。

WHAT HE SAYS: “I’m sorry you feel that way。”

WHAT YOU HEAR: “You’re being a psycho。”

WHAT HE MEANS: “I just really want this argument to be over。” Women like to hash things out, talking issues through from start to finish. Guys, on the other hand, have much more of a flight instinct when it comes to confrontation – especially if he doesn’t fully understand why you’re so upset。

WHAT HE SAYS: “If you feel undervalued, ask for a raise。”

WHAT YOU HEAR: “Ugh, your problems are so simple – just fix it。”

WHAT HE MEANS: “Work’s bothering you? Let me help!” The truth is, men tend to see themselves as problem solvers in romantic relationships, and so what comes across as condescending1 can actually be your guy’s way of trying to help。

WHAT HE SAYS: “Uh huh. Right. Yeah。”

WHAT YOU HEAR: “I couldn’t be less interested in what you’re saying。”

WHAT HE MEANS: “I want to hear your story, but it’s been 10 minutes and still no punch line2.” Men don’t process information in the lengthy way that women do, so telling him a story in the drawn-out way you would to one of your girlfriends isn’t going to work. In short, cut to the chase and you’ll get more of a reaction。

WHAT HE SAYS: “I didn’t tell you about the layoffs?”

WHAT YOU HEAR: “My job’s in jeopardy and I didn’t even bother to tell you。”

WHAT HE MEANS: “I didn’t want to worry you。” Most men don’t like to advertise their fears or what they might perceive as weaknesses – especially to the person they feel they need to protect (that’s you)。

WHAT HE SAYS: “It’s not a big deal。”

WHAT YOU HEAR: “How trivial。”

WHAT HE MEANS: “Let’s not dwell on it。” Men come from the school of suck-it-up, while women tend to need more reassurance if something is bothering them。

WHAT HE SAYS: “I need some space。”

WHAT YOU HEAR: “I don’t want to be with you。”

WHAT HE MEANS: “I care about you, but I also want some more independence。” In many romantic relationships, men use this blanket phrase instead of being more specific, as in: “I love the connection we have, but I miss spending time with my friends as well。” Use your judgment: If he’s still being affectionate and just feels a bit smothered3, give him some breathing room. However, if you’re only hanging out once a week to begin with, it might just be that he wants to end things – in which case, walk away。

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Obsessing over a sweet treat is such a drain on the brain


Next time you're craving a bar of chocolate, give in. Your waistline might not thank you for it - but your brain will.

Research has revealed that obsessing over a sweet treat is such a drain on the brain that it makes it difficult to concentrate on other tasks.

Fighting an all- consuming desire for chocolate HobNobs or strawberry ice cream can have consequences ranging from simple memory lapses to car crashes, say scientists.

The research centres on cravings for specific foods and brands.

Someone experiencing a craving isn't just hungry, they want to eat a particular brand of biscuits or flavour of ice cream - and nothing else will do.

The Australian research team set out to see whether the intensity of these desires affects our ability to concentrate on other things.

They found that volunteers whose favourite chocolate bar was unwrapped and within their reach while they sat a series of tests had slower reactions and poorer memories than those who did the same tests in a chocolate-free zone.

The researchers, from Melbourne's Flinders University believe that when we crave a food we draw a mental picture of it.

Writing in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science, the researchers, from Melbourne's Flinders University, said: 'Although cognitive effects of individual food cravings are likely to be small, in practice even small reductions in cognitive resources have the potential to compromise optimal performance in everyday situations, thereby reducing work efficiency or increasing the likelihood of accidents.'

But the researchers also believe that when we crave a food we draw a mental picture of it - and that filling the brain with competing images, such as visualising a rainbow, can ease cravings.

Protecting Wildlife


Some of Britain's most endangered wildlife - from red squirrels to native crayfish - are vanishing from the countryside at an alarming rate, a report warns.
 
A census of the most at-risk species found that dozens of plants and creatures are in serious decline, despite Government-backed attempts to protect them.
 
Conservationists yesterday accused politicians of failing to tackle the crisis and called on the coalition Government to carry out the parties' election pledges on protecting wildlife.
 
The report, from the Joint Nature Conservation Committee, revealed that 88 species are in decline, including skylarks, pearl-bordered fritillary butterflies and red squirrels.

The assessment - which looked at the fortunes of hundreds of threatened species and habitats listed on the UK Biodiversity Action Plan - found that 19 types of landscape were also suffering, including mudflats, maritime cliffs and saltmarshes.
 
And it revealed that eight species have become extinct since the publication of the original plan in 1994, including the wryneck bird, two lichens, three moths and two beetles.
 
However, the report also found some success in boosting wildlife, with eight habitats and 40 species said to be improving.

Matt Shardlow, chief executive of Buglife, the Invertebrate Conservation Trust, said: 'British wildlife is in crisis. Species that have lived here for thousands of years are declining and disappearing. 'The UK and country authorities must now redouble their efforts if they are to have any hope of meetingthe new EU target of "halting the loss of biodiversity and the degradation of ecosystem services in the EU by 2020".'
 
Dr Mark Avery, of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, said: 'The report shows that when targeted conservation programmes are funded, species such as stone-curlew, corncrake and bittern can often quickly recover. 'But we've made less progress with restoring and expanding vital wildlife habitats.'
 
Many of the species have suffered from the loss of their habitats, intensive farming and pollution.
 
A spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said: 'Many pressures on biodiversity remain high and some species such as farmland birds and sea birds have declined. We will continue to address this.'

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Naked workers !!!


According to a British media, on May 17, passengers on the London Underground were shocked to see two handsome men and two blondes enter the subway station without clothes. The foursome, who covered their modesty with handbags and briefcases, were stripped to the buff. They looked as if they were busily going to work and nothing was out of the ordinary.


It turned out that they were promoting a new Virgin TV series, The Naked Office, that shows how naked workers at struggling companies turning their businesses around. This absurd advertisement has caused great debates among British Internet users.

Something about Fish


As they swim gently around their tank or bowl, fish tend to enjoy a stress-free existence. But they face one great potential peril, scientists have found.
  
Apparently, if they catch sight of their reflection gawping back at them, they try to fight it. They are then terrified when their lookalike fights back in exactly the same way.
 
Scientists say the discovery shows how similar their brains are to ours.

Biologist Dr Julie, who led the study, said: 'I think this indicates there is more going on cognitively than people have long assumed in fish.'
All showed high levels of testosterone and other aggression-inducing hormones in their blood.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow



Yesterday, another beautiful, but has passed; tomorrow brilliant, but not the arrival. A three is better than yesterday, today, three tomorrow, a better today. A good many today is better than yesterday and tomorrow, not good.

To yesterday, today and tomorrow on the scale together, today the most weight; you, me, him today, and after the previous one today, but have light weight. Although today the word simple, but enough to write you a lifetime. To life every day as today's people, I believe that every day he will become golden days. Today in the hope of a better, although they must be achieved tomorrow, hope that the seedlings can be contained under it today. Otherwise, they would like to better tomorrow harvest can only be disappointed.

Although the ordinary today, may be it is a block BRIC, elevate your tomorrow; today, although the ordinary, may be it is a stream. Poly filled with you tomorrow; today, though inconspicuous, it is onecan fire, red you tomorrow ......


Short philosophical essay today in the hope of a better, although they must be achieved tomorrow, hope that the seedlings can be contained under it today. Otherwise, they would like to better tomorrow harvest can only be disappointed.

Pic and Words











Monday, July 26, 2010

Destiny takes a hand ~ Sleepless in Seattle

1.Work hard! Work will save you. Work is the only thing that will see you through this.


2.You make millions of decisions that mean nothing and then one day your order takes out and it changes your life.

3.Destiny takes a hand.


4.You know, you can tell a lot from a person’s voice.


5.People who truly loved once are far more likely to love again.


6.You know it’s easier to get killed by a terrorist than get married over the age of 40.


7.You are the most attractive man I ever laid ears.


8.Why would you want to be with someone who doesn’t love you?


9.When you’re attracted to someone it just means that your subconscious is attracted to their subconscious, subconsciously. So what we think of as fate, is just two neuroses knowing they’re a perfect match.


10.Everybody panics before they get married.


11.Your destiny can be your doom.


12.The reason I know this and you don’t is because I’m younger and pure. So I’m more in touch with cosmic forces.


13.I don’t want to be someone that you’re settling for. I don’t want to be someone that anyone settles for.


14.What if something had happened to you? What if I couldn’t get to you? What would I have done without you? You’re my family. You’re all I’ve got.

Titanic: Encounter

1.Outwardly, I was everything a well-brought up girl should be. Inside, I was screaming.

2.There is nothing I couldn’t give you, there is nothing I would deny you, if you would not deny me. Open you’re heart to me. 

3.What the purpose of university is to find a suitable husband.

4.Remember, they love money, so just pretend like you own a goldmine and you’re in the club. 

5.All life is a game of luck. 

6.I love waking up in the morning and not knowing what’s going to happen, or who I’m going to meet, where I’m going to wind up. 

7.I figure life is a gift and I don’t intend on wasting it. You never know what hand you’re going to get dealt next. You learn to take life as it comes at you.  

8.To make each day count.

9.We’re women. Our choices are never easy.

10.You jump, I jump.

11.Will you give us a chance to live?

12.God shall wipe away all the tears from their eyes, and there shall be no more death. Neither shall there be sorrow or dying, neither shall there be any more pain, for the former world has passed away.

13.You’re going to get out of here. You’re going to go on and you’re going to make lots of babies and you’re going to watch them grow and you’re going to die an old, an old lady, warm in your bed. Not here. Not this night. Not like this.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Gone with The Wind: Strong will


1.Land is the only thing in the world worth working for, worth fighting for, worth dying for. Because it’s the only thing that lasts.


2.Whatever comes, I’ll love you, just as I do now. Until I die.


3.I think it’s hard winning a war with words.


4. Sir, you’re no gentleman. And you miss are no lady.


5.I never give anything without expecting something in return. I always get paid.


6.In spite of you and me and the whole silly world going to pieces around us, I love you.


7.I love you more than I’ve ever loved any woman. And I’ve waited longer for you than I’ve waited for any woman.


8.If I have to lie, steal, cheat or kill, as God as my witness, I’ll never be hungry again!


9.Now I find myself in a world which for me is worse than death. A world in which there is no place for me.

10.You’re throwing away happiness with both hands. And reaching out for something that will never make you happy.


11.Home. I’ll go home. And I’ll think of some way to get him back. After all, tomorrow is another day.

The Lion King : Upgrowth


1.Everything you see exists together in a delicate balance.


2.I laugh in the face of danger.


3.I’m only brave when I have to be. Being brave doesn’t mean you go looking for trouble.


4.When the world turns its back on you, you turn your back on the world.


5.It’s like you are back from the dead.

6.You can’t change the past.


7.Yes, the past can hurt. But I think you can either run from it or learn from it.


8.This is my kingdom. If I don’t fight for it, who will?


9.Why should I believe you? Everything you ever told me was a lie.


10.I’ll make it up to you, I promise.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Shawshank Redemption:Freedom




1.It takes a strong man to save himself, and a great man to save another.


2.Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies.


3.some birds aren’t meant to be caged, that’s all. Their feathers are just too bright...


4.I find I’m so excited. I can barely sit still or hold a thought in my head. I think it the excitement only a free man can feel, a free man at the start of a long journey whose conclusion is uncertain. I hope I can make it across the border. I hope to see my friend, and shake his hand. I hope the Pacific is as blue as it has been in my dreams. I hope.

5.Fear can hold you prisoner. Hope can set you free. A strong man can save himself. A great man can save another.


6.Prison life consists of routine, and then mort routine.


7.These walls are kind of funny like that. First you hate them, then you get u sed to them. Enough time passed, get so you depend on them. That`s institution alized.


8.There`s not a day goes by I don`t feel regret. Not because I`m in here, or because you think I should. I look back on the way I was then. Then a young, stupid kid who committed that terrible crime. I want to talk to him. I want to try and talk some sense to him, tell him the way things are. But I can`t. That kid`s long gone and this old man is all that`s left. I got to live with that. Rehabilitated? It`s just a bull.......... word. So you go on and stamp your form, sorry, and stop wasting my time. Because to tell you the truth, I don`t give a ...........


9.I guess it comes down to a simple choice:get busy living or get busy dying.

Spoken English learning


1 Great minds think alike.
2 Get going!
3 We've got to hit the road.
4 I can't place his face.
5 Once bitten , twice shy
6 look at the big picture
7 I'm exhausted.
8 I've got my second wind.
9 My stomach is growling.
10 Hungry dogs will eat dirty puddings.
11 ~~~~is now in season.
12 Let's grab a bite to eat
13 This food is out of the world
14 What a bummer!
15 First things first
16 it's just my cup of tea
16 Does ~~~~~~~suit your taste
17 Take it easy. easy dose it.
18 Do as i said.
19 Let's roll up our sleeves.
20 Put it in my hands.
21 It's a short-cut.
22 I'll keep my fingers crossed for you.
23 One boy is a boy; two boys half boy;three boys no boy.
24 Never trouble trouble until trouble troubles you.
25 Did you get the picture?
26 Be back in 30 minutes!
27 One more hour to go.
28 Time is running out.
29 To the best of my knowlege~
30 As far as i know.
31 Don't let me down.
32 You'll get it soon.
33 Pick up the pace.
34 You are really something.
35 You are something else.
36 How did you manage to do that?
37 I can't believe my eyes.
38 It was really neat!
39 I'm dying for a coke.
40 wine in, truth out.
41 I can't carry a tune.
42 If you can make it here, you can make it anywhere.
43 My hands are sweaty.
44 I've got a butterfly in my stomach.
45 No way
46 it's a piece of cakeit's a snap.
47 Go for it.
48 ~~~~is driving me up a wall.
49 Anything you say.
50 I'm already locked into something else.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Kung Fu Panda


1.There are no accidents.

2.One meets its destiny on the road he takes to avoid it.

3.Your mind is like this water, my friend, when it is agitated, it becomes difficult to see, but if you allow it to settle, the answer becomes clear.

4.Quit don't quit. Noodles don't noodles.

5.There is a saying,Yesterday is history,Tomorrow is a mystery,But today is a gift!That is why it's called the present (the gift).

6.Yes, look at this tree Chivu, I can not make it bloom and suit me, nor make it bear food before it's time.

7.But there are things we can control, I can control when the fruit will fall... And I can control what time to seed. That is not illusion, Master.

8.Yes, but no matter what you do, That seed will grow to be a peach tree. You may wish for an Apple or an orange, but you will get a peach.

9.But peache can not defeate Tai Long.

10.Maybe it can if you are willing to guide it, to
nurture it, to believe in it.

11. I'm sorry things didn't work out. It's just what it's meant to be. Paul, forget everything else, your destiny still awaits. We are Noodle folk, Broth runs deep through our veins.

12. You cannot leave, real warrior never quits.

13.Why didn't you quit? You know I was trying to get rid of you, but you stayed.


14.Yes, I stayed. I stayed, because every time you threw up bricks on my head or said I smelled, it hurts. But it could never hurt more than I did everyday in my life just being me. I stayed, because I thought, If anyone could change me, could make me not me, it was you, the greatest Kong Fu teacher in the whole of China!

15. Enough talk!Let's fight!

16. The secret ingredient of my secret ingredient soup is...nothing.

17. To make something special, you just have to believe it' s special.

About Love


1.I love you not because of who you are, but because of who I am when I am with you.
    
2、No man or woman is worth your tears, and the one who is, won‘t make you cry.

3、 The worst way to miss someone is to be sitting right beside them knowing you can‘t have them.

4、Never frown, even when you are sad, because you never know who is falling in love with your smile.
    
5、To the world you may be one person, but to one person you may be the world.
         
6、Don‘t waste your time on a man/woman, who isn‘t willing to waste their time on you.
   
7、Just because someone doesn‘t love you the way you want them to, doesn‘t mean they don‘t love you with all they have.
      
8、Don‘t try so hard, the best things come when you least expect them to.
    
9、Maybe God wants us to meet a few wrong people before meeting the right one, so that when we finally meet the person, we will know how to be grateful.
    
10、Don‘t cry because it is over, smile because it happened.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Classical Movie





1,Frankly,my dear,I don’t give a damn.

2,I’m going to make him an offer he can’t refuse.

3, You don’t understand!Icoulda had class.I coulda been a contender.I could’ve been somebody,instead of a bum, which is what I am.

4,Toto,I’ve got a feeling we’re not in Kansas anymore.

5,Here’s looking at you,kid.

6,Go ahead,make my day.

7,All right,Mr.DeMille,I’m ready for my close-up.

8,May the Force be with you.

9,Fasten your seatbelts. It’s going to be a bumpy night.

11、"Would you be shocked if I changed into something more comfortable?"

12,I love the smell of napalm in the morning.

13,Love means never having to say you’re sorry.

14、"I could dance with you'til the cows come home. On second thought, I'd rather dance with the cows until you came home."

16、Gif me a visky, ginger ale on the side, and don'be stingy, baby.

17、life was like a box a chocolates, never know what you're gonna get.


18,Made it,Ma!Top of the world!

20,I’m as mad as hell,and I’m not going to take this anymore!

21,Louis,I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.

22.It's not the men in your life that counts, it's the life in your men.

23,There’s no place like home.

24,I am big!It’s the pictures that got small.

25,Show me the money!

28,Play it,Sam. Play’As Time Goes By’.

29,You can’t handle the truth!

30,I want to be alone.

31,After all,tomorrow is another day!

33,I’ll have what she’s having.

37,I’ll be back.

38,Today,I consider myself the luckiest man on the face of the earth.

40,Mama always said life was like a box of chocolates. You never know what you’re gonna get.

43,We’ll always have Paris.

46,Oh,Jerry,don’t let’s ask for the moon.We have the stars.

48,Well,nobody’s perfect.

51,You’ve got to ask yourself one question:〃Do I feel lucky?〃Well,do ya,punk? )

52,You had me at〃hello.〃

54,There’s no crying in baseball!

56,A boy’s best friend is his mother.

57,Greed,for lack of a better word,is good.

58,Keep your friends close,but your enemies closer.

59,As God is my witness,I’ll never be hungry again.

63,Mrs.Robinson,you’re trying to seduceme.Aren’t you?

67,Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world,she walks into mine.

71,Wait a minute,wait a minute.You ain’t heard nothin’yet!

75,I have always depended on the kindness of strangers.

83,Listen to them. Children of the night. What music they make.

94,I feel the need-the need for speed!

95,Carpe diem. Seize the day,boys. Make your lives extraordinary.

100,I’m king of the world!