Welcome to SPJ Blogs
Sign in
|
Join
|
Help
This Blog
About
Calendar
Mar
April 2007
May
S
M
T
W
T
F
S
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
1
2
3
4
5
Search
Go
Syndication
RSS 2.0
Atom 1.0
Archives
August 2008 (9)
July 2008 (16)
June 2008 (2)
May 2008 (9)
April 2008 (14)
March 2008 (2)
February 2008 (5)
January 2008 (4)
December 2007 (9)
November 2007 (3)
October 2007 (2)
September 2007 (4)
July 2007 (1)
June 2007 (11)
May 2007 (24)
April 2007 (31)
March 2007 (14)
Navigation
Home
Blogs
Forums
Photos
Post Categories
Africa (1)
Asia (2)
China (6)
Europe (1)
Fellowships and Freelance Opportunities (1)
Journalism Training (3)
Latin America (2)
North America (2)
State-controlled media (1)
The Middle East (2)
World Press Freedom Issues (7)
Pics
Rand chart
Shanghai or Beijing?
When first coming to China, we had to make a decision: Shanghai or Beijing? (Other cities weren't even under consideration.)
I picked Shanghai because it has a stock exchange, and Beijing doesn't. I cover the securities industry. And I hate politics.
But I do have to admit that Beijing has more character. Everything in Shanghai looks as though it was built yesterday. And, well, it was.
I like my neighborhood dives to have that lived-in feel. There are a couple of places like that in Shanghai - but a lot of places like that in Beijing. Also, Shanghai's foreign restaurants seemed aimed at expats on expense accounts. Beijing's seem oriented more towards students and tourists -- two groups without as much money. And there are tons of Russian restaurants (Shanghai only has one). I'm a big fan of Russian food and music, my ethnic heritage showing through.
For the most part, journalists who come to China go to Beijing to cover politics, Shanghai to cover business. To me, it's similar to the difference between Washington D.C. and New York City.
Several other bloggers have been weighing in on this.
Forbes publisher Rich Karlgaard wrote about the issue on his blog in "
China's Future: Shanghai Or Beijing?
"
Dan Harris of the
China Law Blog
also commented on this, and his posting drew a lively debate.
But the biggest story -- for me, anyway -- is the rise of China's second tier cities. Nitasha Tiku wrote about this topic on Inc.'s Fresh Inc blog: "
Going Global, Part 8: Second-Tier Cities, First Rate Growth
."
Signing off in Shanghai,
Maria
Published Tuesday, April 17, 2007 10:38 AM by
MariaTrombly
Comments
Anonymous comments are disabled. Please log in or create an account to comment on this article.