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Just Keeping It Real, The Beijing Way

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  • Just Keeping It Real, The Beijing Way

    JUST KEEPING IT REAL, THE BEIJING WAY
    Mark Sutcliffe

    Ottawa Citizen
    Wednesday, August 13, 2008
    Canada

    Who says there isn't freedom of the press in China?

    Ever since the Olympic opening ceremonies, Chinese newspapers have
    been breaking one story after another about how not everything you
    saw on live television was, well, live.

    The latest scandal: You know that cute nine-year-old who looked like
    she was lip-synching the haunting song Ode to the Motherland?

    She was lip-synching. Her performance was as authentic as a Chinese
    gymnast's passport.

    And, gosh, what's worse is that Lin Miaoke (as in karaoke) wasn't
    even mouthing the words to her own pre-recorded performance.

    Due to a last-minute decision by a high-ranking member of the
    Politburo, Lin was pretending to sing to a recording by seven-year-old
    Yang Peivi.

    Some reports say Yang was supposed to sing and was yanked because of
    her crooked teeth. Others contend that Lin was supposed to lip-synch
    to her own recording, but her voice wasn't good enough. Either way,
    the move was made "for the national interest," according to Chen
    Qigang, the music director for the ceremonies.

    Bloggers were quick to denounce the decision, until their blogs were
    removed from the Internet by Chinese officials.

    So, Lin is now the centre of an Olymp-synching scandal. Just call
    her Ash-Lin Simpson. But don't worry, Lin really was cute. Her face
    was not, as far as we know, computer-generated.

    Was anything about the opening ceremonies real? The weather wasn't; it
    was manipulated by rain-dispersal rockets. The shot of the "footprint"
    fireworks wasn't real, either.

    What's next? Were those Fou drummers actually animated by those guys
    in New Zealand who worked on Lord of the Rings? Does it turn out
    that wasn't Sarah Brightman, but one of Andrew Lloyd Webber's seven
    other ex-wives?

    Who knows? And who cares? Besides, what would a major sporting event
    be without a wardrobe malfunction or a Milli Vanilli moment?

    If nothing else, it shows the Chinese leave nothing to chance. If
    senior members of the government are studying the teeth of
    seven-year-olds, that's control of freaking Olympic proportions. Just
    be glad they didn't try to fix Yang's choppers with gap-dispersal
    rockets.

    Speaking of gaps, after four days of competition, Canadian athletes
    appeared poised to close the medal chasm between us and other countries
    such as Tajikistan, Togo, Kyrgyzstan and Armenia. Heck, even Georgia
    has a medal, and let's just say they have other things on their mind
    right now.

    But why is everyone worrying about Canada's performance so far? We
    had a number of second-place finishes on Day 4 in Beijing: like when
    we came second in a soccer game and when we placed No. 2 in a water
    polo match. What's wrong with that?

    And any day now we'll start to see which of the following companies
    sponsors the best team of Canadian athletes: VISA, Rona or
    Petro-Canada. Right now, they're all tied at zero.

    Despite the loss, the soccer match against Sweden had some of the best
    moments of the day, including Melissa Tancredi's spectacular diving
    header for Canada's only goal. And it was hard not to get chills seeing
    the Canadian women all singing the national anthem before the match.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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