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Laugh Beijing Blog

Translating Culture

I keep running up against this unfortunate truth when trying to describe Xiangsheng to westerners: Xiangsheng is in Chinese. People can’t understand it. Moreover, the reason people can’t understand it is more than linguistic one. It’s a cultural issue. The content of Xiangsheng is inherently Chinese. Consider the piece “Little Children” that I have learned […]

Xiangsheng Translation SLAM!

Beijing contains quite a few bookish people, and many who (like me) find there to be no more comforting place to be than in a bookstore. In China, a bookstore like The Bookworm, in Sanlitun, stocked with the best English and Chinese language books around, is an oasis of sorts from not only the hectic […]

Zombie Battery

Last fall I purchased an electric bike so I could do my part keep the streets of Beijing as terrifying as possible. It came with a battery that was so heavy it almost threw out my back to lift: it was the size and weight of a mini-keg. I learned to sling it over my […]

An American Beijinger in Taiwan

Comedy is culture, and my favorite way of defining culture is as the answer to the question: “How do we do things here?” Because I spend my time in Beijing, studying the way Beijingers walk (fast, with little regard for traffic lights or other pedestrians), the way Beijingers speak (fast fast fast and then sloooow, […]

The Xiangsheng Throwdown at Wu Lin Feng Teahouse

I arrived back in Beijing after three and a half weeks away, across oceans in America and then straits in Taiwan. While on vacation, I reminded myself constantly that even though the air is sometimes lousy and traffic unceasingly loud, Beijing is the center of the Chinese Xiangsheng world—the heartland of the comedy style I […]

Dead Pig Tsunamis and Why I Can Never Live in Taiwan

  These past two weeks I have been in Taiwan at a conference for Fulbright, getting a chance to meet up my fellow Fulbrighters from Taiwan as well as see what the island had to offer in terms of culture and scenery. While the latter was breathtaking—Taroko Gorge, in particular, might be the most beautiful […]

New York Times reports on first-generation immigrant comedians

This week I’m in Taiwan for a Fulbright conference, and myself and most of the other scholars are taking advantage of the non-censored internet to catch up on the world by reading the New York Times. One morning at breakfast I found myself bombarded by about ten of my colleagues, each recommending I read the […]

LaughBeijing has a website!

I know what you’re thinking. I know because I’ve received many letters in the mail, and they are all more or less the same. “Jesse!” they all read. “Every day there’s not a post on the LaughBeijing tumblr I break out in a cold sweat. I find myself refreshing the page twenty, thirty, forty times a day. […]

Territorial Dispute SWAG

For the past few months, a decades-old territorial dispute between China and Japan over the Diaoyu/Senkaku islands has flared up again, inciting bad blood in East Asia. Now, I know what you’re expecting. Some sort of geopolitical article, perhaps, about the history and legitimacy of both claims. But, there are other friends of mine who […]

Finally, an English Language TV program about what I’ve been doing here!

Finally, an English Language TV program about what I’ve been doing here! Many thanks to Nikki Aaron and the rest of the team at China View for making this piece! I’m glad to be able to share my story in the language of my birth! 2/5/12