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Uploaded on: December 11, 09
Total Views: 1,132,748
Thumbs Up: 98.7%
Comments: 4,585

A tough but definitely inspiring video from grassroots Youku Paike. The title “Miracle of Life” fits this story well. The hero, Peng Shuilin (彭水林), was a disadvantaged migrant worker in Shenzhen when he was run down by a big truck in 2004. Though he survived, he lost his bottom half permanently and now only measures 78cm in height. He was released from the hospital in 2005, and went back to his hometown in Hunan. With the help from Hunan Disabled Persons’ Federation, he opened “Half Body Man Convenience Store” (半截人便利店) in Changsha. He smiles, and is proud to show how he lives his disabled life. He exercises and plays poker with his friends. Behind all these is the sad reality of court’s red-tape and policeman’s irresponsibility. The court sentenced the driver to compensate Mr. Peng 249,000 RMB, which was almost 50,000 RMB less than Mr. Peng’s hospital bills. As of today, Mr. Peng hasn’t received a single penny. The court’s response to this was to say that Mr. Peng should find the driver himself to get the money.


Uploaded on: December 16, 09
Total Views: 975,234
Thumbs Up: 99.2%
Comments: 1,329

This heart-melting video attracted close to one million viewers in just two days. According to one viewer’s report, the same video was viewed only 150,000 times on YouTube 9 hours before this buzz. Not sure whether the Chinese title given by the uploader helped: It’s hard to bring up a child; aren’t daughters Daddy’s lovers from a past life? With endless Chinese stories about a men betraying their spouses and lovers, it’s a pay-back time. But what a nice way to pay back! There is simply no way for Daddy to sneak out, and in this life he is defenseless before his baby daughter’s “brutal” possessiveness. We love the background music, and love this young Daddy’s facial expressions.


Uploaded on: December 11, 09
Total Views: 896,179
Thumbs Up: 96.3%
Comments: 336

This video is a perfect complement to the demanding baby daughter above, and also came from YouTube. This adorable little Japanese boy plays Ukulele, and makes faces while singing “I’m Yours.” To be a star in this age with overloaded adult-imitators, just be yourself.


Uploaded on: December 13, 09
Total Views: 827,144
Thumbs Up: 91.1%
Comments: 3,109

This paike video cleverly highlights one single job seeker who cried at one crowded job fair. It’s so hard to have a holistic feeling of how difficult it is for a female college graduate lacking family network to find a job. There is so much not being told, and so much to be told in this amateur-produced news. Maybe that’s why viewers have so much to comment on. Some personal stories among the comments are quite moving, and somewhat depressing, at least to me.


Uploaded on: December 13, 09
Total Views: 800,818
Thumbs Up: 96.8%
Comments: 1,380

December 13 marked the 72nd anniversary of the Nanjing Massacre. On that day in 1937, some 300,000 Nanjing residents were killed by senseless Japanese invaders. This video news from Jiangsu Satellite TV reported on how Nanjing remembered this atrocity: peaceful gatherings, the discovery of new evidence, and a 33-minute siren in the morning. Majority of the comments were unsurprisingly full of anger, and called for boycotting Japanese commodities.


A Cold Winter for Job Seekers


Posted on Dec 17, 2009 by jeanshao | Filed under: Society, UGC | Comments Off

China may not have been slammed quite as hard as the U.S. in the economic downturn, but Chinese college graduates are having a tough time finding work. They’re spending longer in the job hunt, starting the search for employment as much as a year ahead of graduation and waiting for hours in some cases just to submit a single resume. This paike video recorded a female job seeker crying at a crowded job fair held at the South China Normal University (华南师范大学) in Guangzhou on December 12, 2009, and features her brief interview with our Youku paike. As of today, over 825,000 viewers have watched this clip, with more than 3,000 comments posted.

Winter is job fair season in China, especially now that Chinese graduates are experiencing increasing difficulty in locating a job. According to the crying girl, a graduate of prestigious Jinan University, this particular job fair was the most crowded one she’d ever attended. Other viewers agreed. To submit one single resume to one potential employer, she waited over 90 minutes. She had been waiting in line for a full hour just to submit a second resume while being interviewed by our Youku paike.

She said her ideal salary, if she were to stay in Guangzhou, would be 3,500 RMB per month (a little over US$500) because she has a masters degree. Her candor, however, was perhaps surprisingly criticized by some viewers — and not for being too low, either. They opined that in the face of this tough reality, college graduates need to readjust their expectations.

One viewer angrily commented: “The problem lies with this society. It’s the societal structure that’s gone wrong, not the graduates.” This viewer said that while many students coming from disavantaged families hope education can change their lives, this is not in fact the case. “Life is much harder after graduation.”

There are always job opportunities, but the key appears to be networking. One commenter admitted that he or she had never bothered to look for a job after graduation: the family took care of everything, and this person now works for a state-owned company — a dream employer for so many other graduates.

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Battling Pandas!


Posted on Dec 17, 2009 by Kaiser Kuo | Filed under: Humor, Sports, UGC | Comments Off

We loved this video, which appears to have been shot at Adventure World, Shirahama, Wakayama prefecture in Japan. There’s a video on Youtube featuring the same twin baby pandas – not like I can tell one panda from another – in what appears to be the same enclosure. Not sure it’s the same video. In any case, this particular vid was uploaded by a Youku user in Shandong, whose brilliant contribution of course is the Russian wrestling announcer overdub. Genius!

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11-year-old Commits Suicide in Dongguan


Posted on Dec 17, 2009 by Kaiser Kuo | Filed under: Society, Video News | Comments Off

On December 10, an 11-year-old boy named He Chuhua hanged himself in the Guangdong city of Dongguan, China’s massive manufacturing capital.

The poignant part? He hanged himself with his red Young Pioneers neckerchief — his honglingjing, tying it to the steel frame of his bunk-bed in his rented room. Xiao Hua, as he was known, had been absent from school for three days prior to his apparent suicide. His parents believed he was at school, while his teachers thought he had gone home, and by the time they figured out that he was missing, it was too late.

He had just moved to Dongguan from Zhuhai (on the Macao border) in June to live with his father. His mother died when he was just seven. His suicide note, written on the day of his death, somewhat confusingly reads:

Dear Aunt: I’ve gone now. You don’t need to worry about me, and you don’t need to come looking for me. I know that skipping school is wrong, but I skipped school because the teacher beat me — that’s the real reason. Aunt, it’s fine that you beat me, and you can even kill me. That can’t be blamed on the teacher.

His father blames his teachers at the Shipai Dongxiang Primary School, alleging that they had beaten and humiliated him. Meanwhile, his teachers fault his father for neglecting the child and denying him the warmth of parental love. (It would appear that his father’s older sister was also involved in raising the kid).

Commenters seem to blame both parties, with some railing against corporal punishment in the schools, and others worried over the fate of kids sent away to school, only seeing their parents on occasional weekends.

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