Round the Clock  
  News Center
  Easy FM
  Language Studio
  Kenya 91.9 FM    
Please download media player
to play CRI audio files. 2000 | XP | Mac
Help for Audio Problems
Schedule          
Music
v B Side Story
v Joy FM
v All That Jazz
v Music Memories
v Easy Morning
v Beat Generation
v Sunset Boulevard
Daily
v Hourly News
v People in the Know
v News & Reports
v Press Clippings
v Realtime China
v China Drive
v Song of the Day
v Africa Express
Weekdays
v Frontline
v Biz China
v China Horizons
v Voices from Other Lands
v Life in China
Weekend
v Listeners' Garden
v CRI Roundup
v China Roots
v In the Spotlight
v Developing Countries
v China Beat
Language Studio
v Special English
v Learning Pub
v Chinese Studio
Webcast
v Easy Travel
v Biz People
v Movie Boulevard
v Online Exclusive
v Music Nonstop
v Realtime Leisure
Radio    iNet    Schedule    Frequencies    Live Events    Help    Forums
To Blog or Not?

At present, it's still unclear how Xu Jinglei and sina.com will divide any advertising dividends.  However, it is certain that internet blogging is here to stay in China. A recent survey, conducted among white-collar workers in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, showed that over fifty percent of these middle-classes are now keeping weblogs.  The study also revealed that many use blogs as a way to release their emotions and to make their personal opinions public.

Here at CRI, we don't have quite the same resources available for a comprehensive study of lifestyle habits, but we did interview a few random people about blogging on the streets of Beijing:

1."I write blogs because I want to share my thoughts with other people."

2."Blog? No, I don't think I have time for that."

3. "If it's a diary, then why should I make my diary public?"

Well, it seems that where blogging is concerned, the public remains as divided as Sina and Xu Jinglei. And who knows if there will be an end to the latter dispute, but we are certainly at the end of this edition of "frontline". If you have any questions or suggestions about our program, please tell us by writing to English Service, China Radio International, Beijing China, postal code 100040. Or you can drop us an email at crieng@crifm.com. Or if you would like to listen to this program again, simply log on to our website at www.crienglish.com and follow the links. And finally, since we've discussing the internet on this and a previous edition of Frontline, let's keep the trend moving forward, with a quick burst of a very popular net song right now, called "lilac".  For program producer Yao Yongmei,  I'm Wujia, saying good-bye and thanks for listening, see you next week!
 
 


1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  
  ARCHIVE
2006-05-19.

 

2006-05-25.

07:00AM, BST. 2006-05-26.

2006-05-25.

2006-05-26,11:00AM

2006-05-20.

Hourly News,07:00,BST,2006-05-26.

ABOUT THIS PROGRAM
Every day, in every corner, a different person has a different story. In CRI's new daily feature Frontline, you'll hear the stories behind many controversial and sometimes diffucult to judge legal cases encountered by ordinary Chinese people. Want to know more about China's legal framework and its effects on a rapidly changing society ? Then tune in to our new Monday feature, Frontline, right here on CRI.
 crieng@crifm.com
 Download Acrobat Reader
CRI VOICES
People In the Know Host: Paul James
At 193 cm's tall, Paul ¨C or P-Jimmy to his close friends ¨C defiantly stands out on the streets of Beijing.
Nancy:The Big Sister on Radio
Yinan has been acknowledged by her listeners as sunny and approachable.

Fergus Thompson:News Anchor
His ability to fall asleep in any place at any time of the day or night comes in useful.
More>>
COMMENTS
View the Messages

[an error occurred while processing this directive]


Producer: Liu Bing    Pagemaker: Wang Dandan    Designer: Zhang Nan