Posted by Adam J. Schokora, December 15, 2008 9:26 PM
In this interview, Zhai Minglei, a citizen journalist and blogger who previously wrote for Southern Weekly and later founded 1 Bao (壹报) and Minjian magazine (since "shut down"), talks about how he is pleasantly surprised by some developments on the Chinese Internet.
This video is the fourth in a Danwei series of short interviews conducted at this year’s Chinese blogger conference (cnbloggercon 2008, Guangzhou, November 15 & 16th).
This video is also available on Tudou for faster loading in China.
Posted by Adam J. Schokora, December 19, 2008 7:19 PM
Liu Xiaoyuan (刘晓原) is a well-known blogger and lawyer who sued Sohu for deleting his blog posts, and recently acted as defense attorney for Yang Jia, the cult hero cop killer.
This video is the fifth in a Danwei series of short interviews conducted at this year’s Chinese blogger conference (CNBloggercon 2008, Guangzhou, November 15 & 16th).
Posted by Adam J. Schokora, December 10, 2008 7:17 PM
An interview at this year’s Chinese blogger conference with Zola (Zhou Shuguang), a citizen journalist and blogger well-known for covering sensitive events throughout China.
In this clip, Zola talks about major Internet happenings in 2008 and netizens influencing Chinese government and legal decisions.
Posted by Adam J. Schokora, December 6, 2008 7:04 PM
In this interview conducted at this year’s Chinese blogger conference, Yang Hengjun, a political espionage novelist and well-known blogger, talks about Chinese netizens’ collective power as "human search engines," and the domestic Internet censorship machine.
- First of all, people have to introduce themselves or to be introduced, at least in groups e.g. blogger group from hong kong, from spanish or from other countries should be addressed by the program host. - Don’t always talk about politic, people in overseas just don…
Ping Ke, a journalist and the voice behind the renowned Antiwave.net podcast series (see 2007 Danwei TV episode), talks about the influence Internet memes have on the general public, diversity of online expression, democratic debate, rational voices, vomit, and hope for change in the future.
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