Hong Kong On Australian Radio

Last Year a Brisbane Journlism Student did a Series of Radio Stories on Hong Kong. I posted the links. It seemed they all died. So I am redoing them as the website is hard to navigate. Scott, a gentle soul take the city on in his own way, and his wide eyed love for the city shows through in his work. I met Scott because he was trying to do a piece on the Indie music scene in HK but it fell through, and stepped in for a piece. I was always impressed with where he found himself, as some of the things he saw and did, I had no idea it existed.

Earlier this year, Scott Spark, an Australian Journalism Student lived in HK for six months through an exchange program between our City University and Brisbane University.

He made 12 Radio “Letters” about our city. All of which are currently playing throughout Australia, on the Australian Broadcasting Network, (their RTHK or PBS).

Democracy for Hong Kong

Many questions were asked when Hong Kong returned to China, from British rule, in 1997. Most importantly, people demanded Hong Kong’s self determination. Another big issue was, and remains, democracy for Hong Kong.

Will its government allow for this transition? Will mainland China hold Hong Kong back, or will Hong Kong be the locomotive that pulls China into the future?

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s917342.htm

Sunday Butchers (Fight Club)

For overseas audiences, a big part of Chinese culture is big screen fighting scenes. But, while in Hong Kong, Scott Spark discovered something far more interesting than “just another Jackie Chan film”. One Sunday afternoon, he met a group of ten people in a public park, beating each other up with homemade weapons. They are “The Sunday Butchers”.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s917839.htm

Dressing Up (Cosplay)

As children, much of our time is spent imitating our favourite cartoon heroes. But then adolescence hits and, all of a sudden, we’re grow out of these dressing-up games. In Hong Kong, many twenty-somethings are into dressing up as their favourite comic, cartoon or video game characters. These “cosplayers” (short for costume players) attend conventions, where onlookers gather with cameras and video recorders.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s920702.htm

Canto Pop

In Hong Kong, the measure of a successful pop song is one which can be sung in a karaoke bar! Says composer Pong Nan: “A lot of the music is driven by karaoke power … how you can get people to sing that song karaoke”. This type of music is known as “Canto-Pop” and you’ll nearly always hear it somewhere amidst Hong Kong’s slurry of noise. Pong Nan and several Canto-Pop fans explain and perform their favourite Canto-Pop songs, including one which celebrates studying!

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s919532.htm

Foreign Domestic Helpers

Many people in Hong Kong are simply too busy to manage their own homes. That’s why foreign domestic helpers, more often known as maids or amahs, are employed to do peoples’ housework and look after their children. A lot of people employ foreign domestic helpers, including expatriates and local Chinese. And, while homes are often small, foreign domestic helpers usually live with their employers. The trouble is that foreign domestic helpers are an underclass in the very society they help maintain. And, as Scott Spark discovered, recent minimum wage reductions have only made these women’s lives worse.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s919861.htm

Chungking Mansions

We now take you to some of Hong Kong’s dingiest boarding houses, Chungking Mansions. We could, of course, talk about the flashy inner-city buildings surrounding it, but Chungking is far more interesting. It’s several towers, each seventeen stories high, and is infamous for murders, drug dealing, prostitution and gambling. It’s also a ghetto for illegal immigrants from Africa, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Pakistan and India. But, if you can overlook its vices, downstairs are some wonderful bric-a-brac markets and curry outlets. We begin in an overcrowded lift.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s919851.htm

Cally and Tai O

Cally Cheng is a twenty-year-old university student. She’s lived in Hong Kong her entire life, but just doesn’t feel best in the city. An hour and a half outside the CBD there’s an old fishing village, Tai O, that she enjoys visiting. Scott Spark followed Cally on a daytrip to Tai O, and discovered why she is not a typical Hong Kong girl and how she survives in a city she hates.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s919180.htm

Yan’s Chase

Sometimes you find a person whose pursuits not only convey something important about themselves, but also about their environment. Yan Sham-Shackleton grew up in Hong Kong, and loves her city. She finds it an inspiration, despite its lack of support for her making documentary films. Scott Spark discovered a woman, with a handy-cam, who climbs into the passenger seat with drivers who are all but otherwise mistaken for thugs.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s920703.htm

Fetish Fashions

When thinking about Australia’s primary exports, you might consider wheat, wool and beef. But Hong Kong bondage queen “Decima” loves our leather. She says Australia’s leather is the best no the planet for her BDSM floggers.

Scott Spark just happened to be passing Fetish Fashions, so he dropped in and spoke with its proprietor Brenda “Decima” Schofield. (Who happens to be my highschool teacher, I have a lot of opinions on the situation, but I will keep it to myself).

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s919857.htm

Light Pollution in Hong Kong:

Peering into an evening sky, clear of clouds, is one of life’s more rewarding moments. But if you grow up in Hong Kong, you may never experience this. The city’s sheer amount of light brightens the sky to the point where stargazing is almost impossible. To make things worse, Hong Kong’s new tallest building wishes to reinstate the city as the “Pearl of the Orient¡¨ with a massive lighting fixture.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s917839.htm

Sex and this City

Where did you first have sex? Bets are, if you grew up in Hong Kong, your answer won’t be “at home¡¨, because privacy is all too rare in the city’s small and crowded living spaces. To make matters worse, many peoples’ work-lives cut into their sex-lives. There just isn’t enough time for sex when there’s money to make. Scott Spark explored how a lack of space, privacy and time affected this seemingly conservative city’s attitudes towards sex.

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s919187.htm

Why Bother with Hong Kong?

Hong Kong promotes itself as “Asia’s World City” However, in some ways, the city looks pretty grim. The SARS epidemic was only part of its troubles. Half a million protesters rallied against proposed internal security laws in July, deflation has gripped the city’s economy for several years, its leader chief executive Tung Chee-hwa¡Xisn’t popular, two executive council members recently quit, and local news-media continually talk of the need for soul-searching and redirection. Scott Askes, Why bother with Hong Kong?

http://www.abc.net.au/brisbane/stories/s919168.htm

Published by Yan Sham-Shackleton

Yan Sham-Shackleton is a Hong Kong writer who lives in Los Angeles. This is her old blog Glutter written mostly in Hong Kong from 2003 to 2007. Although it was a personal blog, Yan focused a lot on free speech issues and democratic movement in Hong Kong. She moved to the US in 2007.

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