Archive for the ‘Expo 2010’ Category

Despo(t) 2010: Stan!


2010
06.20

Also in this series: Death By Exposure and Despo(t) 2010: The Axis of Awesome

Overwhelmed by the Badness

In our quest to avoid the crowded pavilions at Shanghai Expo 2010, we embarked on an intensive one-day project to visit as many maligned countries as possible.  We visited the Axis of Evil and a few non-affiliated-but-still-iffy countries. We also veered heavily into the Central Asian Stans.

I have a huge soft spot for the Stans. When I lived in Turkey, I compared linguistics and discovered that if I were to, say, move to Azerbaijan or Turkmenistan or Kazakhstan (State of Sweaters/Jumpers in Turkish) or Kyrgyzstan, I could function at a reassuringly basic level using my middling Turkish and pleasantries-heavy Arabic.

I could count to 4 in Uyghur and name trees and earth and horses.  I could easily translate the names of cities and regions. I was comfortable around stout older women in headscarves and old men in suit coats leading horses.

I often watched Az TV and tried to follow the news in Azeri. I liked the elaborate song and dance performances that followed the Azeri news. One night I was treated to a wonderful, unironic performance of the Prodigy’s Smack My Bitch Up by a dozen primary school girls in flouncy dresses and enormous Soviet bows in their hair.

I read once that in Uzbekistan their president had declared himself to be a self-important god head type and required all sorts of statues and garish monuments to be built in his honor and a book of his quotes to be required reading/memorization in schools.

When I gently and indirectly brought up the curious commonality to the Turkish Ataturk cult of personality with my students in Istanbul, they remarked on how ignorant and uneducated and uncivilized Uzbeks were to be putting so much faith in the words of just one man.

They mustn’t have noticed the busts and murals and quotes and portraits of Ataturk at every turn. In the village of Avanos, outside Kayseri in central Anatolia where I lived for 2 years nearly a decade ago, a mountainside was engraved with his silhouette and a few choice quotes.

The irony was lost there.

Anyway, I have a soft spot for the Stans.

We started off in the lusciously blue Uzbek pavilion. Or rather, outside the lusciously blue Uzbek pavilion. It had a surprisingly long queue.  We were stuck in the middle of an enormous Uzbek family. In front was a young woman wearing a visibly home-sewn fraying polyester dress and ankle-pantyhose with her scuffed elastic-strapped maryjanes.  A few brothers were placed in front and behind us, as well as another sister, who was hidden under her parasol.Behind us were the elders, short and squat and dressed in their village best. The older woman was head-scarved and carried the most broken umbrella I’ve ever seen opened. She was probably in her 50s but looked to be in her 70s. We shuffled along in the brutal midday heat for about half an hour before we finally entered the cool, dark building.

Uzbek fashions

Uzbekistan had mannequins showing traditional dress, strung up with Christmas lights.

They also had a cabinet displaying, incongruously, everyone’s grandmother’s best porcelain nicknacks.

Not exactly the night sky

They had a night sky painted on the ceiling, surrounding a circle of cloudy blue skies. At the back, they had some lovely Islamic doorways installed against the wall. Everyone took turns posing.

The wall of arches

After Uzbekistan, we found Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan side by side next to Bangladesh.  Kyrgyzstan was lovely and dark and cozy inside, simply decorated with a yurt to one side and beautifully lit carved standing stones under a deep blue toned column illustrating battles and camps.

I want this in my bedroom

Kyrgyzstan was wonderful. At the exit, I bought a pair of felt slippers the colours of a watermelon. The woman apologized for not having a fancy country-promoting bag to put them in as she wrapped them up in a clear produce bag. I slipped them into my handbag and reassured her that I thought Kyrgyzstan was my favourite pavilion of all. I meant it. I wanted to curl up and camp in their yurt and wake up next to their carved standing stones.

Tajikistan had a lot of beds. Beds covered in bright carpets and pillows and signs warning people not to climb up and take a nap. The ceiling was thick with fake hanging vines. At the back were tapestries and herbs (still on the plants as well as in bowls) and a 3D city plan of a city labelled in Cyrillic and Chinese.  Looking back toward the front you can see a huge portrait of a man in a suit, presumably a president of sorts. He presides over a display showing all of Tajikistan’s potential energy sources (not actual).

Beds and leaves. That's about it for the Tajiks.

We tried to go to Kazakhstan but, inexplicably, it had a several hour queue. This may have been our project but we weren’t that keen. We went to Mongolia instead.

Shanghai Despo(t) 2010- The Axis of Awesome Pavilions


2010
06.20

Also in this series: Death By Exposure and Stan!

Ain't nobody here but us chickens

We went back to Expo on Saturday for a stubborn second round of heat stroke and agoraphobia. The first time we went, which was just last Tuesday on the second day of the Dragon Boat Festival holiday, we waited two hours in an increasingly agitated and overheated crowd just to reach the gates. The attendance reports broadcast in the Expo Metro noted that 500,000 people had had the same idea as we had.

This time, although we arrived slightly later after the opening time than last time, we were through the gates and in the site within five minutes. No fights broke out; no soldiers were called in for crowd control, no fans mounted on pillars sprayed misty cool air to prevent the hordes from dropping dead from heat stroke. Apparently Saturdays and Gate 2 make for a better start to the day than Dragon Boat Festivals and Gate 7.  Gate 2, unlike Gate 7, is on the Puxi side of the site (which is good if you have a hankerin’ for the Corporate, Coca Cola,  or Oil Pavilions) so we had a long riverside walk ahead of us and a ferry-boat river crossing before we could reach the main Pudong site.  The Puxi side was nearly deserted.

The ferry we boarded had been boarded thoughtlessly.  It occurred to us after it left the docks that we had no idea where it was heading. We had just rocked up to the nearest waterfront throng and shuffled in alongside them.  Between the crowds and my illiteracy, I do an awful lot of thoughtless shuffling in China.

At first, it veered toward the European pavilions in Zone C, then, as it dodged freighters who were also using the river, it veered abruptly in the other direction and deposited us at the opposite end of the site, in Zone A, right next to the pink, noduled, blister-like Japanese Pavilion. Apparently, the Japanese Pavilion has robots playing violins.  So far, Expo had been calm and quiet and pretty empty so we contemplated queuing for the Japanese Pavilion- it was notorious for 5 hour queues on busier days.  Maybe it would be a mere 2 hours for us.

Japan’s famed queues did not disappoint. It had a queue. A marvellous, mind-bending queue. The first part of the queue looked manageable, but then it was joined by another queue around a bend, and then another, and another.  Most of Zone A was the queue for the Japanese pavilion. Between the Japanese Pavilion and the equally popular Korean Pavilion, you couldn’t actually walk to anywhere further away from the riverside without doing a massive detour around their queues. We decided that popular pavilions were not in our stars. Destiny, as it were, was leading us in other directions.

We would tour the worst countries.

Indeed, the best despotic (or formerly despotic but now recovering) countries.

On our impromptu list were the Axis of Evil, the Central Asian ‘Stans, and various genocidal/self-destructive nations from all over.  It was a very satisfying plan.

Underwhelmed by Iraq

We started out, by accident, with the Axis of Evil, by queuing for Iraq when we thought we were in fact queuing for Myanmar.  The Iraqi Pavilion actually shared a building with Laos and Myanmar, a grouping I had never previously envisioned.  The cheesy murals of Arabian Nights and the hopeful city diorama featuring tidy deserts and sand-coloured mosques clued us in to the fact that we might not be in Myanmar.

It had a few wall-sized signs in Arabic, English and Chinese explaining in greeting card sentiments their hope for the future and the optimism for building new cities, new lives. I appreciated the sentiments, though I would have happily offered my editing services to cut the schmaltz.

There was a display wishing everyone a happy International Children’s Day (which was about a month ago), and an unstaffed ice cream and smoothie counter that took up a third of the room. Two women sold garish gold bracelets at an adjacent counter.  Most of the crowd thronged there, haggling. If Doug hadn’t paused at the abandoned ice cream counter, hopeful for a mid-morning cone, we would have been out in minutes.

After Iraq, we made a rapid tour of its South East Asian pavilion neighbours (more about them in another post) before moving on to Uzbekistan, Kyrgizstan, Tajikistan, Mongolia and the Maldives, then returning for the other two members of the Axis of Evil. North Korea and Iran were hidden away at the back of the Expo site, about as far away from Europe and the Americas as possible (and it was a 45 minute walk for us afterward to walk to Europe for lunch) and far enough away from South Korea to be awkwardly obvious.

North Korea actually had a queue.

Me and Pyongyang, together at last

We queued for North Korea, shuffling slowly along in the fierce midday heat. When we were queuing for Tajikistan earlier, an announcement came over the loud speakers declaring that it was a Shanghai Meteorological Yellow Alert day, with average temperatures of 35 degrees and a bazillion percent humidity.

We were warned to avoid heat stroke and to make ourselves to feel good. Everyone was sweating and every second person in the queues had a sun parasol with spokes poking us in the eye.

North Korea consisted of a photo mural of Pyongyang, with a scaled down phallic monument in front of it, begging to be posed with, and a marvellously garish fountain full of cherubs and coloured lights.

On the far wall, in large letters reflected again in a mirror above, a sign declared Paradise For People.  Against the back right wall was a fake-rock cave that I couldn’t be bothered to look at.

Next to the fake rock cave was a minimalist gift shop that occupied the whole back of the pavilion, with  stark glass counters filled with books by/for Kim Jong Il/Kim Il Sung, little metal jacket pins celebrating the military of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, and traditional women’s dresses overseen by two costumed saleswomen with blank facial expressions.

People's Paradise indeed!

The wide variety of gift shop wares in the North Korea Pavilion

Immediately next door to North Korea is Iran, which was even more popular. It is housed in a lovely building, looking like something between a sandy desert mosque and a castle.

We queued along a wall that had a relief map of the region, indicating that at some point in the past (I forgot to note when) Iran controlled everything from Turkey to China.

Here Be Dragons

Inside, it was cool, dark and packed. Upstairs was a carpet shop and snack bar, with gaudy paintings lining the walls, for sale. Downstairs was a pastiche of enormous photos of mullahs, mosques, historic sights and Ahmedinejad’s smiling visage.

At rest in Persia, part 1

At rest in Persia, part 2

Posing with the Mullahs

Children played on artefacts labelled Do Not Touch.

At play on the Please Do Not Touch display

Chinese women in Iranian shiny faux-hijab stood guard at various displays, posing for photos, looking bored.

In the crowded main domed inner hall, there were factual displays about efficient energy use and urban planning and a few interactive flashy displays with lights, bells and whistles.  We paused briefly to look at a few photos before exiting.  There are only so many eco-friendly urban plans one can gaze at with interest over the course of a scorching hot Saturday morning.

We left the Axis of Evil and started our long march over to Europe for pints of Red Ale at the Irish bar.  It was so hot that the overhead walkway had nozzles spraying a constant stream of mist onto the pedestrians from the upper frames of the giant umbrellas that lined it, tucked up amongst the loudspeakers and spy cameras.

After a morning spent touring the Axis of Evil and the Central Asian Stans, that pint of red ale and plate of bangers and mash in an air conditioned fake Irish pub was marvellous.

Death by Exposure: Expo 2010, Part 1


2010
06.17

Somebody might lose an eye if you keep on like this

Also in this series: Despot 2010: Axis of Awesome and Stan!

After we spent the first day of the Dragon Boat Festival being slothful, alternating dragging our bodies out for breakfast, for lunch, for dinner, and lying dugong-like on the sofa, reading and drinking coffee, we decided to be ambitious for the second day.

We decided we would finally use the Expo tickets we got when we signed up for the gym membership we barely use (as I noted before, we are frequently slothful and dugong-like when not working our asses off).

We are used to traveling on Chinese holiday long weekends (or in this case, workweeks) and crowds/hordes have ceased to faze us.  It couldn’t possibly be more crowded than standing near the Famous West Lake in Hangzhou on Grave Sweeping Day.  We drank our coffee and were on the Pudong end of the site by 9am, when it opened.

It took us 2 sweltering hours to queue just to get to the gates. Babies cried; fights broke out; people shouted a lot, fans mounted on pillars misted us intermittently  with cool water to keep everyone from passing out from heat stroke.

People opened sun parasols and poked us in the eye at regular intervals. PLA guards came and reinforced the poor, skinny volunteers in green Expo t-shirts trying to maintain crowd control.

People jumped over barriers to get ahead in line and were set upon by unhappy mobs.

One man stupidly queue jumped ahead of me and I smacked him with our rolled up Expo guide. The crowd cheered.

We hadn't even reached the gate yet to begin queuing

At the 90 minute mark

Queues are fun.

(more…)

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