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Blogging Comes of Age
Special> Blogging Comes of Age
UPDATED: June 28, 2008 NO. 27 JUL. 3, 2008
News From the People
Chinese netizens are increasingly using the Internet to cover news from their own angles and as a means to express themselves
By JING XIAOLEI
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main stages for podcasters to express themselves.

"Thanks to the development of the Internet, more and more people have begun to use Internet or wireless tools to express themselves," said Ping Ke, who runs one of China's most renowned podcast websites, antiwave.net.

Chinese netizens' enthusiasm for expressing themselves was given fuel in 2005 when the country's first video-sharing website Tudou.com came into being. It has since grown into one of the world's largest content delivery networks, serving over 100 million videos each day with more than 40,000 new videos published daily, including amateur content such as videoblogging and user-generated videos, and professional content such as movie clips, TV clips and music videos. Tudou's motto is "Everyone is his own director."

"It is our faith as we believe that everyone's value comes from his creativity," said Gary Wang, founder and CEO of the website. "Podcasting differs from blogging in the way that it is more about showing oneself while blogging is focused on communication."

Truly creative and talented users often stand out. One such example was two college boys who gained fame for their lip sync videos to songs by the Backstreet Boys and other pop stars. The Back Dorm Boys, as they call themselves, captured themselves doing exaggerated lip syncs on a low-quality Web cam in their college dorm room. They completed their first video in March 2005 after much trial, and uploaded the finished video to the local network at their college. Other students liked the video so much that they began to spread the word about it.

While still at school, the Back Dorm Boys were signed as spokespeople for Motorola cell phones in China. They also signed a contract with Sina.com, one of the largest Chinese Internet portals. In 2006, they received The Best Podcaster Award from the portal.

A few months before they graduated from Guangzhou Arts Institute in February 2006, the Back Dorm Boys signed a five-year contract with Taihe Rye, a talent management company in Beijing, to continue making lip sync videos. They also began studying singing, dancing, and stage arts with Taihe Rye.

The Back Dorm Boys also gained mainstream media attention in the United States thanks to The Ellen DeGeneres Show, helping to spawn countless parodies and imitators.

When asked to explain why in a sea of amateur videos they stood out, the two said, "The secret is: enjoy yourself and do what you like."

Grassroots reporters

"Your voice matters. Now, if you have something to say, you can be heard. You can make your own news. We all can." These words are from the book We the Media-Grassroots Journalism by the People, for the People by American author Dan Gillmor. Grassroots journalism, or citizen journalism, has begun to catch on in China as technology has improved, and especially thanks to fast and convenient Internet multimedia, including online photo and video sharing platforms.

Grassroots journalism first made an appearance in the so-called "greatest nail house" case in Chongqing, in March 2007. Nail house is a Chinese phrase that means households or persons who refuse to vacate their homes to make way for real estate development. The case rose rapidly to national fame as pictures of the house were spread around the Internet.

Netizens on two notable Chinese websites, Tianya and MOP, began following the case, using everything available to report from the scene.

Among the enthusiastic grassroots reporters was a young man called Zhou Shuguang, who later called himself China's first citizen journalist. Zhou wrote blog entries and posted video and still images on the Web. He achieved almost overnight fame and was acclaimed by fellow bloggers and interviewed by Chinese reporters and foreign journalists from Time magazine and Reuters.

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