Beijing blogger and podcaster Dong Lu registered his 10
millionth hit on Friday morning, racing to the landmark on the back
of China's obsession with the World Cup.
The 36-year-old's irreverent take on soccer's showpiece,
produced with the help of three friends in the living room of his
apartment on the northeast outskirts of Beijing, has proved hugely
popular with China's on-line audience.
Sporting a multi-coloured Afro wig and a fake moustache, Dong
presents a podcast every other day featuring caricatures of leading
players, parodies of the many soccer-themed adverts on Chinese
television and the occasional song.
"We do it for fun, out of passion for football," Dong, looking
suitably bleary-eyed after another all-night session in front the
TV watching the action from Germany, told Reuters.
"The World Cup is a great event for everybody whether from small
countries or large ones, rich or poor."
TALK FREELY
Dong is no media outsider, however. He covered the 2002 World
Cup as a journalist and still finds time for his day job as a
columnist with a weekly sports paper.
Some have suggested the reason for the enormous popularity of
sport and showbiz blogs in China is because they allow people to
talk freely.
"In sports journalism there is relative freedom of expression
and we can give our opinions about a match and other sporting
issues," said Dong.
"In other fields such as the social and political arenas, there
are regulations. I've spent 10 years working in the media and I
understand the line that can never be crossed.
"There are many other interesting things in life for me to talk
about. It's about fun, not trouble."
Dong started his blog last November to air his views on life,
music and his love of soccer.
"At first I wasn't sure if anyone would be interested," he said.
"But it took off after a month and the start of World Cup finals
has brought an extra 100,000 hits a day."
Like many China, whose team failed to qualify for the finals,
Dong is backing Brazil and his yellow number nine shirt signed by
Ronaldo is never far from view.
"Someone offered to give me a car for it," he said. "But I
turned them down."
Asked what his wife thought of him turning their apartment into
a television studio, Dong laughed: "She's very supportive of what I
do. I'm her superstar."
(Reuters via China Daily June 19, 2006)