Toastmaster District 80 Singapore 2006 Annual Convention

Just back from Furama Riverfront Hotel, a place where the Convention was held.

It was a great one.

The Toastmaster District 80 includes 9 divisions in 4 countries and areas.

Singaore: 6 divisions
Hong Kong & Macau: 2 divisions
Thailand: 1 divisions

8 persons participated in the Table Topics Speech Contest. The topic was “Who do you love most in the world?” Although the topic was the same to every contestant, each contestant got to know the topic until s/he went onto the stage. S/he was required to think on their feet and have 2 minutes to deliver the speech.

These were very smart speakers. Within seconds, they could get the idea and start making speech. I was surprised that, though there were 8 responses, none of them was the same.

The results,

Champion: Benjamin Cheng
1st run-up: Ng Seng Chuan
2nd run-up: Laksha Metha

All were from Singapore.

In the International Speech Contest, Ramesh Muthusamy from division U Singapore beat the other 8 contestants and won the champion. His speech topic is Expectation. He cited his personal experiences and advised people to maintain a high expectation in their life.

It was an impressive speech. His speech skills were powerful and nature. People near me all believed he would go into at least top 3.

1st run-up: Donald Yee from Hong Kong
2nd run-up: Pradeep Kumar from Singapore

In fact, it did not need much training to tell who was a better speaker. So the results were not much surprise to the audient.

I heard some comments that a few contestants were over-prepared or overacted. Yes, I agree that the content and sincerity are the most important things to a speech. However, since most of them actually were talking about the same topics, so those exaggerated actions did capture my attention and help me sit through the event.

Interestingly, the most exciting moment to me was not from the contest.

Hong Kong is the host for the District’s 2007 annual convention. There was a marketing pitch for the Hong Kong event at the end of the convention. All Toastmasters from Hong Kong, over 60 people, went on the stage, waving the Bauhinia flag with the Chinese National Anthem reverberating across the hall. It really turned me on. It was the first time I heard this melody in a public place of Singapore.

The connection with homeland is hard to break, even for a cosmopolitan.

Another side of China.

“You have handphone in China?!”

A few years back, when I first came to Singapore, many Singapornean considered the whole China a big farm. They did not believe that many Chinese people were using the same model of cell phone as they were using.

But recently, as the media are flooding with news about China’s economic boom, their impression of China has swung to another end.

When talking about China, they think of Shanghai; when talking about Shanghai, they think of the Bund, Pudong, and skyscrapers.

On the photographs of the local news paper, the financial center of Shanghai looks more “future” than that of Singapore.

“China is a very advanced country now, huh?”

All right, here are some photos, taken by Maohaier(毛孩儿), show another side of China, which may help people better understand China.

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“Mom, there’s still someone inside the car!”

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Fetching dead fish from the contaminated river.

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Car accidents occur often, but it is rare to see one of this magnitude in which the driver was only slightly injured.

The English description the above photos are from EastSouthWestNorth.

EastSouthWestNorth has a very good article introducing the Shenyang’s photojournalist Maohaier(毛孩儿). You will find many more interesting Maohaier’s photos in that article.


Followings are two photos from Jason Lee, a REUTERS photojournalist.

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A man walks past a portrait of the late chairman Mao Zedong, on sale at a flea market in Beijing May 16, 2006. Tuesday marks the anniversary of the start of the Cultural Revolution, but the date will pass quietly in China, not for lack of interest or sentiment, but because the party, obsessed with stability, has issued a blanket ban on the subject. REUTERS/Jason Lee

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A migrant worker sleeps at the Beijing West Railway Station May 16, 2006. A Chinese think-tank has called for higher minimum wages to halt the emergence of a new urban underclass, official media reported on Tuesday. REUTERS/Jason Lee


And the following two photos are from CAPTURE CITY, a blog of another China’s photojournalist. These photos are taken in LiaoCheng(聊城), a city in Shandong Province.

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nanPhoto is another famous blog from a photojournalist. You can find many interesting photos in its photo gallery.


The followings are some stylish photos from Xpview

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From these photos, you can see China, a country of change, in different angles.

康康去街街。

这段时间很少跟康康玩,这几天他见了我都不大理睬。

昨天傍晚回到家门口,隔着铁门看见康康坐在地板上玩他的Lego,我就叫了他一下:“康康啊!”

他抬头看见了我,兴冲冲地跑了过来。

我心里一乐:“这小子还是记得他老爸的!”

可是我刚把门开了一个缝,他就吱溜一下钻了出来,大叫着,“该该!”(广东话“街街”)

原来他呆在家里觉得太闷,要出去走走,要去街街!

我站在门口,看着兴高采烈的他,哭笑不得。

Singapore – the most Podcast aware nation?

Search “Podcast” on Google Trends, and click the Regions tab you will get the following diagram,

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Singapore tops the list.

That means, out of all the search on google, Singapore has higher percentage of Podcast search than the United States, a country where the Podcast was born.

Does that mean Singapornean are more aware of Podcast? It could be.

But there are some factors besides listenership may affect the list.

  1. Listeners use other search engines to look for Podcast. For example, users in the States may prefer iTunes or Yahoo than Google as the Podcast search platform.
  2. Users in other countries search so many other topics that dilute the Podcast search.

Google Trends is a very interesting tool to know the users’ behavior on internet.

Search “China”, you will find Singapore is just behind Hong Kong.

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That means many Singapornean are interested in China, which is not a surprise as Chinese is Singapore’s majority.

But when I search “Asian babe”, Singapore is in the second place too!

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“Asian babe” is a term used in porn graphics search. Does that mean Singapornean are hypocrites and sex maniac? It could be. 🙂

But when I search “Play boy”, South America countries occupy the top 10 list.

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One possible explaination: different countries use different terms to search porn pictures.