Friday, April 29, 2016

Happy May Day 2016



I'd like to pause for a moment to send our friends around the world Happy May Day greetings and wishes. 

The holiday will be celebrated on Sunday, May 1.

It is celebrated around the world in many countries as a traditional springtime festival, or as an international day honoring workers.

Wishing al an abundance of cheerful moments with friends, colleagues and loved ones this holiday weekend!

Jeffrey Bingham Mead
Host, Marvels of China: Pathways to the Pacific Rim
AM1490 WGCH and WGCH.com, Greenwich, Connecticut USA

Make Corporate Executive Offices in Greenwich Your Affordable Partner on the Road to Success


No matter what kind of business or enterprise you are in you need to surround yourself with good people you can trust. 

When The Marvels of China: Pathways to the Pacific Rim Show was launched in February 2016 on WGCH.com in Greenwich I needed a reputable partner for my East Coast USA office space needs. 

Are you looking for an affordable partner for success? Look no further than Corporate Executive Offices (CEO) in Greenwich. 

Locally owned and managed since 1989, CEO provides world-class offices in a prominent, modern building with contemporary services, advanced technology and amenities that will help you focus on productivity while keeping your monthly costs under control.




Enjoy the benefit of a prestigious Greenwich, Connecticut address. You’ll enjoy a full range of office support services. CEO allows you to present a professional image to your clients, regardless of your location. 

Don’t just visualize your potential; CEO will partner with you to see it realized.

Whether your business requires one professionally appointed executive office, a suite of offices, a large team room, collaborative office space or a virtual office, CEO can provide the solution. 

The best thing about CEO is that they treat you like family -only better! It's amazing how they look after me and welcome my local and global associates. I could not ask for more. 

My partnership with CEO Offices has been one of the best -and it can be yours, too. 

Visit them online at www.ceooffices.com or call 203-622-1300 today. Tell them I sent you.

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

Make Penang Grill Your Asian Cuisine Destination in Greenwich

Lunch specials at Penang Grill are the best! Try the beef in peppercorn sauce on brown rice. 


After I made a guest appearance on The Debbie Nigro Show yesterday we just felt like celebrating -and we did not have to go far!

Southeast Asian cuisine has never been more popular, and if you want the best go to Penang Grill. 

Conveniently located at 55 Lewis Street in downtown Greenwich, Connecticut, the repertoire of fine culinary selections, tranquil, Asian-themed surroundings, courteous service and great prices will leave you satisfied. 

What’s not to love? Try the big bowl noodle soups, such as Tom Yam Chicken with angel-hair noodles or the Seafood clear broth with udon noodles. 

You won’t go wrong with the Vietnamese salad with tamarind peanut dressing. Szechuan dumplings and Thai crab cakes always make me smile. 

Daily luncheon specials are great for your budget. Penang Grill’s spicy to non-spicy selections cater to all tastes. The vegetables are very fresh and the food always delicious. 


Whether you dine-in or order take out, Penang Grill in Greenwich, Connecticut is an outstanding choice for lovers of Asian cuisine everywhere. 


Penang Grill is located at 55 Lewis Street, just off the east side of Greenwich Avenue. Call 203-861-1988. You’ll be glad you did. 

Tuesday, April 26, 2016

Philadelphia Chinese Lantern Festival: Light, Color, Culture (The Morning Call)



The Morning Call of Philadelphia has published a feature story about the first-ever Chinese Lantern Festival at Franklin Square:

There will be an explosion of light, color and culture Friday night when the switches are thrown at the Philadelphia Chinese Lantern Festival in Franklin Square.
The first-ever festival of its kind in the Northeast, it will feature more than 25 illuminated displays and more than 15,000 LED lights in a venue near Chinatown. 




Monday, April 25, 2016

Tune-in to WGCH.com Tuesday! I will be on The Debbie Nigro Show


Debbie Nigro, my colleague at AM 1490 WGCH and WGCH.com has invited me to be back on her show tomorrow! 

Can you believe it? Brave soul! 

Tune-in tomorrow, Tuesday to The Debbie Nigro Show just after 10:30 a.m. Eastern USA Time. I'll be talking about the Marvels of China: Pathways to the Pacific Rim Show, Asian Pacific American Heritage Month in May, while being a member of Debbie's "Elite to the Street" crowd and having a fun ride behind the mic in the WGCH studios.

May is Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month


May is Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month – a celebration of Asians and Pacific Islanders in the United States. (For legal documents related to Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month go to this link to the Law Library of Congress)
A rather broad term, Asian-Pacific encompasses all of the Asian continent and the Pacific islands of Melanesia (New Guinea, New Caledonia, Vanuatu, Fiji and the Solomon Islands), Micronesia (Marianas, Guam, Wake Island, Palau, Marshall Islands, Kiribati, Nauru and the Federated States of Micronesia) and Polynesia (New Zealand, Hawaiian Islands, Rotuma, Midway Islands, Samoa, American Samoa, Tonga, Tuvalu, Cook Islands, French Polynesia and Easter Island).
Like most commemorative months, Asian-Pacific Heritage Month originated in a congressional bill. 
In June 1977, Reps. Frank Horton of New York and Norman Y. Mineta of California introduced a House resolution that called upon the president to proclaim the first ten days of May as Asian-Pacific Heritage Week. 
The following month, senators Daniel Inouye and Spark Matsunaga introduced a similar bill in the Senate. Both were passed. On October 5, 1978, President Jimmy Carter signed a Joint Resolution designating the annual celebration. Twelve years later, President George H.W. Bush signed an extension making the week-long celebration into a month-long celebration. In 1992, the official designation of May as Asian-Pacific American Heritage Month was signed into law.
The month of May was chosen to commemorate the immigration of the first Japanese to the United States on May 7, 1843, and to mark the anniversary of the completion of the transcontinental railroad on May 10, 1869. The majority of the workers who laid the tracks were Chinese immigrants.


Saturday, April 23, 2016

Kumamoto, Japan Earthquake Clean-up: David Toraji Oshima



As many of you know, the island Kyushu, Japan has been rocked by strong earthquakes and aftershocks, centered in Kumamoto. There has been loss of life and displacement of many people. Heavy rains have also blanketed the island, making life hard for everyone. 

Enter David Toraji Oshima. When I was an instructor at Hawaii Tokai International College in Honolulu David was one of my students. Since graduation he went on to bigger and better things.

When disaster struck David sprung into action. It turns out that he attended high school in Kumamoto and circumstances called for him to give back to a place and people where fond memories are still held. 

With the help of the GoFundMe online fundraising platform and Facebook, David started the Kumamoto, Japan Earthquake Clean-up. (CLICK HERE).

I invite you to check out David's site. Please help as you are able with his efforts. Here is his introduction: 


Hello, my name is David Oshima and my friends and I need your help. I was lucky enough to have lived there in Kumamoto , Japan during high school, and was welcomed with open arms. I would like to return the favor and wonderful treatment I recieved while I was in Kumamoto.  I am trying to raise funds for the immense cleanup effort that is, and will be taking place in Kumamoto following a 6.5 magnitude eartquake that hit the center of the city. The whole city was rocked and is expected to feel after shocks for up to a week. Damage is wide spread and not contained to Kumamoto. Kyushu, in southern Japan has seen wide spread damage and the people need our help. The money you generously provide will be used to help the oridanry people and small businesses that might not recieve the attention from  larger corporations. I would like to help the people of one of the greatest cities in the world recover from this unexpected tradjedy. I cannot begin to express my gratitude to anyone who is gracious enough to help out.

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

PATHS TO THE PAST: Carp, Symbols of Strength and Perseverance




The carp is a symbol of strength and perseverance. The scales and whiskers of the fish make it resemble a dragon, the greatest symbol of power in China. 

Fish in general play a large role in Chinese culture and the words for “fish” and “abundance” are pronounced the same in Chinese (yu). 

Meet My Next Guest, Sun Bin, China's Mountaineer Extraordinaire!



My next guest on the Marvels of China: Pathways to the Pacific Rim Show will be taking you, me and our global listening audience to new heights -literally!

Thanks to Beijing AmBridge International Culture Development Ltd. (AmBridge), the show's title-sponsor, I was able to meet one of China's most ambitious and passionate mountain climbers, Sun Bin.

And you will, too, over the next three Saturday broadcasts scheduled for April 16, 23 and 30. 

Sun Bin has nearly 20 years of world-wide mountaineering, rock climbing and ice climbing experience. He is the first Chinese mountaineer athlete to be sponsored for California-based The North Face. 

He first started his climbing adventures as a member of the Peking University Mountaineering Association in 1997. Sun Bin subsequently joined the Chinese Mountaineering Association in 2000. For the next six years he was the chief designer of training programs for rock climbing, ice climbing and mountain guiding in China, as well as certification programs- a first in Chinese history. 

From 2006 to 2008 Sun Bin joined the Beijing Olympic Committee, serving as project manager of the torch relay on Mount Everest. During the test event in 2007 he summited Mount Everest. 

Since then Sun Bin has climbed and guided others on an amazing assortment of expeditions.  In 2008, he made a film about ice climbing in Shuangqiao Gully titled Dragon Breath. In 2009, he acted as the main role for the movie Summit Memory from the story of climbing Mt. Xixiabangma. In 2009, he translated the book Extreme Alpinism by Mark Twight to Chinese and published for all the Chinese climbers. In 2011, Sun Bin set up a new route on south face of Mt. Siguniang (6250m), and made a documentary, Return to the Peak

In 2012, he set up a non-profit organization,  Summit Outdoor School, to provide courses for mountain guides, local guides, and university students. 

Four years ago Sun Bin was featured in the “Go Wild” campaign, a collaboration between The North Face and Ogilvy & Mather Shanghai


“The North Face’s Go Wild campaign is a breath of fresh air that encourages city dwellers to break free from the eating-drinking-shopping-sitting in front of a screen rut and to replace it with tranquil or thrilling experiences in the great outdoors.” 



Check out this YouTube clip about trad-climbing  and this Chinese language film, 去野-孙斌, featuring Sun Bin on Tudou.com

Presently, Sun Bin and his team are in Norway preparing for an expedition to the North Pole, to be followed by one to Denali Mountain in Alaska, USA. 

So, mark your calendars! Get ready to "go wild" over mountaineering with Sun Bin. This is an interview series you will not want to miss. 



Sunday, April 10, 2016

PATHS TO THE PAST: Chinese Mirrors


In ancient China, mirrors were believed to protect their owners from evil, making hidden spirits visible and revealing the secrets of the future. 

A person who had been scared by a ghost could be healed by looking in the mirror. 

Mirrors were often hung on the ceilings of burial chambers, too. 

PATHS TO THE PAST: Chinese Calendar

China has the world’s oldest calendar. This lunar calendar originated in 2600 B.C., and has twelve zodiac signs. 

It takes 60 years to complete. 


PATHS TO THE PAST: Chinese Dragons





While the dragon is typically seen as an evil creature in Western culture, it holds first place among the four greatest creatures in Chinese mythology, including the phoenix, tiger, and tortoise. It is typically associated with the emperor.

Friday, April 8, 2016

Tune in Saturday, April 9 for Marvels of China: Pathways to the Pacific Rim Show with Jeffrey Bingham Mead


Ni Hao! I have returned from Hawaii USA! 

I invite you as always to tune-in on Saturday morning for our next Marvels of China: Pathways to the Pacific Rim Show on AM 1490 WGCH and on WGCH.COM


On the Conversations segment I will feature my recent interview with Mr. Johnson Choi of the China Hawaii Chamber of Commerce. I conducted this interview on-location in the Century Center on Bishop Street -Hawaii's version of Wall Street- in the heart of Honolulu's downtown business and financial district. 

We're going to be talking business and much more with Mr. Choi. Believe me, if you want to do business in China you'll want to hear what Hong Kong-born Johnson Choi has to say. 

On our weekly Confucius Moment we'll discuss the meaning behind this quote from the Great Sage himself: "The man who removes a mountain begins by carrying away small stones."

On our Paths to the Past segment I'll share some fascinating historical information about the Chinese in Hawaii. 

Did you know that the Chinese were arriving in Hawaii as early as 1789? 

That in China Hawaii was called as Tan Heong Shan, or Fragrant Sandalwood Mountains

That Wong Tze-Chun arrived in 1802 and set up the first commercial sugar operation with equipment he brought with him from China? 

Don't forget that listeners like you can contact me at MarvelsofChina@gmail.com, subscribe to the show's Facebook page, read about us on MarvelsofChina.blogspot.com, and that our past shows are archived as podcasts on WGCH.com

Please remember to do business with the shows sponsors: 

-Beijing AmBridge International Culture Development, Ltd.
-CEO Offices at 75 Holly Hill Lane, Greenwich, Connecticut.
-Penang Grill at 55 Lewis Street, Greenwich, Connecticut. 

Tune-in tomorrow, Saturday, for our live broadcast on AM 1490 WGCH 10:30 a.m. - 11:00 a.m. Eastern Time USA, or go to www.wgch.com

See you on the air!

Jeffrey Bingham Mead
Your Host


Xie xie! Thank you for tuning in to Marvels of China: Pathways to the Pacific Rim. My weekly newsletter, emails and blog site are here to connect you to my show on NewsTalk AM 1490 WGCH Radio, China and the other cultures of East Asia and the Pacific Rim. 

Subscribe by email to MarvelsofChina@gmail.comIf you prefer not to receive messages please respond with the word "unsubscribe" in the subject-box of your email.