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Chinese girls are very materialistic minded, you
know Madonna and her hit its here in en nature.
Meet beautiful, decent and sincere Chinese girls seeking love at Chnlove.com !

Chinese
beauties are usual somehow positive
minded in terms to have a little talk
together and more.
If someone
comes to China lets say Shanghai or any
other big city, one can find plenty of
sexy Chinese beauties in every upscale Hotel,
but keep in mind those Chinese sexy
girls are there on business.
Chinese sexy girls
are usually much tougher than lets say
their counterpart in Thailand, its a
completely different mentality but in
any case you can find
some beautiful Chinese girl and young
Chinese girl plus cute Chinese girls.
 

400 million Chinese pick
Super Chinese Model Girl
For almost three hours, Chinese stopped
working -- and voted. No, for a political
revolution but a thumbs up to a 21-year-old
from Sichuan Chinese Girl who screamed out the song
"Zombie" from the band "Cranberries" as part of her
show.
China's "Super Girl" is an "American Idol"-style TV
show whose grand finale of dancing and singing drew
400 million viewers in China, roughly
equivalent to every person in the United States and
Britain together.
In China,
the Super Girl Show created a frenzy from
mountain villages to the shacks of
Shanghai
and is seen
as a new phenomenon. Nothing this large
and spontaneous has ever pushed its way
unapproved into China's mainstream media
before, only the current Chinese
Olympics get bigger switch on quotes.
Meet beautiful, decent and sincere Chinese girls seeking love at Chnlove.com !

About 8
million, mostly younger, Chinese paid
the equivalent of 2 cents to send a
"text message of support" (the word
"vote" is avoided) via cell phone for
one of the three Super Girl finalists.
Li Yuchun, a music student whose tomboy
looks and confidence onstage are the
talk of Chinese chat rooms, won with 3.5
million votes. The three finalists, all
in their early 20s, became instant
celebrities in a nation that really
hasn't made much room for the pop star
concept, except when they come from Hong
Kong or Taiwan.
Super Chinese Girl owes its popularity to its
raw authenticity, to indirectly giving
voice to individual Chinese through a
vote and to its unscripted creation of a
feeling of "happiness," according to a
dozen young Chinese interviewed on
campus and inside Beijing restaurants on
Friday.
The program did not, for example, emerge
from the Beijing studios of official
Chinese programming but from a
provincial station in the gritty
heartland of Hunan that has a satellite
uplink. The contest is officially called
the "Mongolian Cow Sour Yogurt Super
Girl Contest." By its rules, any female,
young or old, talented or not, can
participate -- not just the familiar
beauty-queen types from central casting.
Some 120,000 girls took part in the past
year in a sudden and unexpected burst of
enthusiasm that has Beijing authorities
slightly worried about the precedent it
may set for more unregulated forms of
pop culture.
"This is totally new to Chinese people,"
says Wei Feng, a student from the
Beijing Foreign Language Institute. "The
whole thing is about singing whatever
you want, and millions of young girls in
those provinces have never had that
chance before.".
In fact, the two top scorers on Friday
were "girl next door" types, with the
more feminine Zhang Liangying, who sang,
"Don't Cry for Me Argentina," coming in
a distant third. Super Girl Li has a
small army of young supporters who see
her as a role model.
"Super Girl represents a victory of the
grass roots over the elite culture,"
argues Beijing sociologist Li Yinhe.
"It is vulgar and manipulative," intoned
an official statement from China Central
TV (CCTV), the national state-run
broadcaster, which added that the
program was not high-toned enough due to
the gaudy clothing worn by contestants
and that the show could be canceled next
season due to its "worldliness."
Technically, CCTV officials can shut
down Super Chinese Girl, since they hold a
monopoly position on broadcast
decisions. Many ordinary Chinese say
that it won't be worldliness that
prompts any shutdown but the fact that CCTV's advertising revenue on Friday
night was lower than that of its modest
Hunan competitor. A pilot of an official
version of Super Girl produced by CCTV
reportedly failed.
"Most Chinese TV is formulaic," says Luo,
a young Beijing University graduate, who
would only give his first name. "We can
figure out after 15 minutes what will
happen, but on Super Chinese Girl we can't
predict what they will say about the
cute Chinese girl."
 
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Young Chinese girl interviewed say
that
they want to see examples of confident
females interacting spontaneously in
Chinese public culture, rather than
through an official script.
Private choice, public event.
For some students, the exciting part of
China Super Girl is making a private choice in
a public matter. A daring few, online
and usually anonymously, link the
concept to political voting.
In recent years, and for the first time,
China has experimented with online
votes, though topics are usually scoured
by authorities and sensitivities
removed. (One recent online vote in the Xinhua news service asked the question,
"Do you think Japan should become a
member of the UN Security Council?" The
vote was a nearly unanimous, "no.")
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One indication that authorities are
targeting Super Chinese Girl was the number of
traditional folk songs sung. At one
point, a matriarch from the People's
Liberation Army, wearing a green uniform
swathed in ribbons and medals, sang a
patriotic song in what many younger
Chinese interpreted as a way of
appeasing the central government
authorities.
The new and slightly giddying freedoms
of a mass-media program also, it is
pointed out by the male viewers, makes a
program about the girls, more
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appealing.
Zhao, an engineering student, was
passing out fliers about Li Yuchun at
People's University on Friday. The
fliers gave step-by- step instruction
for cellphone voting on one side, and a
particularly love- struck message,
penned by Zhao, on the other. Li Yuchun,
Zhao said, is a "no frills, natural girl who
has control of the stage, and is not easily
disturbed.
She
has no long skirts or long hair, and
will challenge the traditional female
idea. She is the Super Chinese Girl in my
heart."
Even older
Chinese have been caught up in the show.
One high-ranking
minister who was hosting a lengthy business
reception scheduled to last until 9 p.m. was
suddenly missing at 8 p.m. on Friday night.
Sources close to the minister noted that
Super Chinese Girl started at 8:30 p.m.
Copyright Deseret News Publishing Co.
Provided by ProQuest Information and
Learning Company. All rights Reserved.
Why men at
visit the beauty parlor in the night ?
The Chinese people seems to have the best
haircuts in the world, everywhere in the
downtown areas hairdressing salons
attractive China girls are open, the funny
thing is most of the clientele are guys.
Red plush chairs, dim lighting and heavy
curtains, China's hairdressing salons are
styled with a romantic touch, but
hardly anyone can be see actually cutting
the hair. Pretty young employees are around
with tight outfits showing what they have,
opening hours are very customer friendly
until the early morning hours Chinese girls
are around.
Sauna, beauty parlor, spa, massage, the
horizontal industry is up again in China.
Between three and four million busy girls
are working in the nightshift industry
according to the Chinese office of Public
Safety, other sources are more generous and
guess up to 20 million.
No matter what figures may be correct, the
numbers are impressive in any case, given
that in China 30 years ago the pretty
Chinese girls night work was almost
eliminated after the 1949 victory of the
Communists.
With the open up policy at the end of the
seventies the nice special Chinese ladies
appeared again. At the hotel bar,
inconspicuous with sexy dresses and eye
contact. Single travelers in China can sing
a song how often the hotel room phone rings
during the night
Maybe a little massage to relax? Maybe a
work out with two girls and one guy? The
Ding-Dong ladies (the Chinese expression for
the sound of a door bell) ring immediately
and directly at the room door and show their
physical arguments.
Less conspicuous are the karaoke lounges, a
traditional stronghold of the pretty Chinese
girls. Do a little sing along with the
customer and encourage them to drink, there
is not always a mattress in the back room.
Everyone will decide individually how far he
wants to go, not everyone reaches from
singing to the "dessert".
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Also
Chinese women had it made up with
the fun, in the large cities they
have a scene of "ducks" who will
take care of them. This goes in
parallel with the female "chicken".
Now the question is, why is this
business booming? There are
certainly social reasons.
The
continuous migration of thousands of
unskilled workers from the rural
areas to the cities and a pretty
girl earn in an evening as much as
maids or factory worker in a month.
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