China Had "Cute" Girl Mime Opening Ceremony After Singer Banned For Crooked Teeth

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AP   |  CARA ANNA   |   August 12, 2008 at 06:51 AM


BEIJING — A 7-year-old Chinese girl was not good-looking enough for the Olympics opening ceremony, so another little girl with a pixie smile lip-synched "Ode to the Motherland," a ceremony official said _ the latest example of the lengths Beijing took for a perfect start to the Summer Games.

A member of China's Politburo asked for the last-minute change to match one girl's face with another's voice, the ceremony's chief music director, Chen Qigang, said in an interview with Beijing Radio.

"The audience will understand that it's in the national interest," Chen said in a video of the interview posted online Sunday night.

The news follows reports that some footage of the fireworks exploding across China's capital during the ceremony was digitally inserted into television coverage, apparently over concerns that not all of the 29 blasts could be captured on camera. China has been eager to present a flawless Olympics image to the world, shooing migrant workers and so-called petitioners who come to the central government with grievances from the city and shutting down any sign of protest.

The country's quest for perfection apparently includes its children.

Lin Miaoke's performance Friday night, like the ceremony itself, was an immediate hit. "Nine-year-old Lin Miaoke becomes instant star with patriotic song," the China Daily newspaper headline said Tuesday.

WATCH A CLIP OF THE FAKERY OR SCROLL TO KEEP READING

But the real voice behind the tiny, pigtailed girl in the red dress who wowed 91,000 spectators at the National Stadium on opening night really belonged to 7-year-old Yang Peiyi. Her looks apparently failed the cuteness test with officials organizing the ceremony, but Chen said her voice was judged the most beautiful.

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"The national interest requires that the girl should have good looks and a good grasp of the song and look good on screen," Chen said. "Lin Miaoke was the best in this. And Yang Peiyi's voice was the most outstanding."

During a live rehearsal soon before the ceremony, the Politburo member said Miaoke's voice "must change," Chen said in the radio interview. He didn't name the official.

So Peiyi's voice was matched with Miaoke's face.

"We had to make that choice. It was fair both for Lin Miaoke and Yang Peiyi," Chen told Beijing Radio. "We combined the perfect voice and the perfect performance."

Chen couldn't be reached for comment Tuesday.

A photo of Peiyi posted Tuesday on popular Web site Sina.com shows a smiling girl with bangs and crooked teeth. A China News Service story posted with the photo says a China Central Television reporter asked Peiyi whether she felt regret over the opening ceremony.

Peiyi responded that just having her voice used for the opening ceremony was an honor.

Whether the move was unethical, or unfair to both girls, has become a hot topic among Chinese and is racing across the country's blogosphere.

"The organizers really messed up on this one," said Luo Shaoyang, 34, a retail worker in Beijing.

"This is like a voice-over for a cartoon character," Luo said. "Why couldn't they pick a kid who is both cute and a good singer? This damages the reputation of both kids for their future, especially the one lip-synching. Now everyone knows she's a fraud. Who cares if she's cute?"

Zhang Xinyi, 22, who works in marketing in Beijing, disagreed.

"I can understand why they picked the prettier girl. They need to maintain a certain aesthetic beauty during the opening ceremonies. This situation is not so bad, especially since it gives two people an opportunity to shine rather than just one."

Peiyi is a first-grader at the Primary School affiliated to Peking University. Her tutor, Wang Liping, wrote in her blog that Peiyi is both cute and well-behaved, with a love for Peking opera.

"She doesn't like to show off. She's easygoing," Wang wrote. She and other school officials couldn't be reached Tuesday.

Miaoke, however, was a minor celebrity even before the opening ceremony. The third-grader appeared in a television ad last year with China's biggest gold medal hope, hurdling champion Liu Xiang, and she was in an Olympics ad just before Chinese New Year, China Daily reported.

Miaoke has her own blog, and one of the latest photos posted since the ceremony shows her looking up nervously at the ceremony's director, film director Zhang Yimou. "Giving the child encouragement," the caption says.

Her father, Lin Hui, told China Daily he learned Miaoke would be "singing" only 15 minutes before the opening ceremony began. The newspaper wrote Lin "still cannot believe his daughter has become an international singing sensation."

It was the second straight Olympics where the opening ceremony involved lip-synching.

Luciano Pavarotti's performance at the 2006 Winter Games in Turin was prerecorded. The maestro who conducted the aria, Leone Magiera, said earlier this year that the bitter cold made a live performance impossible for Pavarotti, who was in severe pain months before his cancer diagnosis. Pavarotti died in September 2007 at age 71.

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Chi-Chi Zhang contributed to this report.

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Lin Miaoke's blog: http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/indexlist_1321880115_1.html

BEIJING — A 7-year-old Chinese girl was not good-looking enough for the Olympics opening ceremony, so another little girl with a pixie smile lip-synched "Ode to the Motherland," a ceremony offic...
BEIJING — A 7-year-old Chinese girl was not good-looking enough for the Olympics opening ceremony, so another little girl with a pixie smile lip-synched "Ode to the Motherland," a ceremony offic...
 
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people are so righteous when judging others. how can we criticize them when we are so superficial in our media and culture. i am not even going to spend any more energy typing out the several examples as i am sure we all know what these are.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:52 PM on 08/20/2008
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I can assure you that these girls will have a great future in China. Both of them. You will hear about them one day. Chinese officials did this because of stupidity and desire to make a perfect picture... wrong. But this will not stop the girls from getting attention and developed into what they deserve.

If they are true gold, they will shine.

From:
http://www.chinationreport.com/#EditorsChoice

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:10 AM on 08/18/2008

The story has it backwards, party officials decided the cute girl couldn't sing good enough at the last minute, and had someone else dubbed in.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 AM on 08/18/2008

I'd like to see pictures of the folks who decided she isn't cute enough scrolled across a monitor, tv screen and/or newspapers -- let's see how cute THEY are!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:05 AM on 08/15/2008
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It was obvious the little girl wasn't actually singing to the music. Even though both girls are adorable, the little girl with the voice should have been seen and recognized. That talented little girl is China's future and shame on those Chinese officials for not having enough pride in her talent and her beauty to show her off to the world.... What an awful message China has sent to its girls.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:28 AM on 08/15/2008

I agree.

Of course, the US often sends similar messages, with kiddie beauty contests a la JonBenet Ramsey, etc . yecch...

The good news for the 2 Chinese girls is that Woody Allen announced he would like to marry either one.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:55 AM on 08/15/2008
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I got a letter in the mail asking if I'd be interested in enrolling my daughter in some beauty pageant... Her older brother read the letter and said, "Mom, there's no way I'm letting her do this. It's a bad message to prop her up like some trophy."

I agreed and he threw the letter out... Of course he'd have no problem dating a trophy... lol

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:27 AM on 08/16/2008

It DOES send an awful message to China's girls. Of course, this occurs big-time in the U.S. as well

It stinks on a personal level in being disrespectful to the singer, with potential negative psychological consequences later due to lowered self-esteem from a superficial characteristic.

It demonstrates that fear mongers, in this case the Chinese gov't, are themselves fearful. Beware of those overly concerned with their image, even if you know nothing else about them.

Last but not least, this is only one of many instances of FAKERY in the Chinese Olympic presentation: Fake weather, fake free speech, fake fireworks, fake internet access, more. See: http://www.naturalnews.com/023862.html

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:40 PM on 08/15/2008
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China's new slogan: "All fake all the time"... or at least when the world is watching.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 AM on 08/16/2008

" What an awful message China has sent to its girls."

Well, yeah, that and abandoning them to the wolves when they are born so that they can have a son as their one government sanctioned offspring. China is a totalitarian nightmare top to bottom, lip synching children are the least of China's women's problems.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:14 PM on 08/15/2008
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You do make a great point...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 AM on 08/16/2008

makes ya wonder what the Chinese are saying about Condi behind her back. She's got a gap in her teeth that you can see from across the room.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 AM on 08/15/2008

How awful. The other girl is also cute. She's a child. I thought we were superficial in this country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 08/15/2008

We all know that China isn't hosting the Olympics in order to host the Olympics. They just want to showcase their country and use the games as a backdrop. However, I don't think U.S. athletes such as Shawn Jackson should train for years and get to the event only to find she and their gymnastics team are competing with people 12 and 14 years old. Is anyone doing something about this? This is NOT OK. Thew rules are the rules, and just because the games are being held in China does not mean that they can falsify passports. Making a nervous American gymnast wait exceedlingly long and then delaying further her performance is disturbing as well. Could we get some legitimate birth records for the China team here? Like right now?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:58 PM on 08/14/2008

Not only that but they told another little girl that she was going to be the singer and then told her she wasn't cute enough and replaced with a little girl who lipsinks. It's a freaking little girl! She needs her own government telling her she isn't cute?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:25 PM on 08/14/2008

Yang has learned a tough lesson. I hopes she studies hard, becomes a billionaire tycoon and make those heartless bastards pay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:44 PM on 08/14/2008
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I hope she grows up to overthrow her government....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:27 AM on 08/15/2008
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And that's somewhere near the bottom of the list of atrocities China inflicts upon its people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:41 PM on 08/14/2008

and the atrocities we've inflicted on Iraqi kids.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:11 PM on 08/14/2008
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It is a remarkable contrast on how two societies at the opposite ends of the freedom scale can scar their youth.

Michael Phelps, 23, talks about the bullying and teasing he endured in his early school years because of the appearance of his ears and his lisp.

A Chinese Communist government thug shows up at a rehearsal and orders this child singer out of the opening ceremonies. Now, for the rest of her life, she will be constantly reminded of that incident.

Both societies have such a long way to go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 PM on 08/14/2008

STOP WHINING!

And be embarrass for being beaten by the so-called 'underage' CHINESE PEASANTS! lol

Let the young ones enjoy their achievements!
Many of those 'underage' would be slaving in China's poor countryside for nothing if they and their parents weren't making something of their lives.

Young Americans would do well to emulate those young Chinese instead of spending their youth eating like pigs or taking drugs, which are worse ways to waste one's youth!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 PM on 08/14/2008

The American women's gymnastic team are not eating like pigs or taking drugs. They are highly accomplished and honest about their ages. They are women, not starved-down robot waifs who have never lived with their parents.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 AM on 08/15/2008

If we want our kids and other kids to be treated fairly ....as adults we should treat them fairly. I'm glad that china at least gave both girls a taste of something in their young lives...what big deal did we get to do when we were their age that was that humongous in our eyes? I how ever agree about the teeth thing but I still think that if we focus on other's kids then why aren't we focusing on our own in the same light? Why do we have kids that steal or lie or do drugs??Do you not think that we as adults add to it too? Think on the individual's opinion and how we don't really care how it effects others . I'm disappointed everyday with how I see people disapline their kids. I also see where our kids go when we don't show enough care about how we do disaplining. Let the nation's attitude show us what we do and hope to god that we change for the better of our kids and the future.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:58 PM on 08/14/2008

No, I personally don't think it's right but the bottomline is this: Who really cares? What's the shattering effect of this on the rest of the world? It's their country, they're hosting this huge extravaganza, it's their choice to do whatever they want. It's just another example of how 90% of the "news" reported is "much ado about nothing".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 08/14/2008
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