About

Megan Shank is an editor, writer and translator living in Shanghai, China.

You Called For Me, Sir?

April 4th, 2008

Again, this story originally ran in Newsweek International, and then I supplemented a Chinese angle for a March 2008 run. You’ll notice how this is definitely for the Chinese reader now — I’m even explaining common English phrases. I also took the portrait to illustrate this story, which I’ll link to later.
You Called For [...]

Brand New Nations

April 4th, 2008

One of the things we do quite often at Newsweek Select is take Newsweek International content and then “localize” it. That is we supplement the article with a local angle and local people. In recent months, as I’ve been working on a lot of planning aspects for the magazine, we’ve been concentrating our efforts on [...]

Haiku for March 10

March 10th, 2008

Clear sun, air and dirt
You, state worker gardener
Leave me a tulip

This was an interview I did with CEO of Focus Media, Jiang Nanchun, for our first edition of Enterprise. Each month, I’ll conduct an interview with a Chinese business leader. I did this interview in Chinese and then translated it into English. Below, find both versions.
Q&A with Megan Shank
Bring the Noise, Bring the AD
According [...]

Hi Strangers

March 3rd, 2008

It’s been some time since I’ve visited this blog, and I feel compelled to check in and say hello. The past month and a half has been challenging on so many levels, but it has also been full of awesome things like a trip to Hanoi and a Bjork concert and an amazing act of [...]

I worked with writer Amy Sennett on this piece. Believe me when I say that explaining how the presidential election works to Chinese readers in 1,200 words is a true challenge, but Amy did brilliantly. It was fun to work with her on this piece.

Demystifying the U.S. Election
By Amy J. Sennett
With the U.S. presidential primaries [...]

The Problem with Mingong

January 31st, 2008

Today while at a Bund-side five-star hotel’s cafe where I was conducting an interview for the Enterprise section we’ll launch in March’s edition of Newsweek Select, a troop of 30-plus mud-covered construction workers tromped in with their rubber boots and construction hats and plopped down next to white collar workers disinterestedly sipping 55RMB ($7) [...]

Chinese Netizens, Rest Easy

January 23rd, 2008

BLOG for Huffpo
The Chinese can rest easy tonight. I should know. I saw it on the news.
Tonight, I flipped on the evening broadcast of CCTV1. The station is part of the China Central Television (CCTV) family, which also runs channels such as CCTV2, CCTV3, CCTV4, CCTV5, and, well, you get the gist. Not exactly creatively [...]

Shank Lit

January 18th, 2008

My cousin, Jenny Shank (or J. Alicia Shank), whose work has been featured in a variety of renown fiction magazines, is a semi-finalist in the Amazon-Penguin Breakthrough Novel competition. Please download her work, read, and provide your comments (and stars!!!) Her wry, subtle humor and deep sympathy for her characters will hook you.

Via Skype, Adam and I review a translation together during one of my 15-hour work days. We are stuck on one of those paragraph-long sentences by a Chinese academic.
Adam: “Passive voice is like hiding the ball.”
Megan: “No one acts. Instead, everyone, everything is acted upon. Maybe it makes sense that many Chinese write this [...]

Pay Attention; Get Involved

January 14th, 2008

International Herald Tribune
Net gives Americans abroad a stronger political voice
By Eric Sylvers
Friday, January 4, 2008
MILAN: Thanks to the Internet, Americans who belong to the Democratic Party are getting a voice of their own in the presidential nomination, as the party has agreed to allow expatriates to choose 22 delegates to the national convention as part [...]

Q & A: Interrogating Inspector Chen
Crime novelist (and poet) Qiu Xiaolong dishes on Chinese censors and soup dumplings
By Megan Shank
Date posted: January 13, 2008
IN “RED MANDARIN DRESS,” the fifth installment of his Inspector Chen mystery series, Shanghai-born émigré Qiu Xiaolong intersperses the narrative of gritty murders with glorious descriptions of Chinese food and captivating asides [...]

Chinese Apocalypse Now!

January 11th, 2008

My fiancé Adam has been here for two weeks. Now he’s going home. We’ve enjoyed celebrating the holidays, trying out new recipes, hosting our Siberian friends for a weekend and making a satiric film about the great China hype and Western hysteria. Hope you enjoy watching it as much as we did making it. But [...]

Facebook and the French

January 10th, 2008

Awesome. Looks like Chinese and American journalists don’t have a corner on irresponsibility and hubris.

A Carbon-friendly Stay

January 8th, 2008

For Newsweek Select’s January 2008 edition; this copy was only printed in Chinese, but I post the English version.
A Carbon-friendly Stay
China is now the fastest growing emitter of greenhouse gases worldwide, but one new hotel in Shanghai wants to change that—with style. URBN Hotels Shanghai, the first carbon-neutral boutique hotel in China, is sure [...]

Sending out an SNS

January 4th, 2008

FOR NEWSWEEK SELECT JAN. 2008
Sending out an SNS
Chinese and international social-networking services want to “friend” you.
By Megan Shank (Shanghai)
No other culture in the world emphasizes building guanxi (connections) as China’s does. Recently, the foreign powerhouse social networking sites (SNS) Facebook and Friendster have engendered themselves as part of that experience here. [...]

Tough to Swallow

December 29th, 2007

I edited this piece by Lauren Hilgers. It ran in our December edition.
Business
Tough to Swallow
Tightening regulations are changing the face of China’s pharmaceutical industry.
By Lauren Hilgers (Shanghai)
At the junction of three major rail lines outside of Beijing at Shijiazhuang, China’s pharmaceutical row, warehouses are pumping out antibiotics and pain medication. Assembly-line workers bottle endless [...]

Megan on NPR

December 25th, 2007

I’ll be speaking live about Christmas in China on NPR’s The Bryant Park Project 8am Christmas morning EST. Tune in, cheer on.
UPDATE: Here’s the link to my segment.

How about a Facebook Race?

December 23rd, 2007

For The Huffington Post:
How about a Facebook Race?
By Megan Shank
Growing up a Nebraskan, I was taught to deeply distrust Iowans—particularly while driving. I have learned that although they are poky behind the wheel, Iowans have expertly navigated the American electoral system to their advantage, drumming up much hubbub and hard cash for the state with [...]

Nooooo!

December 14th, 2007

I am getting back on the blog after two weeks of holiday and then two weeks of adjusting to working life again, but I have to say this is horrible news for me and the residents of Discworld:
Terry Pratchett Says He Has Alzheimer’s
RAPHAEL G. SATTER | December 12, 2007 07:20 PM EST | AP
LONDON [...]