Thursday 2 February 2012

Valentines Flowers Him - Valentine’s Day a Reminder to Tend to Matters of the Heart


Well, Valentine’s Day is just around the corner, and so it’s time to take care of your valentine’s heart send valentines flowers him.

I am not talking a Hallmark card or candy or flowers, though those are fine, too. I mean the real thing, the organ that makes everything run.

“Todd” is the kind of guy who likes his meat red and his beer cold. He doesn’t need to work out a lot (he says) because he gets a lot of exercise carrying in the groceries and taking out the garbage. Sometimes he even takes the stairs instead of the elevator. Todd used to be a jock in college, and he is used to his body taking of itself. Tammy, his wife, is getting very concerned because she can’t remember when he had his last physical. She really has no idea how to get him in to see his doctor.

“Julie,” who lives on the same block as Todd and Tammy, is the exact opposite. She does yoga several times a week, and walks or runs on the other days. She looks great, but her exercise program isn’t about staying in shape. She has a strong family history of people dying prematurely from heart disease. She thinks she’s taken care of all the risk factors. She also thinks that the reason her neck, shoulder and upper back ache a lot is because she pulled a muscle doing yoga.

The medical facts challenge both Todd and Julie’s understanding of  heart disease.

A recent longitudinal study was done by the American Sociological Association. The primary researcher, Kristin W. Springer, analyzed the health of 1,000 middle-aged men who graduated from Wisconsin high schools in 1957. The results show that men on average die five years earlier than their female counterparts. The main reason found is because of the “ideals” of manliness. The more manly he feels, the less likely he is to seek preventive treatment. This was just as true of highly educated men as of men with less education.  When he finally does go, his medical problems are too advanced to extend or even save his life.

More women than men die of heart disease each year, primarily because women have different symptoms than men, and frequently don’t even realize that they are having a heart attack. Pressure or discomfort in the chest may not even occur. Instead, women may have neck, shoulder, upper back or abdominal discomfort. Other symptoms include shortness of breath, nausea or vomiting, sweating, lightheadedness or dizziness, or unusual fatigue. Looks like Julie needs to get herself to a doctor, pronto!

Since Todd may be too manly to want to go to the doctor, here are some ideas to help Tammy help him:

• Appeal to the love you have for him, and your genuine concern, telling him, “You are so important to me that I want you to be around for a long time.”

• Schedule a doctor’s appointment just as you schedule all social engagements. Don’t talk about it, and go along with him because you are concerned. Chances he will go because he is concerned about you being concerned.

• Don’t nag. He probably will ignore nagging and it will damage your relationship.

If you would like more information about heart health, go to www.americanheart.org. There is also a wonderful free opportunity for you to learn more about heart health, courtesy of the Health Forum of the Park Ridge Chamber of Commerce. Dr. Dean Katsamakis, Internal Medicine and Cardiology, affiliated with Resurrection and Lutheran General Hospital, will discuss “Heart Disease-The Silent Killer,” at 11 a.m. Feb. 2 at the Park Ridge Senior Center.

The Park Ridge Health Care Forum will host monthly presentations and discussions at 11 a.m. the first Thursday of each month at the Park Ridge Senior Center.

The Health Care Forum is collaborative group of health-and-wellness professionals and community partners working to bring health education to the community. Topics will address a variety of health issues related to cardiology, prescription drugs, depression, Medicare scams, new Medicaid changes, health screenings, how to prepare for your next doctor’s appointment, brain health and ideas on how navigate through the health-care process. Refreshments will be served. Attendance is free.

The Health Care Forum is sponsored by the Park Ridge Chamber of Commerce, the Park Ridge Park District, Advocate Lutheran General Hospital and Resurrection Health Care.

Valentines Flowers Him - Hearts and Flowers

Not flowers and chocolates again! Surely the way to a green-fingered person’s heart on Valentine’s Day is to make the most of the great outdoors, do some spectacular planting and wallow in luxury at the end of a hard day’s digging.


There’s an abundance of romantic gifts for the gardener, from a simple heart-shaped garden ornament to wonderful hampers of luxurious, sweetly scented organic products to wash away the toil of the day.


Think beyond the box of chocolates to items which will bring pleasure for years to come.


Award-winning rose grower David Austin has a stunning container gift rose collection, for instance, which can be ordered to arrive on a specific date. Each rose arrives in a gift box, decorated with a rose print.


Among the gems in the collection is the St Swithun, a beautiful English climbing rose which produces large, saucer-shaped blooms in a romantic shade of pure pink blush, with a strong myrrh fragrance. The containerised roses come in 6ltr pots (£24.95 including standard delivery, phone 01902 376 300).


If your loved one is inspired by other people’s gardens, or simply enjoys a romantic day out in the open air, an annual membership to the National Trust is a must. It provides free unlimited visits to all of the 200 Trust gardens across England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Buy gift membership on 0844 800 1895 or Membership starts at £37.88.


If she’s the apple of your eye, buy her a rosy-red Redlove bare root apple tree, excellent for both eating and cooking, which bears red fleshed fruit that has a beautiful pattern running through it and retains its colour when cooking. Exclusive to Suttons, the tree has unusual, long-lasting, deep pink spring blossom. (£24.99, phone 0844 922 0606)


Add a touch of sparkle to your relationship – and your garden – with a twinkly red mosaic heart hanger, made with red-coloured glass shards and frost and weather resistant. Available in different sizes from gardens2you (from £8.99, phone 01933 624 084).


If you want a more personalised gift, you can name a pack of rose seeds after your loved one that can grow into a rose bush to cherish forever.


Simply name your rose will register the name to the unique pack of rose seeds and personalise the certificate, which you will receive with both your chosen name and the unique seed reference number allocated. It comes presented in a stylish gift tin. (£19.99)


If you’re looking for a timely gift, check out Gardman’s Hamilton Roman numeral clock, with its romantic heart-shaped metal designs. (£24.99. (Gardman, stockists 01406 372 227).


With more hearts in mind, this delightful heart-shaped plant holder in brown rustic finish will add a touch of romance to any garden. It makes an eye-catching feature planted with cascading geraniums or ivies and can be used as a conservatory planter or outside hanging from a tree. (£22.50)


For someone you think is hot stuff, you might opt for a gift of a chilli plant to grow in a windowsill container, with delicious Belgian chocolates with a kick of hot chilli. (£9.95, phone 01458 270 911)


Alternatively, the same company offers more of a pampering gift for gardeners with its organic weekender gift box filled with organic toiletries including bath oil, soap and a votive candle scented with jasmine and geranium with manuka honey. (£27.95, phone 01458 270 911)


Create a romantic mood either inside or outside with a set of coloured glass happy tealights from The Balcony Gardener. Each set contains a silver, blue, pink, purple and yellow glass tealight. (£30, phone 0207 431 5553)


If the present is for an avid birdwatcher, what about a new pair of Magnaloux LC2 8×25 binoculars to admire the feathered friends which come into the garden? Featuring high-quality lenses for improved performance, they are also waterproof and nitrogen filled, meaning they can be used even in wet conditions. (£79.99, from phone 0800 978 8314)


If you’d rather display a token of your love artistically, create some heart-shaped topiary of your own using privet or box. This might involve treating yourself to a suitable topiary trimmer such as the Bosch’s Isio Cordless Shape and Edge, a lightweight tool which your loved one can use afterwards. (£59.99 from good stockists,)


If you want to make your loved one smile, buy her a novelty red kneeler saying Keep Calm And Carry On Weeding. More suitable for him might be the green version, A Nice Cup Of Tea Please. (£3.95 each,phone 020 8746 2473)


Best of the bunch – crocus


These pint-sized corms provide a splash of colour in late winter and early spring, producing slender, goblet-shaped flowers.


While the large-flowered Dutch crocus, C. vernus subsp albiflorus, are easy to grow and bear blooms in white, mauve, purple, yellow or striped and look wonderful in a pot or bowl on the patio, the smaller-flowered specie crocus are useful for early colour in pots planted with other bulbs.


C. tommasinianus is one of the prettiest, with its slender pale lilac-blue flowers with orange stigmas, opening in the late winter sunshine.


It looks amazing naturalised under trees in poor, free-draining soil. Good cultivars of this type include ‘Barr’s Purple’, ‘Ruby Giant’, which produces red-purple flowers, and ‘Whitewell Purple’, with purple-blue wide opening flowers.


Crocus look great planted in drifts of one or more colours and are superb for naturalising.


Good enough to eat – Globe artichokes


These unusual veg are not only delicious but they provide an eye-catching architectural highlight with their spiky leaves topped with huge blue thistle flowers.


It’s the hearts inside the globe-shaped flowers which are edible, although you can also boil the outer scales around the flower and serve them with melted butter or vinaigrette.


Globe artichokes need a good fertile soil that is well drained but doesn’t dry out in summer, so dig in plenty of organic matter before planting. They can be sown in trays in a greenhouse in February, pricked out in March and April, hardened off and then planted out when they are 10cm high, preferably in a sunny but sheltered site, allowing at least 75cm diameter per plant.


Do not allow the plants to flower in their first year, as you want the roots to build up reserves for the following year. You can stop them flowering by pinching out all the flower buds. When the plants mature in year two, restrict the number of main buds to five or six.


Keep newly planted artichokes well watered. Flower buds on established plants should appear from June onwards and will grow to around 1.5m (5ft) in height.


Harvest the artichoke flower heads when they have reached a good size and before they open. They should be green and tight with fleshy outer scales. Once the flower heads start to turn purple and scales start to open they become inedible.


Three ways to… enhance roses


1. Increase their flowering by training stems horizontally, or in sweeping arches, so that they will produce flowering stems along the branches.


2. If covering a pillar, don’t place the stems vertically against the support. Wind them around, spiral fashion and they should flower lower and better.


3. Tie in new stems of climbers and ramblers with lengths of garden twine, making a figure of eight between stem and support, so the tie does not rub on the stem and damage it.


What to do this week


Prepare the ground if you are planning to sow or turf a new lawn, to give the ground time to settle.
Test your soil to see whether the pH needs adjusting, so you can take action before the main growing season.
Continue to refirm any young plants lifted by frost.
Order young bedding plants and summer-flowering bulbs, corms or tubers.
Continue to put cloches in position to warm the soil for early sowings of vegetables in March. They need to be in place for at least three weeks for the soil to benefit.
Sow quick-growing perennials such as campanulas and poppies to valentines flowers him this year.
Keep beds clear of weeds. Groundsel and chickweed in particular should be removed from around growing chrysanthemums as they are host plants for the chrysanthemum eelworm.
Take cuttings from dahlia tubers.
Weather permitting, take hardwood cuttings of hardy climbers now to save time later in the spring.
Prune old canes of autumn raspberries down to the ground as soon as new growth appears.
Transfer fuchsia cuttings taken in the autumn into 5cm (2in) pots.
Sow parsley in pots indoors or outdoors under glass, sieving a light covering of compost over the seeds.

Wednesday 1 February 2012

Valentines Flowers Him - There Are Some Great Gift Ideas For Valentine's Day


Valentine's Day is a day of the year for the love of men and women who come from all the mud, changing cards and gifts to loved ones. Unique in the country fear that this time of year, but inevitably it shows in the event grow each year. For those who are lucky to have found love, Valentine's Day is a day I'm sure very nice.

These days, not only the exchange of cards, gifts have become important aspects of Valentine's Day. On Valentine's Day with your loved one a great gift, like a plasma TV and 50-inch speaker surround sound system. A home theater is to say more than a bunch of flowers or a box of chocolates.

To show their love for their image and sound customer will be low, offering price and home theater AV equipment at a reduced price for the sale of the weekend of Valentine's Day.

If you have trouble finding the perfect gift for valentines flowers him, wife, husband, girlfriend or boyfriend, then go to Sound and Vision for some great gift ideas. There are some great gift ideas for Valentine's Day and Blu-ray, DVD recorders, surround sound systems and televisions speakers.

Buyers of the Image and Sound to see a few gift ideas at prices low and affordable. Bargain hunters Valentine for sale to see a wide range of brands from the likes of Sony, Panasonic, Philips, LG, Sharp and Toshiba, and more at reduced prices

Buyers looking for Valentine online sales are the www.soundandvision.co.uk. Picture and sound have two shops one in Bolton and the other in Leeds. Located in the Strait of Farnsworth Bolton large branch and a full range of products on display, with experts on hand to assist and help decide what the right to buy Valentine's Day. Bolton, though a little too far, and then visit the new store in Armey Leeds, West Yorkshire.

If there are shops online shopping at home seem more interesting then the sale of its site Valentine's Day and vision. Buyers of picture cards and negotiate the sale to Valentine's Day display video pages and comments useful products.

Instead of spending money on valentines flowers him, chocolates and teddy bears to spend the money wisely and give the gift of Sound Vision AV and sale weekend Valentine's Day.

Thursday 12 January 2012

valentines flowers him - sweet new collection to celebrate Valentine's Day



German luxury brand MCM has unveiled the Sweet Visetos Collection to celebrate Valentine's Day.

Described as a witty interpretation of the term ‘sweetheart’, Sweet Visetos symbolises blooming love with a heart-shaped cherry. A joyful mix of colour and pattern gives the product a kitsch edge, the company said.

The new collection comprises a Boston bag, the popular tambourine bag shape and long zip-around wallets in two colours: beige and pink.

These special-edition gift items are available from February 2012 exclusively in MCM flagship boutiques worldwide.


A number of zip-around wallets are available in the special-edition Valentine's Day collection

About MCM

Born in in 1976 during Munich's heyday, MCM embodies the sophisticated and culturally rich spirit of the city. A long-time favourite of international royalty, celebrities and VIPs, MCM draws on its tradition of prestige and quality. The logo symbolises 1900 in Roman numerals.

MCM continues to be the pioneer of the market by continuously evolving with clever designs, durable materials, and delivering versatile styles to suit every need. Bag styles run from classic black and tan to statement-making models in strong colours. The brand offers sophisticated handbags, practical and stylish luggage, functional business bags and trendy small leather goods, all crafted from materials such as leather, fabric and exotic skins.

MCM has boutiques in major cities such as Athens, Berlin, Düsseldorf, London, New York, Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong and Seoul. The brand is also sold by prestigious retailers in key markets including the US, the UK, Dubai, Italy and Russia.

For details, contact: Susanne Laible, MCM, tel: +41 44 368 1668, fax: +41 44 368 1601
valentines flowers him

Monday 9 January 2012

valentines flowers him - Valentine's Day Paper Chain Decorations

The paper chains are made by cutting a piece of paper into equal sized strips and these strips are formed into chains. These are quick and easy to make and are a great way to practice stamping techniques.

Valentine’s Day Color Scheme Suggestions

Pinks and reds are the colors of romance. These are warm colors and are complemented at either side of the color wheel by oranges and soft mauves. However although these are the traditional colors, contemporary or unusual color schemes also work well. Black stamped on red paper for instance would look very dramatic, whereas silver stamped on plain white paper would give an extremely classy feel to the finished chain.

Stamp images using a dark ink on a light colored background paper for a greater contrast.

Rubber Stamping Supplies Required

Paper – craft paper is ideal for this project, or any plain paper that is suitable for cutting into strips.
Stamps – any heart shaped stamps are good for this project. A selection of hearts will give a varied overall finish, whereas a single stamp can be varied by placing it at different angles or by altering the color of the ink.
Inks – dye based inks or quick drying pigment inks make this project quicker to finish as the inks do not need to be left to dry or set with heat. A section of colors will give depth, whereas a single color such as pink creates the classic feel of Valentine’s Day.
Glue – a dab of glue is required to join each strip of paper. As an alternative to glue some double-sided tape could be used or perhaps a heart shaped sticker.
Equipment

Scissors
Ruler
Pencil
To Make the Chains

For more information about making paper chains take a look at the How To Make Paper Chains article.

Prepare paper for stamping. If you are using a roll of craft paper then it might be helpful to secure the paper to the work surface to stop it curling up.

Stamp all over the paper in a random fashion, completely covering the surface with stamped hearts. Varying the direction of the hearts and the color of the ink will give an unstructured feel, more formal stamping patterns such as stamping in lines will result in a more structured pattern. Remember that the hearts will be viewed from different angles once the chain has been made.

Cut the paper into strips. The paper chain in the picture was formed from strips that are 2-by-8 inches. The strips can be made any size however, for a rough ‘rule of thumb’, keeping a proportion of about 1:4 will give an effective chain (if the strips are proportionately too wide they buckle when made into chains).

Make the strips into a chain as long as you want. Use to decorate a Valentine's Day themed dinner table, hang on the wall, drape over pictures or in any other way that you can think of!
valentines flowers him

Thursday 5 January 2012

valentines flowers him - Sage Branch Library holds "Valentines for Troops" event

BAY CITY — Eighteen-month-old Mairiam Tacey used an orange marker to decorate a Valentine’s Day card Wednesday that is headed to some special people: American troops serving overseas.
Her father, Joel Tacey of Bay City was visiting the Sage Branch Library with Mairiam and her brother Remy, 4, to browse children’s books and to take part in the Valentines project.
“Arts and crafts are her favorite activity,” Tacey said. “If you ask, ‘Where’d Mairiam go?’, you can always find her at her drawing table.”
The Bay County Library System kicked off the first of four scheduled “Valentines for Troops” workshops on Wednesday at the Sage library, 100 E. Midland St.
“It’s a really open-ended event — people can drop by anytime during it,” said Krista Pedersen, children’s coordinator for the Bay County Library System. “We supply paper, cut-outs, glitter, stickers and other fun things to create a card or letter to a soldier wishing them a happy Valentine’s Day.”
Valentine’s Day cards are mailed to troops by the nonprofit organization Soldiers’ Angels, which covers the cost of postage.
 “As a library system, we collect all the different Valentines and put them in a big package that is sent to Soldiers’ Angels, who then sends them on to the troops.”
Each year, the library workshops generate more than 200 letters and Valentines for soldiers serving overseas. Pedersen estimated that around 
250 were created at the libraries in 2011.
“A lot of children express thanks and support through their artwork,” Pedersen said. “I have also seen comments that thank the men and women for being heroes. Of course, adults write more in detail about what they are thankful to the troops for.”
Lindsey Russell, senior library assistant, was on hand to help with Wednesday’s workshop. Last year, Russell said 38 people created Valentines at the Sage Branch Library.
“I hope as many — or more — turn up this year to make Valentines,” Russell said.
Here’s a schedule of upcoming dates and locations to create a Valentine:
• Alice & Jack Wirt Public Library, 500 Center Ave., Bay City; 5:30-7:30 p.m. today. Contact: 989-893-9566.
• Auburn Area Branch Library, 235 W. Midland Road, Auburn; 5-7 p.m. Tuesday.  Contact: 989-662-2381.
• Pinconning Branch Library, 218 Kaiser St., Pinconning; 3:30-4:30 p.m. Wednesday. Contact: 989-879-3283.
valentines flowers him

Tuesday 3 January 2012

valentines flowers him - Filmed in China

When Christian Bale was 13 he travelled to China to make his first film, Steven Spielberg's Empire of the Sun (1987). The adaptation of JG Ballard's book about life in Japan-occupied China during the second world war was shot in Shanghai. It's an experience the 37-year-old Bale now finds difficult to relate to. "It was so long ago," he says, sitting back in his seat in a Beverly Hills hotel. "I feel like it was a different person who made that movie."


Bale, born in Wales to English parents, has gone on to become one of Hollywood's most sought-after actors. His career includes challenging films such as American Psycho (2000) and The Machinist (2004), as well as an Oscar-winning performance in The Fighter (2010). Next summer he reprises the role of Batman in The Dark Knight Rises, the final instalment in Christopher Nolan's phenomenally successful trilogy. No grand strategy underpins the jobs he takes. Actors, he says, "don't really have the ability to plan everything they do".
With this in mind, there is something apt about his latest film, Zhang Yimou's The Flowers of War, in which Bale's career comes full circle. The production took the actor back to China for the first time since Empire of the Sun but this time the setting is Nanking in 1937. The flowers of the title are a group of women and girls who, aided by Bale's character, try to survive the brutal treatment of occupying Japanese soldiers.
"It felt like fate calling Christian back to China," says Zhang. He and Bale are sitting in adjoining seats: Bale is wearing a dark open-necked shirt and jeans and has also grown a beard, like the one he sports at the beginning of the film when his character, an American mortician on the make, stumbles through the smoke in a ravaged Nanking to evade the Japanese. Zhang is all in black, pairing tracksuit trousers with a natty pair of Dr Martens-style boots; his daughter Mo sits between the two men and will translate for us today, as she did on the set.
Bale does not speak Mandarin and Zhang cannot speak English, so Mo was an essential presence during the shoot. The language gap did not stop the two from communicating, Bale explains, adding that he had a better experience than the last time he worked with a director who could not speak English (he declines to name the film), when the translator "told me to do the exact opposite of what the director had said".
With Zhang, there was an immediate rapport. "You come to understand somebody, you see what they're like," says Bale. "You kind of get it. You can see expressions and body language and we were both laughing our arses off at the same thing – at least I hope it was the same thing." He laughs uproariously. "It was a real eye-opener in that I realised the communication doesn't have to be through the language. So it was very satisfactory creatively."
The prospect of working with Zhang drew him to the project. "He's a masterful storyteller," he says, acknowledging the reverence with which the director of Raise the Red Lantern (1991), Hero (2002) and House of Flying Daggers (2004) is held in China. Zhang also directed the spectacular opening ceremony of the 2008 Beijing Olympics and had been set to work with an old friend – Steven Spielberg – until the American director pulled out as artistic adviser at the games in protest at China's failure to take a tougher stance against the unfolding humanitarian crisis in Darfur. At the time, Zhang described Spielberg's withdrawal as "very regrettable" but the two have apparently remained close: when Zhang began casting The Flowers of War, he consulted Spielberg, who immediately recommended Bale.
The film, shot in a mixture of English and Mandarin, received a limited release in the US at the end of last month to ensure it qualifies for the foreign film category in 2012's Academy Awards. It will be given a wider release in February and will also be screened at the Berlin Film Festival in February, when it should be picked up for distribution in European markets.
Zhang says the story, which gives a human face to one of China's worst tragedies – the Rape of Nanking, when an estimated 300,000 people were killed in six weeks – needed to be told and needed a foreign star. "It was very necessary to have a foreign actor in the movie. During that time there were [only] a handful of foreigners living in Nanking and they played a very important role in documenting what happened."
The film was fully financed by a Chinese company, New Pictures Film – with support from two banks: Bank of China and Minsheng – but the presence of one of Hollywood's biggest stars is indicative of the close ties that have developed between the US film industry and China. Several US companies, including Legendary Entertainment, which co-financed Nolan's Batman films, have struck joint venture deals with Chinese-owned media groups to ensure their films qualify as Chinese-made productions, guaranteeing their distribution in the country. Currently, only a limited number of foreign films qualifies for official release in China because of a strict quota system, to the great frustration of Hollywood studios keen to tap one of the world's fastest-growing cinema markets.
Breaking new ground in the relationship between Hollywood and China was of no interest to Bale. "I'm no businessman, so the whole question of whether this changes the business between Hollywood and China, which some people have mentioned to me: great, good luck. But it doesn't have anything to do with me."
His next two projects will pair him with Terrence Malick, whose last film was The Tree of Life, while the end of the Batman trilogy is clearly a matter of some relief. "It was wonderful but there's a time when everything has to finish." I ask if he is tempted to make a fourth Batman film. "No. It's the right time to exit."
Given the scale of the movies he makes and the frequency with which he works, Bale is rare among his peers in that he has mostly succeeded in keeping his personal life separate from his professional work. Apart from an incident involving an argument with a family member before a premiere a few years ago, the notoriously intrusive UK tabloids have tended to leave him alone. "I try and stay under the radar and it's working, so I'm not going to ask any questions," he says. The less the audience knows about him, the more they will appreciate the characters he plays. "You can have a pure enjoyment of the character because you know nothing about them. The less known about me, the better I can do what I do."
He found himself in a different kind of spotlight shortly after we met. He and Zhang went back to China for the film’s Beijing premiere. After that, the actor met a CNN crew and travelled to Dongshighu, a tiny village eight hours' drive from Beijing, which is home to Chen Guangcheng, a blind lawyer and human rights activist. Chen, who is under permanent house arrest, fell foul of the Chinese authorities six years ago when he spoke out against a policy of forced abortions. He was subsequently arrested for damaging property and sentenced to four years in prison, where his supporters say he was tortured.
Bale and the CNN crew wanted to meet Chen but were prevented from seeing him by private security guards when they tried to approach Chen's house. The actor was manhandled and punched several times and was clearly shaken by the experience. "What I really wanted to do was to meet the man, shake his hand and say what an inspiration he is," he told CNN later.
Zhang, too, has struggled with the limitations on free speech in China. Censorship rules mean certain subjects and topics have to be avoided in his work, he says. "There are a lot of movies I knew even from the start wouldn't pass [the censors]." He implies this leads to a kind of artistic compromise. "The way you make movies in China is to know what will make it [past the censor] and what won't make it. I really want to make stories about the cultural revolution: it happened when I was [between the ages of] 16 and 26 and it really shaped who I am. But, because of censorship, I can't."
Still, he remains optimistic that the censors will one day loosen their grip. "The Chinese economy is growing so fast, [maybe] that will bring more opportunities and the government will loosen the law a little," he says. "I don't think it will ever go completely but I think there will probably be adjustments, allowing for more flexibility. Hopefully."
valentines flowers him