They started it.
No, really, they did.
A major Chinese TV broadcaster, got in
touch through my website and asked me if I'd like to come to Beijing
and appear on their “Guinness world of records” TV show, and
break a tablecloth-pulling-related record. That might be fun, I
thought, so I said yes, I'd like to pull the biggest tablecloth ever
successfully pulled. Fun, right? Right.
Over the next few weeks, emails flew to
and fro from them to my agent to me then back to my agent and back to
them. They repeatedly came up with other, way more complicated, ideas
for a record. Could I pull a tablecloth from one table onto another,
and then onto another, and another, each time the tables getting
bigger? Well, unless you have a magically growing tablecloth,
probably not. But also, I didn't want to be one of those people who
has a record for something that was clearly just invented for someone
to get a record in, y'know? Each time, I made it clear that the only
thing I was really interested in doing was the biggest tablecloth
ever. I figured it was a nice simple to understand record, a great
trick, and a lovely TV visual. But they didn't let it lie. It was
starting to get frustrating.
Finally, after dozens of emails, we
settled on two records. I'd pull the biggest tablecloth, and also
they'd have a line of a dozen or so smaller tables, and we'd see how
many tablecloths I could pull and put back in a minute. The second
challenge seemed a little bit cobbled together, but I guess they like
time-based stuff, so I agreed. We liaised more about the construction
of props and sizes of tables. I gave them web links to the exact
items I wanted on the tables so they could buy them. All seemed
complicated, but doable. I was going to go to Beijing to pull the
biggest tablecloth ever, and I was going to come home with a genuine,
bona-fide Guinness world record. Cool.
Here's how none of that happened.
Day One
So you know how when you're on a
flight, after takeoff, once you get to cruising altitude, you can
turn your phone back on in flight mode, so you can watch your
carefully curated saved-for-the-big-trip folder of entertainment?
Yeah, well not on Air China, because – and I'm directly quoting
here - “CHINA LAW”. So, no wrasslin', no old
Letterman shows stolen from YouTube, they wouldn't even let me listen
to podcasts. BECAUSE LAW.
Sadly, I'd just necked a double
espresso, so sleep wasn't an option for a while, and that, combined
with their deeply worrying version of a vegetarian meal (Rice,
something red and mushy in the corner, and a single cold carrot)
meant that the first hour or so of my flight was spent in an entirely
justified teenage sulk. I investigated the Vic-20 era seatback
entertainment system interface (press button. Wait 4 seconds. Cursor
moves. Not joking, I counted), and slowly scrolled through the
available movies. Nothing of interest. Until the last page. There,
tucked away where hardly anyone would have the patience to find it
was a seam of pure gold. The Jackie Chan channel. Boom. So begun
CHANFEST AT 5 MILES HIGH 2016. Police Story. Police Story 2. My Lucky
Stars, and then, finally, sleep.
And then I'm in China.
I'm met at the airport by Peter, my
handler, taken to the hotel, and immediately shunted into a private
dining room for dinner. I meet some of the other performers – a
couple of Ukrainian acrobats, a push-up expert from Norway and his
trainer. It's odd. A bunch of people who can all do one thing better
than anyone else, all jet-lagged and lightly confused, slumped around
a big circular revolving table with bowls of food on it. They know
I'm a vegetarian, so have prepared a large bowl of cabbage floating
in warm water. I tell everyone it was nice to meet them and slink
away to my room.
Day Two
I'm told that although I gave them the
information about which crockery, trays etc to get weeks ago, they
haven't got it. There's some vague and mysterious talk about it being
held at customs. Hmm. So me and Peter have to go out to buy the
stuff. This is a bit of a concern. As you might imagine, any
manipulative trick like this, when performed at this kind of high
level, needs exactly the right props. I'm going to have to try to
find the closest things to what I usually use, in a foreign country,
on a tight deadline. This worries me, but I swallow it down and focus
on the task at hand. First stop is an IKEA, and as I predict, no
dice. Then we drive to a shopping centre full of little shops all of
which sell stuff for the restaurant and hotel industry. That's more
like it. We find some stuff close enough to my usual props that
there's a chance the trick will work, and sit in the shop waiting for
a couple of hours while it gets fetched from the warehouse. During
this wait, I chat to the family who run the shop, who are lovely and
funny and give me a souvenir to take home as a gift, and some nuts. I
also watch their TV, and you know who's got a frankly terrifying show
on Chinese Television? Bear Grylls. And the stuff he does on Chinese
TV is a little, shall we say, more hardcore, then what he does on
your TV. I only watched it for about ten minutes, but I witnessed him
tear the wings of live birds and tell one contestant that “I
can't make the jungle safe, you will get hurt, but I won't let you
die”. Not the most reassuring pep-talk, if I'm honest.
Then the props arrive and we pile back
in the car to head down to the studio.
Slumped in the back of the
seven-seater, head resting on the tinted windows as I try to
constantly elude the grasp of jet lag. Watching the blank, beige,
broken down and – lets face it – old school communist cityscape
of Beijing cruise past. It doesn't have the exciting glowy,
smorgasbord of stuff smushed together that cites like Hong Kong or
New York or Tokyo have. Rather, it looks like they stopped building
and maintaining stuff in 1980, and since then the cracks have just
been papered over, the pipes gaffer taped back to the wall. No wonder
the government heavily censor the internet and television – can you
imagine growing up here and then finding out that not all cities are
this shabby?
However jaded and cynical you try to be, its always fun walking into a big TV studio. Nondescript and industrial on the outside, but once you're through the heavy doors, its all lights and cameras and shiny fun TV stuff. And this, since its for a show with lots of stunts on it, is a big hangar of a studio, with grids of dramatic lights designed to flash and strobe and sweep and shine and remind everyone of the importance and excitement of what they're watching. I meet someone who I guess is a producer, or at least a high ranking member of the production staff, and she shows me the tables they've had made for my tricks. And I get confused. There's no big tablecloth. No line of lots of smaller tables. Just two, medium sized tables. I question this. She tells me, no, I'm not doing the biggest tablecloth pull. What they'd like, instead, is for me to attempt to pull one cloth between two tables, repeatedly, as many times as possible in 30 seconds. I tell her that I came here to do the trick we agreed on. She says they never agreed anything of the sort. “Well”, I think to myself, “This went bad quick, huh.”
We go up to her office and talk about
it. I tell her that I'll do her challenge if I can also do the
biggest tablecloth. That's the reason I flew five thousand miles, and
that's what we agreed I was coming here to do. There's some raised
voices. I calmly tell her that I won't do their challenge, unless I'm
also doing my challenge. She calms, and agrees. We talk about how big
the table should be, how big the cloth should be, how many things
would be on the table, etc. We apologise for shouting. Things seem to
have been yanked back from the edge.
I'm sent back down to the studio to
meet the Guinness officials, to work out the rules for their two
table challenge. We run it a couple of times, and figure out that
what with the time it takes to walk around the table after each pull,
I can just about make three repetitions in 30 seconds. After
conferring, the Guinness guys tell me that I'll be expected to do
four on the show. I explain that this is impossible. It's not a test
of my skill, it's just how long it takes someone to walk around a
table after each try. They tell me, yes, but four is a good number.
Okay then. I figure I'm failing this challenge, but thats ok, I don't
care about that one, I'm just here to pull the biggest cloth. If I
get that, I'm fine.
Back to the hotel. McDonalds in bed.
Jet lag adding unliftable weight to my eyelids. I fall asleep
wondering what the chances are that this will all work out fine. Not
good, I figure. Not good at all.
Day Three
Back to the studio. I'm supposed to be
meeting the Guinness guys again to discuss the ins and outs of the
big tablecloth pull so that, if I succeed, it's officially a record.
I get put in a dressing room all day, and nothing happens until I get
told to go back to the hotel. Hmm.
Well, I say nothing happens, but that's
not quite true. I start to chat more to the other performers, and
hang around on set observing things. I start to get a bad feeling in
my gut, and it's not the bowl of soggy cabbage. Ok, perhaps its
partly that.
I hang out with a gymnast who has come
here to break the record for the highest side-somersault from the
floor. Instead, they have him running up a sloping wall and doing a
back somersault over a bar. Completely different skill. He's just
going to give it a go, because what's the worst that could happen?
Yikes.
I talk to an American circus performer
who has come here to break the record for walking on the necks of
free-standing bottles. She uses wine bottles back home, but she's
arrived to find that they've given her beer bottles. Way harder, when
that's not what you've been training with. Worse than that, there's a
Chinese acrobat who's been brought in to compete with her for the
record, and she's been training with the beer bottles for weeks.
There's an Italian acrobat who arrived
to find that he, too, has had a Chinese performer sprung on him that
he has to compete with, and worse still, the prop that they made for
his stunt wasn't made correctly, and in rehearsals he badly cut his
hand on it.
Then I remember in some of my emails
with them, they very vaguely talked about the idea of a competitor. I
flagged it up, and asked if there would be someone else doing my
trick that I would be expected to compete with. Ohhh noooo, they
said, noooo.
It started to really feel like this
whole thing was a bit of a bait and switch. Performers being set up
to fail, and worse, set up to be beaten in rigged challenges by
Chinese performers. No. Come on now, Ricardo, Surely I was being
paranoid. Sleep on it.
Day Four
I'm woken up by a phone call from the
TV company. I'm filming my bit tonight. We haven't even talked to
Guinness about the details of my record, but yep, apparently I'm
filming tonight. Alright. I grab my suit, and off we go back to the
studio. I share a ride with the bottle-walker, and another performer,
who mentions in passing that yeah, he's done this show a bunch of
times and they usually spring a surprise competitor on you, and
change the record your attempting. Most people just go along with it
because, y'know, TV.
We get to the studio at about noon, and
we're rushed into make-up. Odd, since the show doesn't tape until
seven. They give me a basic foundation to cover up the fact that I'm
46 ¾ and have lived a life, and then they go to work on my eyebrows.
And boy do they. I walk out of the makeup room looking like a
particularly startled Groucho Marx, and go right into the bathroom
next door to wash off the borderline clown make-up. Odd.
Next is a camera rehearsal. We rehearse
my entrance, walking down the stairs, waving to the imaginary
audience, chatting with the host, and doing the trick. Doing their
trick. No mention of the big tablecloth. No mention of the reason why
I travelled five thousand miles. I bring it up. Everyone looks
shifty, and confused, and shifty. I get told that we'll deal with
that soon, that I'll talk to the producer again and we'll sort it all
out, and then I'm told to go back upstairs and wait.
I've done enough TV to know that if
something isn't covered in the camera rehearsal, it's not going to
happen in the show, so once I'm back in my dressing room, I ask to
speak to the producer. Sure, I'm told, she'll be right here.
I ask to speak to her every half hour.
It becomes a bit of a running gag between me and the other
performers. I use my grown-up “This is important” voice. Nothing.
I say that there is a very real chance I won't be doing the show.
Nothing. I spend my day sitting in a feezing cold dressing room,
being ignored and not taken seriously.
Finally, at 6.45, literally fifteen
minutes before the show is supposed to start filming, with a studio
audience already filling the huge hangar downstairs, I get granted a
meeting. I ask what about the big tablecloth trick. They immediately
start shouting. What big tablecloth trick? There was never a big
tablecloth trick agreed. You knew you weren't doing a big tablecloth
trick. Why would you lie about this? The producer fixed me with a
hard stare and told me that if I backed out of the show, they would
cancel my return ticket, kick me out of the hotel, and “Your
visa, perhaps not so good now”.
Whoa.
More shouting. In my face. Through
translators. Midway through the yelling, I call my agent back in
England. My wonderful, beautiful, alluring and fragrant agent., who,
let's remember, didn't get me into this, but damn well got me out. I
passed the phone to the producer who yelled down it for a couple of
minutes and then passed it back. “Right. We'll take care of
you and get you back home tonight. Get yourself out of there”,
said the best agent in the world.
While I was still being yelled at by a
room full of producers and translators, I calmly got up, and walked
out, smiling sweetly. I think they thought I'd caved, that I was
going to get ready for the show. They were wrong. I think they
assumed that I'd feel pressured to just do the show on their terms,
since by that point, the thing had already started filming. They
misunderstood my ability to be a dick, when correctly inspired.
I went back to the dressing room, told
the other performers, who I think were quite enjoying watching my
story play out, what was going on. Packed my stuff, hugged them
goodbye, and walked across the studio, and for the first and only
time in my career, I walked out on a gig.
Out into an industrial estate on the
outskirts of Beijing, on a freezing cold evening. The middle of
nowhere. Shit.
The last few days had been a chaotic
shambles, but now things were in sharp focus, and my task was simple.
Get to the airport and get myself on the flight my agent was getting
for me before they revoked my visa. I figured they wouldn't think I
would be going right now, and besides, they were filming the show for
the next few hours, and they'd be concentrating on that, so if I was
quick, I'd be fine.
There was a little budget hotel across
the street, so I went in and tried to get a taxi. No deal. Taxis
don't come this far out of town, they said. Again, shit.
I crossed the street and went back into
the studio, and found the youngest, coolest looking low-level TV
employee, another talent handler. He wouldn't be doing anything until
the show was wrapped, so I chatted to him, and bribed him 50 yuan to
drive me back to my hotel. He went for it. Awesome.
Back to the hotel, pack my stuff, get a
taxi to the airport, and by the time I get there, I'm booked on the
1.30am flight out of town. Nervous as I went through immigration, but
my visa held, and by the time they had finished shooting the show I
was supposed to be on, I was already in the air.
Escape made.
And the thing is, it's such a shame.
The Guinness book of Records has been a childhood staple for everyone
of my generation. A genuinely unique and treasured cultural object. I
often got bought it for Christmas, and I think it was one of the
first reference books I ever owned. A window into a world of weird,
crazy, special, amazing people and things. I would have loved to have
joined that club. I mean, if you're going to devote your life, as I
have done, to learning some ultimately meaningless, ridiculous feats,
then you might as well have the only authority that matters tell you
that you're the best at it, right?
None of this was the fault of Guinness.
It was the TV company that ruined it with their dishonest and
disorganised approach, not just to me, but from what I saw, to many
Western performers. It was absolutely shocking to be faced with a
major broadcaster who were so ready to bring someone halfway across
the world on false pretences, lie about what we'd agreed in dozens of
emails, and then try to bully me into just going along with the whole
sorry mess. What a pity.
Would I still like a chance to get that
record? Hell yes.
Do I want to go back to work on TV in
mainland China? Thank you, no.
Was it fun commandeering a car to speed
across Beijing so I could get to the airport before the asshats
revoked my visa? Yes. I did feel a bit like Jason Bourne. BUT SO
WOULD YOU.
23 comments:
Absolutely horrific!
Brought back memories of one or two corporate gigs we did years ago
(nowhere near as awful - until we decided never to do them again.)
Welcome back to reality. ;-)
Cheers
Brian
amazing! Kinda Scary! Great Read!
Holy crap. What a saga. You did the right thing, of course. And hey, you took that beautiful photo of the little boy on the balcony/bridge thing, so there's always that.
Wow. My heart is racing just reading about your adventure.
Good for you though!! I think you did the right thing.
However I think next time they're going to take our passports... (Good reason to have two!)
Dreadful tale told in an awesome way. Thank you for sharing.
Sorry to hear about your experience, sounded like a very stressful and generally very poor experience, but I got a bit distracted by this throwaway...
"Bear Grylls. And the stuff he does on Chinese TV is a little, shall we say, more hardcore, then what he does on your TV. I only watched it for about ten minutes, but I witnessed him tear the wings of live birds"...
What? I mean seriously WTF?
Great read, you're amazing!
It makes the gig in Cardiff I booked you for very straight forward. Great read admire you standing your ground, well done.
Great read, admire you standing up to them. I now wish I'd thrown some jeopardy into the Cardiff gig I booked you for a while back
By turns horrifying and hilarious (and frequently both)! I really enjoyed this insightful and amusing post; glad to hear that you escaped safely in the end! Did you exchange details with any of the other performers and discover how it panned out for them?
Wow. Just Wow. You deserve the Guinness World Record for sleuthiest escape from a psycho TV show 😜
The awful misadventure you had was far more engrossing of a tale than had it gone as planned: kismet! I found similarities to my first six weeks working for Aeon English Schools in Japan - a boss who hated Americans, hated men and told lies even when a lie benefitted nobody. I walked out on that awful job and left 80 students in the lurch after sitting down with her and management from HQ ... I said the next lie she tells I'll stand up, grab my coat and leave both this job and the apartment you rented me. Twenty seconds later I was out the door. The job I found in Tsukuba a month later was a flowery walk in the park after that nightmare. I'm glad you stuck to your guns and put them in a predicament, it was the right move.
I want to hear more about how you found vegetarian fare at a McDonald's! :)
Whatever the sponsors are feeling proud of, should be their new shames.
I've been to China and my wife is Chinese. This story is 100% China in every way; in every detail. Not a single nuance shocks.
Great story and warning to others going to China. Personally, they xrayed my bags leaving China ( by foot to Vietnam ) and they confiscated my LonelyPlanet ( Tiawan etc ). Their logic evades me!
My border guard's English name tag said "Candy Sin" but I didn't feel I could laugh.
They can't just revoke your visa and leave you stuck at the border. The police would have to charge you with a crime first and seize your passport. As long as you have your passport, you're good to go. Sorry to hear you had such a bad experience but you handled it with class. Hoping you get another chance to come back to China to do the trick you originally signed up for.
Shared your article on Reddit China, a forum run by expats who live here. As you can see from the comments, none of us were in the least bit surprised. https://www.reddit.com/r/China/comments/41t7zk/abayo_and_the_world_record_for_worst_gig_ever/
I did the same thing in Wenzhou back in 94 ,they made a fake work permit that I found out about when opening a huge club as a DJ. Got an early morning ship to Shanghai, train to Beijing, picked the rest of my stuff up and pegged it. Bless you mate, you did the right thing.
Ah, you got China'd. It's unbelievable the amount of times I've heard similar stories. Allen Iverson had the same situation last year.
http://basketballbuddha.com/allen-iverson-trip-to-china-ruined-by-chinese-agents/
I've got two hard rules that I have to maintain while living here. Never let a Mainlander completely control my schedule and always have an escape plan.
Not that you were wrong for getting out of there so quickly, but your Visa would have been fine. There's no way that they could have cancelled it in such a short amount of time. It was just a scare tactic to coerce you into doing what they wanted. Lying and cheating are standard parts of doing business.
Interesting story. Just FYI, they were bluffing when they said they could cancel your visa. It's not that easy and that'd require your passport and at least a week's time. Probably difficult to forget about all of that and just enjoy your time, but you were already there!
i feel your pain. i had a similar experience when i was producing a feature film out there. its the chinese way.
Thank you for living through this and sharing it. I'm sure it will save many people a tremendous hassle in the future. You have an awesome act and they totally missed out by screwing you over. I'll go out of my way to catch one of your live shows when I can, and I certainly hope to see your name in the storied pages of Guiness one day.
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