About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 55. Chapters: Chinese social relations, The Bus Uncle, Flag of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Morris, Cantonese opera, Cattle Depot Artist Village, Culture of Hong Kong, Filipino NGOs in Hong Kong, Shopping in Hong Kong, Cantonese profanity, Gweilo, Hong Kong cultural policy, Pseudo-model, Sport in Hong Kong, Manhua, Heritage conservation in Hong Kong, Villain hitting, HKSCS, Ting Hai effect, Hong Kong returnee, Hong Kong literature, Filipinos in Hong Kong, Hong Kong Comics, Hong Kong Lunar New year kau cim tradition, Bauhinia blakeana, Lianhuanhua, Emblem of Hong Kong, Hong Kong tea culture, Diu, Cha: An Asian Literary Journal, Wong Tai Sin Children's Choir, Huangmei opera, Meli Melo Limited, Smoking in Hong Kong, Wax burning, Karaoke Box, Weapons of the Gods, Pang uk, Yes!, Meli Melo Artists Alliance, Chinese Serial, Mahjong school, City Contemporary Dance Company, Jau Gwei, Hong Kong musical tongue twister, One bowl with two pieces, Gangtai, Women in Hong Kong, Coffin home. Excerpt: The Bus Uncle is a Cantonese YouTube viral video clip of a quarrel between two men aboard a bus in Hong Kong on 27 April 2006. While the older man, who came to be nicknamed the Bus Uncle, scolded the man seated behind him, a nearby passenger used his camera phone to record the entire incident. The resulting six-minute video was uploaded to the Hong Kong Golden Forum, YouTube, and Google Videos. The clip became YouTube's most viewed video in May 2006, attracting viewers with its rhetorical outbursts and copious use of profanity by the older man, receiving 1.7 million hits in the first 3 weeks of that month. The video became a cultural sensation in Hong Kong, inspiring vigorous debate and discussion on lifestyle, etiquette, civic awareness and media ethics within the city, eventually attracting the attention of the media around the world. The incident took pl...