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View Full Version : Chinese companies 'rent' white foreigners




lester1/2jr
06-29-2010, 04:43 PM
link (http://edition.cnn.com/2010/BUSINESS/06/29/china.rent.white.people/index.html?hpt=P1&fbid=dgOcZZmaqMf)?? hey finally something I 'm qualified to do: be white. This is the most foolish thing I've ever heard


Beijing, China (CNN) -- In China, white people can be rented.

For a day, a weekend, a week, up to even a month or two, Chinese companies are willing to pay high prices for fair-faced foreigners to join them as fake employees or business partners.

Some call it "White Guy Window Dressing." To others, it's known as the "White Guy in a Tie" events, "The Token White Guy Gig," or, simply, a "Face Job."

And it is, essentially, all about the age-old Chinese concept of face. To have a few foreigners hanging around means a company has prestige, money and the increasingly crucial connections -- real or not -- to businesses abroad.

"Face, we say in China, is more important than life itself," said Zhang Haihua, author of "Think Like Chinese." "Because Western countries are so developed, people think they are more well off, so people think that if a company can hire foreigners, it must have a lot of money and have very important connections overseas. So when they really want to impress someone, they may roll out a foreigner."

Or rent one.

Last year, Jonathan Zatkin, an American actor who lives in Beijing, posed as the vice president of an Italian jewelry company that had, allegedly, been in a partnership with a Chinese jewelry chain for a decade.

When is being foreign a career advantage?

Zatkin was paid 2,000 yuan (about $300) to fly, along with a couple of Russian models, to a small city in the central province of Henan where he delivered a speech for the grand opening ceremony of a jewelry store there.


"I was up on stage with the mayor of the town, and I made a speech about how wonderful it was to work with the company for 10 years and how we were so proud of all of the work they had done for us in China," Zatkin said. "They put up a big bandstand and the whole town was there and some other local muckety-mucks."

The requirements for these jobs are simple. 1. Be white. 2. Do not speak any Chinese, or really speak at all, unless asked. 3. Pretend like you just got off of an airplane yesterday.

Those who go for such gigs tend to be unemployed actors or models, part-time English teachers or other expats looking to earn a few extra bucks. Often they are jobs at a second- or third-tier city, where the presence of pale-faced foreigners is needed to impress local officials, secure a contract or simply to fulfill a claim of being international.

"Occasionally companies want a foreign face to go to meetings and conferences or to go to dinners and lunches and smile at the clients and shake people's hands," read an ad posted by a company called Rent A Laowai (Chinese for "foreigner") on the online classified site thebeijinger.com.

It continued: "There are job opportunities for girls who are pretty and for men who can look good in a suit."


damn, I look like a serial killer in a suit. guess I'm NOT qualified :(

Anti Federalist
06-29-2010, 04:45 PM
Get to work, gweilo.

heavenlyboy34
06-29-2010, 04:48 PM
It's not so absurd. It seems like being an extra on a movie set. Free market FTW! :)

lester1/2jr
06-29-2010, 04:49 PM
it is a racially funny version of fraud really. If these people looked at the compaies balance sheet they'd see their was no such relatonship. If they have a balance sheet

dannno
06-29-2010, 05:03 PM
it is a racially funny version of fraud really. If these people looked at the compaies balance sheet they'd see their was no such relatonship. If they have a balance sheet

I've never seen a balance sheet that listed employees and partnerships :confused:

Also, technically as soon as they start paying you, you are legally a business partner.

It would take quite a leap of story line to become fraud.

lester1/2jr
06-29-2010, 05:06 PM
no but they are paying him to say he is some italian businessman who has been working with the company for a decade. this is to show that they are some international company or something



Last year, Jonathan Zatkin, an American actor who lives in Beijing, posed as the vice president of an Italian jewelry company that had, allegedly, been in a partnership with a Chinese jewelry chain for a decade.