Is Shanghai the new coffee capital of the world? | BBC News
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ต.ค. 2024
- If you walk through the streets of Shanghai, its café culture is unmissable.
There are some areas where you won’t be able to turn without passing yet another new café.
China’s financial capital now has so many coffee shops that the government has claimed it has the most in the world.
However, with so many new establishments, the competition for customers has become fierce.
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#China #Shanghai #Coffee #BBCNews
BBC forgot the grey lense. Fire the camera man.
Naaah, people make mistakes.
I think China finally cracked down on them. They told foreign reporters to stop using them or be kicked out of the country, so they complied.
Am I hallucinating, or has the BBC actually made a normal report on China without its long-standing gray-China filter?
Grey filter is propaganda lies. Spread fast and now everyone believes it
天空还是灰色的,只不过傍晚的灯光太炫耀
bbc转性了 前几天还说药检是为了政治利益
Nope ! The report seems normal because Starbucks and Tim Horton runs and operate a few thousand coffee shops in China.
WSJ has also made some pro-China content recently
The title missed these three important words which BBC always uses when reported something about China: "but at what cost."
Good one!
This probably one of the most positive reporting I've seen by steven
Steven must be running out of negative news about China!! 🤣
You forgot COVID 19 positive reporting of WhuHan corona virus
It's rare for the BBC not to smear China this time. Hope there will be more objective reporting on China in the future.
Strange indeed. Steven McDonnell's been talking sh*t about China for years. That what keeps him in the the job as China Correspondent for the BBC. Maybe new UK govt told them to tone it down, who knows.
NO ....the only !!!
Better than clubs and casinos
It's rare for the BBC not to smear China this time. Hope there will be more objective reporting on China in the future.
Hopefully Chinese media stops smearing the West @cool_things_collection
It s the first time BBC show a bit of true China
I m.chinese,it is fake news
The sky is still grey at 0.30... ...BBC Exclusive Photoshop.
A BBC report about china without Grey filters!!!? colour me shocked 😮
I noticed the bad press is the norm. I Didn't pay attention to that trick of using grey filters. Thanks for sharing that info.
@@ricnyc2759 Search BBC China grey filters, its all over youtube.
@@ricnyc2759it’s a lie. Made up by online bullshiters.
The sky is still grey at 0.30... ...BBC Exclusive Photoshop.
I can't believe BBC is not talking shit about China
Why would a far left extremist media run by woke editors talk shit about a Communist country?
Because coffee is glorious ☕
@@skycloud4802 Still it is so unbelieveable that they choose to talk about it. They do have a tendency to avoid talking about anything good in China, and report anything bad in China. Maybe they have a new employee. This young fellow will not get a promotion until he learns his lesson.
they has too much coffee which helps ease their anger
IOCCDCWHO RIP
Shanghai is. Chinese young people are avid about coffee in recent years. And many brands were born to appeal to their needs, such as Ruixing and Manners. This is a good thing because coffee has many health benefits such as losing weight and energizing the mind. Hope more and more young people love coffee in the future.
Not surprising. Shanghai has always been more international than the rest of china.
You forgot Hong Kong.
@@Angel-pg5jj I meant rest of mainland China.
Nah. Shanghai is more modern, cleaner and more convenient than what you know as international cities.
@@kaijunjiang9763 I wasn't comparison Shanghai to other international cities but ermm... OK.
Tianjin also has lots of coffee places, love Tianjin its a beautiful place.
Shangai is an amazing city!
The Bund in central Shanghai is an amazing place to relax.
South Korea, too. Everyone loves coffee. I think coffee drinking culture has been spreading through North-east asia. Is it something to concern? Considering global warming, it could be. Most coffee drinking countries don't grow their own coffee beans..
Why is not growing their own beans relevant?
Cultural self-hate and copying Americans -- thats the reason.
This is bbc fake news, i m chinese,your dad Trump said bbc is another beauty, fake news
not surprising, starbucks opens the most outlets in china last year
weird, the BBC would say anything positive about china
It's damage control. Now that it's easier to visit China as a tourist, BBC knows it can't get away with what it used to on China.
I remember being taken to cafes to have some exceptionally good coffee in Shanghai when I used to visit in the early 90s for business. Cappuccinos and Lattes were unheard of in Manchester where I lived in at the time. Shanghai has always had good coffee, long before the “Starbucks-ification” of many western cities.
I grew up in Shanghai now live in the UK. It is a beautiful vibrant city. Everything should visit once in their life time at least to experience
Everything should visit once, hahah can u stop making me laugh man, your English sucks
Been there recently I think it’s lost a lot of the vibrancy it once had due to Zero COVID policies scaring out internationals/destroying business
@@hishamdemmisse6044bro,they can go back to china,if the ccp do some change
nah, id say Athens-Greece. you can walk anywhere/any direction in the city and every 5 mins there is another cafe.
How do you think ?
The word "decorating" was mistranslated by BBC in the interview at 2:00, actually she is saying that the build-out (i.e. remodeling, 装修) cost is expensive. This involves sledgehammers. Students in China training on translation of leases use "build out" not "decoration." This mistake is frequently made by ChatGPT when doing interpretation from English audio... In short, BBC, make sure to use professionals when presenting China!
1:18 coffee passed through the gloryhole
😂
lmao! A BBC glory hole ;)
Furry gloryhole.
WTF
“I shouldn’t stick my Johnny in there, however…”
Despite the fact Asia is more a market for tea than coffee. The past few years has seen coffe take a preference weather in East Asia like as seen in this report in China but also in countries like Japan and South Korea which has a strong coffee culture to Southeast Asia in Singapore, Indonesia Vietnam and the Philippines where coffee culture has been strong for much longer.
Many high school students drink coffee in China.
There are takeaway coffee places literally everywhere.
Tea still runs supreme - no coffee shops will ever have the queue Hey Tea has
This is great. I love the coffee scene in China. They have soo many good cafes now.
BOT.🤥🤨
@@Time4Breakfast why? Lol
I was just in Shanghai, and honestly, didn't see THAT much coffee compared to Seoul or Hanoi.
There are two main drinks in China: tea or coffee, but tea is the majority
Have you been to Brazil?
Wellington and Melbourne want a word with you
its a metropolitan with 23m people, basiclly 50% population of the entire Australia
They are not even close to 2% of Shanghai 😅
🇯🇵日本人ですが、普通にレモンティーとコーヒー飲んでる。🇬🇧👑英国人の様に優雅には飲む時間はないけど
ストレートティーは好みですがなるべく砂糖が入っていない飲み物にします。
コーヒーだったりお茶だったり美味しいならなんでも行けそう。
Seattle?
Yes, its great for coffee.
But at what cost?
Shanghai has been the coffee capital for many years, they’re way ahead of us
Per population other cities are miles ahead.
Which country are you in?
Interesting
Love My people long live coffee
How could you not show the coffee place on Yuyuan road? It's one of the fanciest ones I've seen. They change the whole decoration, both outside and inside, every few weeks. They even have security on the doors for some events, it's crazy.
Love China from the Philippines ❤
Good competition as the quality of coffee in Shanghai also is rising
Coffee is the tastiest drink ever made, I didn't know Chinese people drink it that much!
shanghai is specifically polyadic culture in china. Shanghai mix Asia coffee and Europe coffee together. There are 25 million people in the city to work who need drink coffee to be excited. because they are busy. But if you want to fly to Shanghai to taste coffee,that’s good choice.
I have never heard that Shanghai is the capital of Coffee.
Congratulations on actually finding one man optimistic about the prospects of the economy. That is not easy feat.
Very good news for Coffee exporting countries!
It's a topic I never thought of 😮
I think australia is the capital as many people say Melbourne and Sydney.
No one says Sydney. Other than Sydney, who can't bare that Melbourne beats them in yet another thing ☕️😂
Turkey or Greece
❤
No- coffee capital of APAC is Hanoi or Melbourne- both beat Shanghai hands down in terms of coffee culture…..
Ok mate
Even more in Saigon or Hanoi . One every few meters
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No. There are a few half decent coffee places but 99% of people there wouldn't know a decent coffee if they tasted one. Luckin coffee was a huge chain for a time and that was worse than Starbucks.
Thank you
Its cool to see Shanghai among the great coffee cities of the world. So unexpected
It’s not grown there though?
depends on what you’d define as grown. But coffee has been around for a while here, and theres certainly a diverse culture here too.
Shanghai is definitely the coffee place of China. Wouldn’t say unexpected though. It’s the only fairly international city in mainland
So long as they don't add gutter oil or artificial colour or chemical to make the coffee.
@@Yuckyuck1870Coffee is a globally traded commodity, grown for the most part in very isolated areas. I doubt any of the world’s cities that are known for their coffee culture are anywhere where coffee is grown.
Why are people in the comments so offended over this?
Now, Shanghai is 40 ℃. People are too hot to go out.
Wow a nice positive video of China.
When I used to drink coffee I had horrible sleep. Studies have shown that people who drink coffee habitually don't actually get an energy boost from it, they're just more tired than normal and rely on the caffeine to get back to the energy they would have without caffeine.
How can ANY city be capital of coffee? People drink coffee everywhere. In every city. In every country.
but the shanghai a city only has more than 1000 starbuck
@@hengguangzhao and? Do you know you can make coffee at home?
@@hengguangzhaoso? Do you want a cookie and pat on the back to congratulate you that.
Are you from india?
@@Whoeverwhateverwhenever 上海和纽约一样都是生活节奏很快的城市 很多人的时间都是放在工作上 根本没有时间自己在家做咖啡 但是上海的咖啡可以做到很多创新
Better than Bars ❤
nice to see BBC do an ordinary report on China for once...without the ridiculous "But at what cost??" thing attached to it. Marco Rubio and Tom Cotton are crying right now.
don't know about coffee, but China was for many years and still is manufacturing capital of the world. More than 3 trillion dollars worth of goods China exports every year.
Coffee capital of the world? The majority of them drink creamy icy stuff with a straw. How many coffee connoisseurs do you know prefer their coffee that way? They just want a cool drink on a hot day and cafes happen to give them that and allow them to hang for hours which suit young people who don’t have lots of money to spend at many different places. If it looks cool and give them great shots on Instagram or the Little Red Book that’s a bonus. But frankly that could have been bubble tea as well and people don’t really care. Coffee capital is a stretch.
why not grey filters
so is peking , so is hong kong
No
short answer - No.
Shanghai rich place
Tea is still better.
Somebody's gonna get sacked for an unbiased report from China 😅
I thought the Koreans were in charge of the coffee capital. There are as many cafes on every street as there are PC bangs (Korean internet cafes)!!
Ethiopia is home for coffee
Duh
Thanks for this proram .As shanghai has its DNA of embracing the new culture and new ideas since 1840, so many people there are willing to try and adapt the Westner items literally. another factor does contribute to this phenomenon: young people are facing very challenage work and life, so some of them now shifts their attitude : doing nothing“及时行乐- live on time” , in stead pursuiting very big goal as it is unpredictable in current ecomonic envirroment . as i need to travel between Vietnam and Shanghai , i also see there are a lot of cafes in Vietnam also , most of the consumers are young. part of reason are the same: people woule like to enjoy the current certain happines to chat with people and enjoy rather than some big things
Why does the BBC use a Japanese cover when discussing Chinese issues? That's so weird.
#SaveBangladeshiStudents
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#Bbcnews #CNN #TheWashingtonPost
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Please save our Bangladeshi student 🙏 🇧🇩
Because they don’t really know China 😅
Because the BBC r racist!
because Japan is cool duh
i thought i was tripping - i thought those were chinise people embracing the k-pop or j-pop look or something but yeah they didn't look chinise also
*SEOUL* is actually the coffee capital of the world.
Would be nice if China allowed visa free travel for UK passport holders like they do with other European countries!
快了 最近看见新闻说正在扩大免签国家 估摸下一次应该是美国或者英国了吧😂连澳洲都免签了
@@zhenzhang6740 good to hear that - thanks!
@@mikes8873Because of the existence of media such as BBC and CNN, China refused to provide visa-free policy for Britain and the United States.
@@mikes8873Because of the existence of media such as BBC and CNN, China refused to provide visa-free policy for Britain and the United States.
Getting a little too individualistic in China are we.
BBC doesn't tell you the full story - that street which has 18 coffee shops is located in the most expensive part of Shanghai, an average office worker with a degree will have to work for 200 years plus stop eating and paying taxes to be able to afford a tiny little apartment in that area. When young people are permanently priced out from the area traditional known as Shanghai, the last thing they can do is to pay 15 rmb and buy a coffee in those places.
whats the name of this road?
Do you think those waiters on 5th avene can afford a nice little flat there?
@@tedwong7037 still not 200 years salary for a tiny apartment.
Bangladesh current situation is very bad please provide news about Bangladesh 🇧🇩🥺🩸
It’s the tea country of the world
But at what cost? 😅
Wow, the BBC is unbiased, really impressive
Lots of positive , great reporting from the bbc. Obviously negative, but that’s what news does. You think k they talk positively about US. China always plays the victim. US gets bashed the most by a mile.
As a Indian I'm always happy when BBC isn't talking sh!t about non western countries. Nice video
Red China?! I thought they were big tea drinkers?🧐
Coffee is what they like but in Africa we believe in heavy meal the difference is clear Lol
Melbourne in Australia has something to say I think.
Coffee in Melbourne is not that much better than anything else in my experience, as someone from Sydney.
As an American who visits Melbourne regularly, every coffee I have there is absolutely next level ☕️
@MaineSWH Well you are coming from the USA, so it's a pretty low bar.
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@@Alan-ww8viAnother arrogant Aussie who dosent know sh** about the US other than TH-cam 😂
BBC Your hometown is experiencing FREEDOM😂
So what
No. It’s not. Good luck finding a coffee that’s not laden with sugar and/or cream ☕️
But what about café noir?
You should try to get out more and increase your life experience.
Do it today!
What the fuck does this thumbnail have to do with coffee bruh
Well they invented tea 3000 years ago.
The BBC always reads between lines 😅
Vietnam street coffee is great 🤤🤪. If you come, try milk coffee or cà phê sữa
Hope they buy coffee from Kenya.
so what do Chinee coffee taste like
probably inferior to European and American let's be honest lol
@@AJ-iu6nw could be
Like coffee
Google “spring onion coffee” and find out
@@AJ-iu6nw Give me a break, American coffee is just some pathetic sugary water.
i can't believe it. the correspondent refers to the disability coffee shop, following the citizens just speak Mandrain. such a shame😊i can tell you why the coffee is up-rising in my hometown, the government is charging a long-die-hard tax on the tea. salt, ciggarette, alcohol and tea, that's the four😊
You must visit Vietnam then 😁
I lived in shanghai for 1 year the coffee is absolute dogshit
I wouldn’t say it’s dogshit but it’s definitely overrated. The coffee shops are very nice design-wise though, so it’s good for taking photos LOL
which is suitable for you
Yeah the coffee shops are generally lovely to sit in will agree to that
Its better than UK boring TEA hahaha
stephen of bbc there to have free conffees and sell too
Seriously who cares
👌✌️
So everyone just drinks coffee and drops deuces all day?
No, there are just a lot of people into coffee. They have their own business.
Is this a threat to NATO and G7?
I'm Chinese and I drink coffee everyday. Without coffee I don't have energy to go to work. I don't live in Shanghai. Thanks BBC for reporting something good about my country
Out of curiosity, Chinese take Xmas as cultural invasion,, but don't consider coffee as cultural invasion?