Phew, sorry this has taken so long, I've been spending the last 3 days travelling home. And yeah, I know (now) it wasn't just the chinese news but at the time that was all I had access to due to the crappy connection. CCTV9 isn't what I'd call a.... thorough news station.
Overall though, China was class. Like the blog says we went from Harbin to Sanya (Hainan) through Shenyang, Datong, Pingyao, Wutai Shan, Xi'an, Chengdu, Songpan, Kunming, Nanning, Beihai, Ghongzhou, Yangshou and Chengching (just the airport which is why I'm probably spelling it wrong).
It's a pretty amazing place. The things that stick out are;
For an (officially) secular country, it has a huge number of temples.
Chinese people don't like orderly queuing.
There's a hell of a lot of polution in the cities.
McDondalds is one of the most expensive places to eat. And that suited me just fine.
Chinese is a really hard language to learn and some people decide they aren't going to understand a foreigner even if (s)he is speaking perfect Chinese. I've seen this happen to ex-pats that have been there for years. It's pretty funny.
A huge number of people travel by train.
I love chinese food.
I hate chinese desserts.
Chinese people eat everything. I tried, God help me I tried, but I cannot get any enjoyment from eating snails or a chickens foot.
Expensive Chinese restaurants don't match up to the cheaper ones.
I thought Christmas was commercialised in the west.
I am rubbish at snowboarding.
I'm incredibly glad to be home but thats probably

to do with the fact that I've been living in very close quarters with my brother for the last 3months. I'd definately recommend China as a place to visit. For long term stays I'd say check out, Dalian in the north east, Chengdu or Kunming in the south west and Xi'an in the centre. The best of the cities, not too poluted (relatively speaking) and

to see. Well, actually, in Chengdu we did nothing but flake, but it was good for that.
Plus they got

of good beers in China. And Beijou!