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  • Steven P. Murphy, chief executive officer of Christie's International, bows after he cuts a ribbon after announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai021_1_1.jpg
  • Staff members man the phone lines for overseas clients during Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 27,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai060_1_1.jpg
  • An auctioneer calls out during Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 27,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai058_1_1.jpg
  • A woman stands under a Southeby's sign outside of a Southeby's public preview of auction items in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai001_1_1.jpg
  • A Christie's doorman stands in front of the entrance to Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai038_1_1.jpg
  • A staff places a work of jade into a display case during a public preview after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai053_1_1.jpg
  • Cai Jinqing, chief executive officer of Christie's China, poses for photographs after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai047_1_1.jpg
  • Attendees look at artworks on display during a Christie's preview event in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai035_1_1.jpg
  • Street sign for Pall Mall, SW1, London. This street, made famous by the Monopoly board game is one of the grandest in London.
    20091219pall mallA.jpg
  • Security guards stand amongst artworks during a public preview after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai029_1_1.jpg
  • Steven P. Murphy, chief executive officer of Christie's International, talks to the media after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai025_1_1.jpg
  • A man looks at artworks on display at a Southeby's public preview of auction items in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai002_1_1.jpg
  • Ushers gets a briefing just prior to Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 27,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai055_1_1.jpg
  • Dennis Ching, chief executive officer of Southeby's China, poses for a photograph in front of a poster featuring Zeng Fanzhi's The Last Supper, outside of a company event in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai008_1_1.jpg
  • Contemporary artist Cai Guoqiang stands in front of his latest creation just prior to Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 27,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai054_1_1.jpg
  • Cai Jinqing, chief executive officer of Christie's China, poses for photographs after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai048_1_1.jpg
  • Attendees look at artworks on display during a Christie's preview event in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai034_1_1.jpg
  • Staff members man the phone lines for overseas clients during Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 27,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai061_1_1.jpg
  • Security guards stand amongst artworks during a public preview after a press conference announcing Christie's very first mainland China auction in Shanghai, China September 23,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai043_1_1.jpg
  • People attend a Poly Auctions preview event in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai016_1_1.jpg
  • Dennis Ching, chief executive officer of Southeby's China, poses for a photograph in front of a poster featuring Zeng Fanzhi's The Last Supper, outside of a company event in Shanghai, China September 04,  2013. Both Southeby's and Christie's have opened an office in Mainland China in the past year, however they face overwhelming odds as China's state-owned auction houses such as Poly and Jiamu enjoys a near monopoly over China's art procurement market as foreigners are not allowed to buy vaguely defined "historical" art.
    QS131006Shanghai004_1_1.jpg
  • Dock workers keep maintenance on a mechanical scoop at an iron-ore transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai027.jpg
  • Detail of the Siemens Integrated Mail Processor (SIMP) operated by the Royal Mail at their Nine Elms sorting office Vauxhall, London. Developed in the mid-1990s it is the backbone of Royal Mail's system and Nine Elms is the biggest and most modern sorting office in Britain, employing 1,000 people and handling all post coming from/to south London: 1.1 million first-class items a day, 750,000 second class. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres.
    nine_elms_35.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong037.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong009.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong042.jpg
  • A mechanical scoop unloads a bulk carrier cargo ship docked at an iron-ore transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai046.jpg
  • A conveyer belts dumps iron ore onto a pile at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai023.jpg
  • Dock workers inspects a mechanical scoop at an iron-ore transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010.  China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai003.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong035.jpg
  • A man chats on his cellphone while walking through a park in Shanghai, China on 09 November, 2011. While China's mobile phone subscribers is expected to reach 1 billion by the end of March, 2012; the world's largest mobile communications is however effectively monlopolized and strategically controlled by the Chinese government through giant state champions such as China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom.
    QS111109Shanghai030.jpg
  • A man Chats on his cellphone while standing under Chinese national flags in Shanghai, China, on October 04, 2011. While China's mobile phone subscribers is expected to reach 1 billion by the end of March, 2012; the world's largest mobile communications is however effectively monlopolized and strategically controlled by the Chinese government through giant state champions such as China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom.
    QS111004Shanghai023.jpg
  • Smoke stacks of local steel plants billow out exhaust behind a large storage facility for iron ore in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai031.jpg
  • An aerial view overlooking the processing depot of Royal Mail's DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England. Commercial postage of catalogues, junk mail and brochures pass through this enormous complex where some of the UK's 82 million items pass through. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres such as DIRFT.
    DIRFT176-20-02-2007 _1.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong019.jpg
  • Workers walk by piles of iron ore at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai020.jpg
  • A dock worker inspects a conveyer belt at an iron-ore transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai008.jpg
  • Sorted letters are grouped in a drawer at Royal Mail's giant warehouse at the DIRFT logistics park in Daventry, Northamptonshire England. Raised from its neighbours is an Air Mail letter addressed to someone called Rodrigues and with stamps if its unknown country. Each letter faces the same direction for ease of viewing in this enormous complex where some of the UK's 82 million items pass through. Royal Mail handles some 82 million posted items a day. They have a statutory duty to provide a delivery service to 27 million addresses in the UK for letters and for parcels weighing up to 20kg. Six days a week they deliver daily to all addresses in the UK and provides a collection service from 115,000 Post Boxes, 16,000 Post Offices, businesses and organizations throughout the UK and distributed through 72 mail centres and 100 distribution centres.
    DIRFT135-20-02-2007 _1.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong032.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong012.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong002.jpg
  • A man Chats on his cellphone while standing under Chinese national flags in Shanghai, China, on October 04, 2011. While China's mobile phone subscribers is expected to reach 1 billion by the end of March, 2012; the world's largest mobile communications is however effectively monlopolized and strategically controlled by the Chinese government through giant state champions such as China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom.
    QS111004Shanghai024.jpg
  • Workers walk by piles of iron ore at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai058.jpg
  • A conveyer belts dumps iron ore onto a pile at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai063.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong027.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong015.jpg
  • A conveyer belts dumps iron ore onto a pile at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai061.jpg
  • Exhaust rises up from the Chimneys of a large power plant as a mechanical scoop works to dig up and unload a pile of coal in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai050.jpg
  • A conveyer belts dumps iron ore onto a pile at a transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai049.jpg
  • A dock worker walks by a conveyer belt at an iron-ore transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai039.jpg
  • A conveyer belts loads up a barge at an iron-ore transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai016.jpg
  • A dock worker inspects a conveyer belt at an iron-ore transfer and storage center operated by the Shanghai International Port Group in Shanghai, China on 26 January 2010. China's economic boom and hunger for natural resources has been a blessing for countries such as Australia and Brazil, who controls most the world's high quality iron ore deposits.
    QS100126Shanghai009.jpg
  • Workers operate to assemble a subway car at the China South Locomotive & Rolling Stock Corp. Ltd. and Siemens AG's joint venture Rail Transit Equipment Base in Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, on November 13, 2011. At least 15 cities in China are building subway lines and 36 more have submitted plans, causing concerns that local debt levels will become unmanageable in the future.
    QS111113Guangdong044.jpg
  • A policeman stands in front of a billboard featuring Deng Xiaoping, commonly recognized as the architect of China's economic reform,  in Shanghai, China on 27 April 2010. While economic reform has lifted millions out of poverty in China, there has been little to no political reform to address increasingly volatile problems such as corruption, state monopoly, land issues, while an increasing amount of funds have been channeled into beefing up domestic surveillance and public security.
    QS100427Shanghai_007.jpg
  • Live ShitTV soap drama, Shangri La field, Glastonbury Festival 2016. Shangri-Hell International Television has the monopoly on all media outlets, plus a new HQ to create more mind-controlling trite to make you feel better about yourselves. Shangri-La is an area thats one massive immersive installation, a vast interactive fictional world brought to life by a creative team of over 1,500 crew, performers and artists. The Glastonbury Festival is the largest greenfield festival in the world, and is now attended by around 175,000 people. Its a five-day music festival that takes place near Pilton, Somerset, United Kingdom. In addition to contemporary music, the festival hosts dance, comedy, theatre, circus, cabaret, and other arts. Held at Worthy Farm in Pilton, leading pop and rock artists have headlined, alongside thousands of others appearing on smaller stages and performance areas.
    _F3A5121_1.jpg
  • In front of an ad for Mercury, the 90s mobile phone network provider, a city worker uses his mobile phone in a London street.  Actor Harry Enfield was the face of the media campaign on tv and in print to help promote the young industry, still then an expensive accessory for the ordinary Briton. Mercury Communications, was a national telephone company in the United Kingdom, formed in 1981 as a subsidiary of Cable & Wireless to challenge the monopoly of British Telecom (BT). Mercury was the first competitor to BT, and although it proved only moderately successful at challenging their dominance, it was to set the path for new communication companies to attempt the same. In 1997, Mercury ceased to exist as a brand with its amalgamation into the operations of Cable & Wireless Communications and totally exited from the telecommunications business by 1999.
    mercury_phone-15-07-1993.jpg
  • A brown paper bag from Monopoly is still on a seat of a London bus after its user has left, on 15th April 2019, in London, England.
    bus_food-01-15-04-2019.jpg
  • Live ShitTV soap drama, Shangri La field, Glastonbury Festival 2016. Shangri-Hell International Television has the monopoly on all media outlets, plus a new HQ to create more mind-controlling trite to make you feel better about yourselves. Shangri-La is an area thats one massive immersive installation, a vast interactive fictional world brought to life by a creative team of over 1,500 crew, performers and artists. The Glastonbury Festival is the largest greenfield festival in the world, and is now attended by around 175,000 people. Its a five-day music festival that takes place near Pilton, Somerset, United Kingdom. In addition to contemporary music, the festival hosts dance, comedy, theatre, circus, cabaret, and other arts. Held at Worthy Farm in Pilton, leading pop and rock artists have headlined, alongside thousands of others appearing on smaller stages and performance areas.
    _F3A5200_1.jpg
  • ShitTV, Shangri La field, Glastonbury Festival 2016.<br />
Shangri-Hell International Television has the monopoly on all media outlets, plus a new HQ to create more mind-controlling trite to make you feel better about yourselves.<br />
Shangri-La is an area thats one massive immersive installation, a vast interactive fictional world brought to life by a creative team of over 1,500 crew, performers and artists. The Glastonbury Festival is the largest greenfield festival in the world, and is now attended by around 175,000 people. Its a five-day music festival that takes place near Pilton, Somerset, United Kingdom. In addition to contemporary music, the festival hosts dance, comedy, theatre, circus, cabaret, and other arts. Held at Worthy Farm in Pilton, leading pop and rock artists have headlined, alongside thousands of others appearing on smaller stages and performance areas.
    _F3A5116_1.jpg
  • Live ShitTV soap drama, Shangri La field, Glastonbury Festival 2016. Shangri-Hell International Television has the monopoly on all media outlets in Glastonbury.<br />
Shangri-La is an area thats one massive immersive installation, a vast interactive fictional world brought to life by a creative team of over 1,500 crew, performers and artists. The Glastonbury Festival is the largest greenfield festival in the world, and is now attended by around 175,000 people. Its a five-day music festival that takes place near Pilton, Somerset, United Kingdom. In addition to contemporary music, the festival hosts dance, comedy, theatre, circus, cabaret, and other arts. Held at Worthy Farm in Pilton, leading pop and rock artists have headlined, alongside thousands of others appearing on smaller stages and performance areas.
    _F3A5119_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou006_1_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou012_1_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou013_1_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou009_1_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou008_1_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou003_1_1.jpg
  • Allen Zhang, or Zhang Xiaolong, director of WeChat and vice-president of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou011_1_1.jpg
  • Employees take naps during lunch hour at the Wechat division of Tencent, photographed in Guangzhou, China on 24 December 2013. Wechat is quickly becoming China's favorite social media tool and have already started to erode the income of internet giants such as Sina's Weibo as well as telecommunication state monopolies like China Mobile and China Unicom.
    QS131223Guangzhou001_1_1.jpg
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