On the day when my cousin and I were scheduled to leave Japan, we took the Centair express from Nagoya city to Centair airport. We were happily working out possible plans for our next trip together, since we are both in jobs that do not allow us to take leave without advance notice. But never would we know that we'd have an extra day in Japan, and for me it turned out to be absolutely the gem of my trip.
A courier has won superstar fame since he rang the New York Stock Exchange bell on behalf of e-commerce titan Alibaba Group. He tells Deng Zhangyu he hopes to employ his celebrity to expand his charity work.
Gazing at stars has always been her thing since childhood. So it wasn't entirely surprising when Chen Xuefei was recently recognized along with nine others for contributions to the sciences.
Conductor and pianist Lio Kuokman can still recall the first classical music concert he attended at the age of 4. An orchestra from Macao was performing, and the program included Brahms' Symphony No 2.
For Gao Weiguo, a 35-year-old who works in the IT industry, a karaoke bar is where he spent his free time when he was in his 20s.
This year's lunar New Year holiday season is likely to witness fierce competition at the country's box office among three movies that have been adapted from reality TV programs.
For Chinese moviegoers, the movie Unbroken has it all - from being directed by Angelina Jolie to the screenplay written by Joel Coen and Ethan Coen to its cinematography by the 11-time Oscar-nominee Roger Deakins. In addition, there's popular Japanese singer Miyavi, who plays the villainous Mutsuhiro Watanabe.
As a small gesture to its urgent craving for change, China Central Television on Monday announced that for its much-anticipated annual Spring Festival Gala, widely known as Chunwan, it will double the number of hosts this year.
Diversity on TV takes a step forward with ABC's Fresh Off the Boat, which boosts Asians' scant presence in prime time with a sitcom about an Asian-American family pursuing the American dream while holding onto its own ethnicity.
The end is at hand for Foyle's War, the absorbing, impeccably produced World War II-era series that moved smoothly from crime to spy drama as the years passed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|