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Crude prices surge following U.S. and UK strikes on Houthis targets in western Yemen in response to continued attacks on commercial vessels in the Red Sea. In the U.S., CPI data comes in higher than expected. The Dow reaches a new intra-day high before closing the session flat. Chinese export data is up by more than expected for December but deflationary pressures persist with consumer prices falling for their longest streak since 2009. Airbus maintains its lead over Boeing for the fifth straight year. CEO Christian Scherer hails the ‘remarkable' demand for its planes. And we are live in Taipei ahead of Saturday's presidential election which is seen as pivotal in shaping Chinese-Western relations.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
ABC, CBC, BBC... no they are not TV networks, they are the bridge in the cultural gap, the players on both teams, the understanders of both worlds, closet holders of two passports... they are the overseas Chinese. Whether you're a banana or an egg, listen to this podcast and learn what life is like for our Chinese/Western friends and neighbors. Episode link: https://www.chinesepod.com/0863
S6 E9 GOING DOWN ON THE MIC TONIGHT@7pm MST w/ Guest Director Christian “Kang” Bachini I, Moni Luvs Effects, the SFX MUA am now a SUPER FAN of this man and his work after my initial short interview with him at the film festival and then watching his film… THAT'S HOW GOOD IT IS… especially after you hear the backstory about filming it!!!! Christian “Kang” Bachini A.K.A. “CKB”is an Italian filmmaker born in Parma. At age 23, CKB moved to Asia in order to pursue his dream of becoming a Martial Arts actor. During his Years in China he became an advocate of Chinese-Western co-productions by working side by side with Italian Film Festivals to promote meetings between Chinese and European Producers; in addition to becoming one of the few accomplished Mandarin-speaking foreign actors working in Shanghai. In 2021 he decides to leave Asia behind and step behind the camera to debut as director with his short film "Escalation", a "proof of concept" film from which he aims to kickstart a full feature film version based on the same concept. Check out the trailer for “Escalation” (link below) and my initial interview with CKB at the 2022 Misfit Films Festival were his film won BEST IN HORROR (link below)… FB: /OfficialChristianKang IG: @christiankangbachini Twitter: ChrisBachini YouTube: ChristianKangBachini Website: www.escalationmovie.com Phone: +39 371 565 7071 Misfit Film Festival Interviews 11/22/22: https://www.youtube.com/live/WdBu4rxu... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Come enjoy our LIVE SHOW and find out much more ..... Tune in TONIGHT @ 7p MST click the links BELOW Enjoy the show from over 20 sites & in over 120 countries LIKE… FOLLOW… SUBSCRIBE… Watch / Chat LIVE & REPLAY YOUTUBE CHANNEL / @goingdownonthemi... Watch / Listen / Chat LIVE WUBI UBIQUITY RADIO & TV Station https://wubi.live/ Watch / Chat LIVE & REPLAY FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/goingdownont... Watch / Comment LIVE & REPLAY TWITTER https://twitter.com/GDOTM2019 Watch / Chat LIVE & REPLAY TWITCH https://twitch.tv/goingdownonthemic Watch / Listen REPLAY & ARCHIVES ANCHOR FM https://anchor.fm/going-down-on-the-mic TIK TOK https://www.tiktok.com/@goingdownonth... INSTAGRAM https://instagram.com/goingdownonthem... Interested in being a Guest on our show? * https://calendly.com/gdotm2019 *All manual booking must be reviewed and approved for final confirmation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS… GET BODIED BY STEPHANIE MONI LUVS EFFECTS CHRISS LAY MEDIA LIGHTHOUSE STYLING AND BEAUTY ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Interested in being a Guest on our show? * https://calendly.com/gdotm2019 *All manual booking must be reviewed and approved for final confirmation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Don't forget to support our chosen worthy nonprofit: https://www.raisingbritt.org/ Our mission here at Raising Britt is to glorify Gods plan by empowering, educating and inspiring parents with special needs children with a full range of disabilities. ... . . #christianbachini #ckb #horrorfilms #horrorgore #goingdownonthemic #podcast #wubiradio #raisingbritt #director #specialneeds #moniluvseffects GO ROCK OUR BRAND!!!! BUY OUR MERCH!!! EVERYONE DESERVES TO BE GOING DOWN ON THE MIC!!! . .Buy it HERE https://going-down-on-the-mic.creator... --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/going-down-on-the-mic/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/going-down-on-the-mic/support
Meet Nicole Susi, of Regency Revival as she shares her experience in everything vintage home design and decorating. As a Florida native, Nicole gives her input on Florida design and finding pieces to match the South Florida lifestyle.Does your home design style match your personality? Nicole explains how people sometimes design their homes to look like what they think they should look like rather than what they like. "Your house really is a reflection of you and who you are." - Nicole SusiHave you heard of "Fast Furniture"? Learn about the negative impact fast furniture could have on the environment and how shopping vintage can be a better alternative when shopping for your home. Antiques have longer lifecycle and can reduce your carbon footprint. Sometimes you'll even find that the quality is higher and can stand the test of time.Find WHERE to shop for your best vintage finds. Garage sales? Estates sales? Auctions? Flea Markets? These places can be the best to find unique pieces that are one of a kind that tell a story and add character to your home.A word you might learn from this episode is 'chinoiserie' pronounced SHēnˌwäzəˈrē. This word is simply the Palm Beach Aesthetic. It is the Chinese/Western art, furniture, architecture you can find around Palm Beach, Florida.Vintage could be anything 20-30 years or older. When people think VINTAGE they think antique, cherish, and expensive. Regency Revival makes it a goal to make vintage home decor attainable, affordable, and approachable.Learn what are some simple things to look for or stay away from when shopping vintage. In this episode, you'll discover some great tips for when you are shopping for vintage furniture. Nicole Susi, of Regency RevivalEnjoy Episode 26 on the Home Design Podcast.Visit homeshows.net to learn more about the Home Design Podcast team and mission. Follow @FLHomeShowsMeet Nicole Susi, of Regency Revival, and get in contact with her at Regency Revival on Instagram.The Home Design Podcast is where we aim to educate, inspire, and connect South Florida with the industry authorities within their trade.
What is the difference between western and Chinese way of life? In this podcast we look at 10 of them. Our wise saying for today is - 不善始者不善终。 (Bú shànshǐzhě bù shànzhōng. 'not good starter not good end') — A bad beginning makes a bad ending. At the release of this podcast, I have been living in China for 2years. I have lived in the cities and in the villages and yes I am black too. Sharing my life with the world is just amazing and welcome to the beingreal podcast. I am "BeingReal George" on youtube and also "@gentle_george" on instagram. Feel free to DM me your questions for my future daily podcasts.
Was the Corona Virus outbreak covered up? And if so by who and for how long? What does the Covid-19 crisis mean for Chinese/Western relations? And how will this crisis impact the battle of ideology... All these questions and more answered in the most recent Dutiful Future podcast. Tune in to hear mine and Roberto White's thoughts and predictions of this crisis and how it will impact global political ideology. The street fighter battle for the dominant ideology has been going on for a while, but who will come out on top... #Covid-19 #coronavirus #USA #China Follow @robertomwhite on twitter Follow @dutifulfuture on twitter
ASPZ is the leading international poetry & visual arts magazine in China, aiming at full speed to become a publication spread over the many Chinese cities and also abroad. It seasonally publishes works in its elegant magazine based on themed calls for submissions. ASPZ is also involved in many projects that aim at diffusing poetry and arts and creating a new Chinese-Western renaissance. This podcast is one of these precious projects. All the work of ASPZ is done by volunteers and it is non profit. If you wish to be involved, send a message - We have an email address which is for general inquiries and general orders which is aspz.magazine@gmail.com.
This week we sit down with Acupuncturist, Chinese & Western herbalist and teacher of herbal medicine, Angela Renzetti. We talk about how her desire to travel the world led her to joining the military, living in East Asia, and eventually Acupuncture. She chats with us about how she found herself pulled back to the PNW to pursue her studies of this traditional Chinese medicine and herbalism, and also about her super fun forms of self-care. It's another episode of Sage Sisters Podcast! You can connect with Angela Renzetti here and on instagram. Intro Links: Sign up for Gretchen Shanks Sexual Healing Options here. Check out the details of the JOMO+Digital Mindfulness and Yoga Retreat Connect with Sage Sisters Podcast: sagesisterspodcast.com You can also find us on: Instagram Facebook Email us: babes@sagesisterspodcast.com
Pretend Chinese Western-Pop-Up6779 by Planet Sync by Pop-Up Music
Made in China Podcast: International Business | Crowdfunding | Entrepreneurship
In this episode we interview Russell Smith, a long-term expat in China who currently designs websites and does online marketing for Chinese manufacturers. Here’s what’s on tap: How he got started in China and why sourcing is not for everyone How he transitioned into providing services to Chinese companies The staggering differences between forming Chinese vs. Western business relationships How Russell managed to break into a network of hundreds factory owners and how he’s built his reputation with them from scratch The one brunch with his Chinese contacts that resulted in landing 3 contracts simultaneously The unpredictability of doing business and contract work in China Why sometimes you need to be committed to China to reap the complete rewards The differences between Chinese & Western web design What sort of SEO and advertising strategies work in China China’s present and future state of online marketing Russell reveals his smallest thing he’s done in his business that’s brought him the most significant results Three book recommendations from Russell and his advice to the aspiring entrepreneurs out there
Emma Teng‘s new book explores the discourses about Eurasian identity, and the lived experiences of Eurasian people, in China, Hong Kong, and the US between the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842 and the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943. Eurasian: Mixed Identities in the United States, China, and Hong Kong, 1842-1943 (University of California Press, 2013) situates this history within a broader frame of competing scientific, cultural, and political notions of racial hybridity as a detrimental or positive force, as a transformative power leading to racial degeneration or eugenic improvement. Placing special emphasis on the importance of self-narratives of some of the main figures of Teng’s account, Eurasian is built around the stories of families who lived through and contributed to early debates over Chinese-Western intermarriage in the US and China, tracing the histories of many of these families through the experiences of their children and the transformations they help shape, and understanding these stories alongside larger social and political discourses of Eurasian identity. It is a fascinating, sensitively wrought, and carefully argued book that both engages and shifts debates in the many fields that intersect in this modern history of Eurasian identity and its many voices, and offers a polyvocal accounting of the many ways that Eurasian identity was claimed by individuals and communities from British Columbia to Hong Kong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Emma Teng‘s new book explores the discourses about Eurasian identity, and the lived experiences of Eurasian people, in China, Hong Kong, and the US between the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842 and the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943. Eurasian: Mixed Identities in the United States, China, and Hong Kong, 1842-1943 (University of California Press, 2013) situates this history within a broader frame of competing scientific, cultural, and political notions of racial hybridity as a detrimental or positive force, as a transformative power leading to racial degeneration or eugenic improvement. Placing special emphasis on the importance of self-narratives of some of the main figures of Teng’s account, Eurasian is built around the stories of families who lived through and contributed to early debates over Chinese-Western intermarriage in the US and China, tracing the histories of many of these families through the experiences of their children and the transformations they help shape, and understanding these stories alongside larger social and political discourses of Eurasian identity. It is a fascinating, sensitively wrought, and carefully argued book that both engages and shifts debates in the many fields that intersect in this modern history of Eurasian identity and its many voices, and offers a polyvocal accounting of the many ways that Eurasian identity was claimed by individuals and communities from British Columbia to Hong Kong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Emma Teng‘s new book explores the discourses about Eurasian identity, and the lived experiences of Eurasian people, in China, Hong Kong, and the US between the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842 and the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943. Eurasian: Mixed Identities in the United States, China, and Hong Kong, 1842-1943 (University of California Press, 2013) situates this history within a broader frame of competing scientific, cultural, and political notions of racial hybridity as a detrimental or positive force, as a transformative power leading to racial degeneration or eugenic improvement. Placing special emphasis on the importance of self-narratives of some of the main figures of Teng’s account, Eurasian is built around the stories of families who lived through and contributed to early debates over Chinese-Western intermarriage in the US and China, tracing the histories of many of these families through the experiences of their children and the transformations they help shape, and understanding these stories alongside larger social and political discourses of Eurasian identity. It is a fascinating, sensitively wrought, and carefully argued book that both engages and shifts debates in the many fields that intersect in this modern history of Eurasian identity and its many voices, and offers a polyvocal accounting of the many ways that Eurasian identity was claimed by individuals and communities from British Columbia to Hong Kong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Emma Teng‘s new book explores the discourses about Eurasian identity, and the lived experiences of Eurasian people, in China, Hong Kong, and the US between the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842 and the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943. Eurasian: Mixed Identities in the United States, China, and Hong Kong, 1842-1943 (University of California Press, 2013) situates this history within a broader frame of competing scientific, cultural, and political notions of racial hybridity as a detrimental or positive force, as a transformative power leading to racial degeneration or eugenic improvement. Placing special emphasis on the importance of self-narratives of some of the main figures of Teng’s account, Eurasian is built around the stories of families who lived through and contributed to early debates over Chinese-Western intermarriage in the US and China, tracing the histories of many of these families through the experiences of their children and the transformations they help shape, and understanding these stories alongside larger social and political discourses of Eurasian identity. It is a fascinating, sensitively wrought, and carefully argued book that both engages and shifts debates in the many fields that intersect in this modern history of Eurasian identity and its many voices, and offers a polyvocal accounting of the many ways that Eurasian identity was claimed by individuals and communities from British Columbia to Hong Kong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Emma Teng‘s new book explores the discourses about Eurasian identity, and the lived experiences of Eurasian people, in China, Hong Kong, and the US between the signing of the Treaty of Nanjing in 1842 and the repeal of the Chinese Exclusion Act in 1943. Eurasian: Mixed Identities in the United States, China, and Hong Kong, 1842-1943 (University of California Press, 2013) situates this history within a broader frame of competing scientific, cultural, and political notions of racial hybridity as a detrimental or positive force, as a transformative power leading to racial degeneration or eugenic improvement. Placing special emphasis on the importance of self-narratives of some of the main figures of Teng’s account, Eurasian is built around the stories of families who lived through and contributed to early debates over Chinese-Western intermarriage in the US and China, tracing the histories of many of these families through the experiences of their children and the transformations they help shape, and understanding these stories alongside larger social and political discourses of Eurasian identity. It is a fascinating, sensitively wrought, and carefully argued book that both engages and shifts debates in the many fields that intersect in this modern history of Eurasian identity and its many voices, and offers a polyvocal accounting of the many ways that Eurasian identity was claimed by individuals and communities from British Columbia to Hong Kong. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The darkly funny "No Man's Land" has just shown at the Berlin International Film Festival, rounding off the three Chinese films competing for the top Golden Bear award this year. The film is a kind of modern Chinese Western and sees a city lawyer journey across the Gobi desert, where he encounters a series of unusual characters who are as rugged and dangerous as the terrain itself. The film's director Ning Hao, said he watched a lot of Westerns as a child and nodded to the influence of Quentin Tarantino, but says he has taken far more from Chinese art and culture: "We do not have a 'western' film history in China and I was wondering how I could combine a 'western' with such a story. And then I thought, well, I need to do something about China, about Chinese people and their problems. I want them to be included in the film. So it became kind of a 'western', but also a Chinese story, because in China this thing about earning money and wanting to earn more and more money is a big issue." Along with "No Man's Land" "Black Coal, Thin Ice" and "Blind Massage" are the other Chinese films that are among 20 competing for this year's top prize in Berlin. The winner will be announced Saturday.