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TORONTO, July 17, 2021 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) iQiyi, (Chinese: 爱奇艺; pinyin: Ài qí yì), the global streaming leader of Asian entertainment, will be holding its second North American Content Showcase on July 20, 2021 at 1:00 PM EST (10:00 AM PST) to update all North American agencies and clients on the latest streaming programming on iQiyi North America. Following the content showcase, there will be an industry panel discussion on, Strengthening brands in the Age of Streaming Content . Audiences from all over North America will hear from Justin Poy, President of The Justin Poy Agency the exclusive ad agency for iQiyi North America in Canada as well as Ariel Tsai from PingPong Digital, a multicultural ad agency in the United States. To register for this unique Content Showcase, PLEASE REGISTER HERE:
Loud encouragement for women to have more children, coupled with a rise in rhetoric equating femininity with weakness, could be a damaging combination for women’s rights in China.
Exquisite clothing made with the Chinese silk tapestry technique known as kesi, which was once used to make clothing for royalty since the Song Dynasty (960-1279), has been appearing in Chinese costume dramas. Not only domestic audiences are applauding the sharp increase in quality of the costumes appearing in such dramas, once upon a time criticized as
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It’s like Game of Thrones, but with art instead of sex. I’ve found myself repeating that summary frequently while evangelising about
Story of Yanxi Palace (2018), a Chinese period drama loosely based on historic figures in the Qing dynasty court of the Qianlong Emperor (1711–99) – and one of my lockdown obsessions. The tale begins in 1741, when our Cinderella-like heroine Wei Yingluo (Wu Jinyan) enters the Forbidden City, ostensibly to work as an embroidery maid at the palaces, but with a secret mission: to uncover the perpetrator behind her beloved sister’s rape and murder. It’s a suitably knotty start to a narrative as labyrinthine as it is long; the series comprises 70 episodes at 45 minutes apiece.
Posted on May 12, 2021 by ABS-CBN // 0 Comments
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Eighteen years after its first episode aired on Philippine TV, “Meteor Garden” fever is still very much alive as Pinoy fans reminisced their experiences watching the show and flooded the comments section of iWantTFC’s social media post that celebrated the show’s anniversary.
Currently, iWantTFC offers free streaming in the Philippines of the Tagalized version of the original “Meteor Garden,” as well as Jerry Yan’s newest Asianovela “Count Your Lucky Stars.”
User Carolyn Castiotos said, “I was 9 years old when I started to collect some of F4’s pictures and posters! Until now they’re still up on the wall of our bedroom.”