Articles

  • Sep 11, 2024 | the-ken.com | Luna Yue Huang |Abhijith S Warrier

    This story is only available to subscribers of The Ken. Already a subscriber? Log inUnrivaled analysis and powerful stories about businesses from award-winning journalists. Read by 5,00,000+ subscribers globally who want to be prepared for what comes next. Only Free+ Premium PodcastsFree + Premium PodcastsCovering the most interesting workplaces, career and business trends, along with candid conversations with founders and business leaders.

  • Aug 21, 2024 | theworldofchinese.com | Luna Yue Huang

    Having spent her childhood living apart from her parents, filmmaker and photographer Chan Hau Chun developed a deep desire to explore family relationships and the meaning of home. After leaving the Chinese mainland and living in various cities, Chan settled in Hong Kong as a teenager and has considered it home ever since. Driven by the urge to express her feelings amidst the constant change and pressures of a highly commercialized city, Chan took up documentary filmmaking and photography.

  • Jul 5, 2024 | theworldofchinese.com | Luna Yue Huang

    It was also a time when infrastructure boomed, cities became building sites, and the construction was glorious. In another installation, viewers see images and lyrics from the song “Road to Heaven” (2001) by Han Hong. The song is an ode to the Qinghai-Xizang Highway, whose construction began in 1958 and is considered one of the great achievements of the early PRC. “That is a magical heavenly road, sending the warmth of the world to the border,” go the lyrics.

  • Aug 24, 2023 | msn.com | Larissa Gao |Stella Kim |Arata Yamamoto |Minxiao Chang |Luna Yue Huang |Jennifer Jett

    Japan began to release treated radioactive wastewater from the wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant into the ocean on Thursday, amid opposition from some domestic activists and loud objections from neighboring countries including China.

  • Jun 30, 2023 | msn.com | Luna Yue Huang |Jennifer Jett

    HONG KONG — The suspected Chinese spy balloon that flew over the United States early this year used commercially available, off-the-shelf technology that was American-made, according to three U.S. officials familiar with preliminary findings by the FBI. The officials said the Biden administration first suspected the balloon could be carrying U.S.-made equipment or parts in the first hours after it was detected and that it had sent aircraft to check it out and take photos.

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