
Yutao Chen
Senior Interactive News Designer at The Washington Post
designer @washingtonpost | photographer | filmmaker
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
washingtonpost.com | Terrence McCoy |Rafael Vilela |Júlia Ledur |Yutao Chen
Scientists are ‘X-raying’ the Amazon, unlocking a lost human history (washingtonpost.com) Scientists are ‘X-raying’ the Amazon, unlocking a lost human history By Terrence McCoy; Rafael Vilela; Júlia Ledur; Yutao Chen 2025041009002900 COSTA MARQUES, Brazil — As the storm approached, the men hacked deeper into the forest, searching for clues that might unravel a century-old mystery.
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2 months ago |
washingtonpost.com | Sonia Rao |Yutao Chen
Cramming for the Oscars? It’s about time, slowpoke! It’s not like anything else has been happening in the world…Fine. We know your time is precious, and you already spent a combined six hours watching “Wicked” and “The Brutalist.” We’ll make it easier for you. Answer the simple questions below and we’ll tell you the order in which you should watch this year’s Academy Awards nominees for best picture. Story continues below advertisementQuestion 1 of 81. Do you like musicals? Question 2 of 82.
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2 months ago |
yahoo.com | Sonia Rao |Yutao Chen
Cramming for the Oscars? It’s about time, slowpoke! It’s not like anything else has been happening in the world…Fine. We know your time is precious, and you already spent a combined six hours watching “Wicked” and “The Brutalist.” We’ll make it easier for you. Answer the simple questions below and we’ll tell you the order in which you should watch this year’s Academy Awards nominees for best picture.
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2 months ago |
msn.com | Michelle Lee |Julia Mio Inuma |Hiroki Kobayashi |Yutao Chen
These cookies are set by a range of social media services that we have added to the site to enable you to share our content with your friends and networks. They are capable of tracking your browser across other sites and building up a profile of your interests. This may impact the content and messages you see on other websites you visit. If you do not allow these cookies you may not be able to use or see these sharing tools.
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2 months ago |
washingtonpost.com | Michelle Ye Hee Lee |Julia Mio Inuma |Hiroki Kobayashi |Yutao Chen
Hiroki Kobayashi and February 8, 2025 at 5:00 a.m. ESTJust nowAWASHIMA ISLAND, Japan — There are two post offices on this remote Japanese island of 150 or so residents. Only one delivers mail to the living. The other hasn’t been officially operational in three decades. Instead, the “Missing Post Office” is a repository for 60,000-plus pieces of mail: letters, birthday cards and New Year’s greetings sent from all over Japan to those with no forwarding address.
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