How This Chinese NGO is Changing Young Girls’ Attitudes Towards their Bodies

From navigating their first periods to grappling with their changing identity, the transition from girlhood to womanhood raises hard questions for most young women.

In rural parts of the country, Chinese NGO Bright & Beautiful finds the journey is often further complicated by patriarchal Confucian traditions and holes in education. This is why they’ve set out to support girls on the path from adolescence to adulthood with a series of alternative education workshops.

bright beautiful ngo girls china

“Our goal is to empower young girls to create the change they want to see for themselves,” co-founder Chenxi Ouyang tells us over the phone from her home in Hangzhou. The Guangdong native is one half of the duo, along with Juliet Zheng, behind the alternative education-focused NGO that creates embodied arts programs to help “develop self-esteem and unlock potential” within girls across rural China.

Influenced by social innovation incubator Unreasonable Institute and the Half the Sky movement, the first seed for Bright & Beautiful (B&B) was planted off the back of a semester abroad in 2013. To help raise money and give a voice to marginalized young women in China’s rural areas, the pair launched a short documentary and “story T-shirt” project — a collection of tees embellished with handicrafts by young village women featuring a QR code linked to short documentary films sharing their stories.

Ouyang and Zheng added the idea for embodied arts educational programs after one of their early research trips to the China’s southwestern Yunnan province, where they found a number of girls they spoke to didn’t feel they had the same opportunities as their male counterparts. Ouyang explains:

“A lot of people mistakenly think that China has achieved gender equality. Compared with many developing countries, China is relatively better now, but that doesn’t mean inequality doesn’t exist.”

Seven years on, the core goal of female empowerment remains the same, but the organization has evolved into a three-person team filled out by hundreds of volunteers that offers holiday camps and weekend workshops for girls aged 12 to 18.

Particularly in rural areas of the country, they have found the historic adage of “zhong nan, qing nü” (重男轻女) or preferring sons over daughters, lingers today. “There are a lot of families who still value boys more than girls, and many of the young girls we speak to don’t actually like being girls — or they don’t think they should like being a girl,” says Ouyang. “They also don’t think they can achieve as much being a woman, which restricts a lot of their potential.”

Hoping to address this imbalance, Bright & Beautiful works in rural schools and with community groups primarily around Zhejiang and Guangdong provinces, using art, theatre, movement and lots of open discussion to encourage the girls to ask who they are, what they want, and how to unlock their full potential. So far, they’ve reached over 2,000 students.

bright beautiful ngo china radii

Founders Juliet Zheng (left) and Chenxi Ouyang (right)

The team started out with four-day art camps that explore different themes each day: body, emotions, relationships and courage. “It’s all about sharing knowledge in a very interactive way,” explains Ouyang. Offering a side of learning that she finds is “undervalued in both society and the educational system,” the experiential sessions encourage the girls to harness their feminine energy and think through their feelings, while teaching them skills and values to understand and protect their rights.

“Regardless of external resources or finances, we’ve found that if a woman is feeling confident or powerful, she’s better equipped to conquer the challenges or difficulties in her way,” she says. “That’s why we think it’s so important to focus on education.”

A spin-off from the camps, regular one-day Rites of Passage workshops, designed especially for adolescents entering puberty, delve into essential topics that remain taboo or stigmatized. Covering everything from sexual education to menstrual health to bodily autonomy, the programs are “all about addressing the challenges and problems that girls may encounter growing up,” says Ouyang, adding:

“For real empowerment, our bodies and sexuality are things we should talk about at a young age.

“Otherwise it’s so easy for people to be corrupted by what they see online or by other people telling us what we are or what we’re not.”

Taking the menstrual health exercises as an example, she explains that rather than flicking through a page in a textbook, B&B goes “into depth about changes that happen during puberty, why we have periods, how to take care of yourself when you’re menstruating and why you should celebrate it instead of being ashamed of it.” Activities such as experimenting with sanitary pads — by coloring or soaking them to see how they change — and creating art that highlights the physical changes in women’s bodies are designed to pull these topics out of the shadows and cement them as a part of the normal conversation.

“You can really see the change after the workshop,” says Ouyang. “When we first play the video about periods, a lot of the girls cover their eyes or look embarrassed… But after going through the exercises they generally feel much more comfortable talking about menstruation, and the fact that they have periods. It’s quite transformative to see.”

radii china ngo menstrual education

For B&B, opening up a dialogue about developing healthy relationships and heavier topics like self-protection against sexual assault and harassment is also paramount. Alongside a need for more comprehensive sex education, she finds that societal pressures from negative labels like “leftover women” to “popular electronic novels and soap operas that still deliver this message that girls are objectifiable” all play a part in creating a narrative that women don’t have choices.

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According to a UNESCO-supported study that surveyed 30 secondary schools from six Chinese provinces and municipalities, more than half of students believed that “a woman cannot refuse to have sex with her husband” and only 50 percent agreed “girls should have a say as to who and when to marry.” Covering everything from experimenting with posture and tone of voice to help tap into different sides of their personality to developing skills for drawing boundaries, “these workshops are a good opportunity for us to share a different outlook,” she continues. “We want the girls to know that it’s your body, you have the power and the option to say no and choose what you do with it.”

To keep momentum high and continue raising awareness in what’s been a tough year shaped by the Covid-19 pandemic, Ouyang explains that one of their biggest focuses for the moment is to train more leaders and volunteers to run workshops and camps in order to expand the number of girls they can reach. They’re also building on collaborations with like-minded partners to keep pushing the word out there, including menstrual-health focused social enterprise LUÜNA that helps raise funds and donates sanitary towels to their students.

Lirong Quan, a former student who recently signed up as a B&B volunteer, explains how the lessons she learned in the camp continue to impact her today. “It made me more open-minded and piqued my curiosity about the world… It also changed something in me, it’s hard to put it into words, but I can feel I’m better at managing my emotions and communicating them.”

Another program graduate, who asked to remain anonymous, noted that while growing up people around her told her “it doesn’t matter if girls study hard” and “not to bother”, but the program helped give her a push to pursue her goals. After graduating from high school, she left home and travelled to another province for college. “[B&B] introduced me to new possibilities and my potential. It inspired me to keep going to see what else is out there for me.”

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With increasing access to technology across China, the team is also branching out into online content via streaming sites like Douyin that are popular with youth to make their programs accessible countrywide and beyond. One of the online initiatives, “#HerStory,” is a four-month series of biweekly webinars aimed at students and young professionals from all backgrounds that invites changemakers and pioneers from across the globe for a “transnational dialogue” discussing issues like gender equality, women’s empowerment and how to impact social change.

Whether it’s empowering girls with skills and values via embodied arts sessions or sharing knowledge online, the endgame for Bright & Beautiful remains the same. “We want women to know who they are, to truly understand themselves and their bodies, relationships and emotions,” Ouyang concludes. “Only then can you know who you really are instead of what society and people around you expect you to be.”

All images: courtesy Bright & Beautiful

TikTok’s Newest Rival is a “Pyramid Scheme” Called Zynn

Zynn topped the US App store charts this week, passing both TikTok and Zoom.

The short video app looks a lot like TikTok — users scroll through 15-second clips uploaded by others, where they can like, comment, and share.

Zynn, however, rewards users for watching videos in a very real way. They earn points that can be exchanged for in-app purchases, gift cards to stores like Amazon or Walmart, or cash through PayPal. Signing up earns $1, and inviting five friends earns up to $110. These rewards are currently only available for those in the US and Canada.

One YouTuber reported making over $1000 in a day on Zynn. But others are less convinced. Venture capitalist Turner Novak even called the app a giant pyramid scheme.

Zynn’s strategy isn’t new: e-commerce platform Pinduoduo and news app Qutoutiao have both incentivized users with money.

While Zynn has only been released for around a month, it could mean serious trouble for TikTok — but is that an accident?

The app store shows that Zynn was created by Owlii Inc., and The Information reported that the company is now owned by Kuaishou. Kuaishou is a $30 billion startup backed by Tencent, and the biggest competitor to Douyin in China.




While Kuaishou has over 300 million daily users, Douyin has over 400 million. Earlier this month, Kuaishou sued Douyin for interfering with search results on the app store.

Zynn’s rising popularity in the US could further escalate scrutiny on Chinese apps. The Committee on Foreign Investment in the US has previously launched investigations into ex-Chinese-owned Grindr and TikTok over user data concerns.

TikTok has since been trying to erase its ties to China. It recently appointed Kevin Mayer, former Disney executive, as its new CEO.

We can expect Zynn to keep growing as people stay bored in Covid-19 quarantine — and as they look for new ways to make money.

China Reacts to YouTuber Who “Re-Homed” Adopted Chinese Child with Autism

In a recent video, YouTuber Myka Stauffer and her husband announced that they would be “re-homing” their adopted Chinese son, Huxley.

Four-year-old Huxley has autism, and the couple reportedly wanted to place him in a home that could better address his needs. They adopted him from China three years ago.

Stauffer started her YouTube channel in 2014, sharing parenting tips and vlogs with her five children. She has over 700,000 subscribers, and many monetized videos featured Huxley and his “adoption journey.”

Many online are accusing Stauffer and her husband of exploiting Huxley for financial gain and then abandoning him.

Chinese netizens on Weibo aren’t happy about this either.

“Obviously it is incredibly shameful to use children as tools,” one user said. Others in the same comments thread called for Stauffer’s monetized videos to be removed.

“I don’t know if what the couple’s saying is true or not, but my heart hurts for the child. I feel like him getting abandoned again will make his condition even more complicated,” another wrote.

“First compensate for the money made…then compensate for the mental and emotional damage…if you don’t have the capacity and will then don’t go and hurt a child,” a user said.

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According to the Global Times, the Guangxi Civil Affairs Department — where Huxley was adopted from — is investigating the case.

While an employee explained that abandoning an adopted child is illegal in China, Stauffer and her husband may not face legal consequences because Huxley could have received US citizenship.

Stauffer mentioned in the video that they weren’t aware of additional special conditions Huxley had, like a sensory processing disorder and reactive attachment disorder. The Guangxi employee, however, said that the department notes everything about a child before adoption.

China started its international adoption program in 1991, and an estimated 110,000 children have been adopted through it. According to the US State Department, Americans have adopted over 80,000 Chinese children from 1999 to 2018. It’s estimated that up to 5% of adoptees in the US are un-adopted.

China Might Add PE to the Gaokao and Everyone Hates It

Last week, a group of over 100 Chinese political advisors proposed to include physical education (PE) in the gaokao. The national college entrance exams are notoriously stressful, taking place over two full days.

The advisors suggested that PE would promote health education for middle and high school students, and also alleviate academic pressures. Many high schools already include PE tests in their admissions process. The proposition comes amidst a wider push to include more physical education in schools — another proposal wants to make swimming lessons mandatory in schools across the country.

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“China’s traditional idea of talent cultivation puts more emphasis on mental education than physical education, and so schools are squeezing the PE class time to save for those major classes, or even ignoring the compulsory ‘one-hour exercise time’ required by the Ministry of Education,” said Wu Zhiming, one of the proposal authors.

The idea is that if PE were on the gaokao, students may be motivated to spend more of their free time exercising. Wu also explained that getting schools to prioritize PE as much as academics could lessen rates of obesity and myopia among students.

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Many netizens on Weibo, however, opposed the proposal, feeling that PE would only increase gaokao stress.

“I remember when I was in high school, the primary purpose of PE class was to relieve pressure…If PE is being tested, will the pressure be too much?” one user wondered.

“High school students do homework until past 11:00 PM everyday. People talk about giving them less homework, but test scores are still important. If everyone else is studying, don’t you have to study too? If you don’t study you’ll fall behind. We should have more PE, but if it’s suddenly part of the gaokao, it will absolutely increase the burden…” another wrote.

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Commenters generally recognized the value of PE, but believed the proposal was overreaching.

“I’m an athlete, but I don’t support this. In order to make contributions to society, you need to be healthy. That’s why PE is important. But don’t let PE become a threshold that blocks saplings from growing,” one user said.

Last July, the Central Committee and State Council released new guidelines for education reform which emphasized all-around development for students — including strengthening physical education.

Yang Deqin, deputy to the National People’s Congress, also recently proposed that swimming be a mandatory part of education among primary and secondary schools.

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Just a couple generations ago, China had no swimming pools or lessons, and the percentage of the population that can swim is dangerously low — one figure on the tropical island of Hainan puts the number of teens who can swim at just 21%, while another report from rural Hebei province puts the number at 10%.

The plan may actually be sorely needed — in 2016, drowning was the leading cause of death among children under the age of 14 in China, topping traffic accidents and illnesses.

This year’s gaokao has been postponed from June to July because of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Lay Zhang Drops Ancient Chinese Banger “Jade” and It’s a Pun

Lay Zhang has dropped the title track off his upcoming album “Jade”, and it’s got a little something for everyone.

The track carries forward in the trap-era, Chinese-nostalgia-revivalist style pioneered in recent years by folks like Kris Wu. That makes sense, seeing that Kris and Lay used to perform together as part of K-pop group EXO, and along with other ex-members like Luhan, have become torch-holders in bringing back the polished professionalism of Korea’s sound and re-contextualizing it for Chinese fans.

The track opens up on the unmistakable sound of Chinese opera percussion — Vava how we feeling right now? — before dropping into Lay’s verse. It doesn’t hurt that the beat is an absolute banger, produced by Murda Beatz.

We gotta say, Lay has done a great job of balancing his linguistic approach, switching effortlessly in and out of English and Mandarin, sometimes mid-bar. The standout instance of this is his playing with the homophonic relationship between the English you and the Mandarin , meaning jade:

玉 玉 玉 玉 玉 玉
没人比你珍贵 you (no one is more precious than you)
只有我懂的美 you (only beauty that I know)
But ain’t nobody shine like
玉 玉 玉 玉 玉 玉
Ain’t nobody shine like you
I know you like diamonds too
But ain’t nobody shine like 玉

Of course, the comments section is filled with fandom, much of it from the EXO-L fan community:

“How many EXO-L here to support Lay?” reads the top-rated comment on the song’s official YouTube audio.

“I also love how carefully crafted Lay’s songs are,” writes another. “He never disappoints.”

Keep on shining, Lay Zhang — ain’t nobody shine like 玉.

Wǒ Men Podcast: The Unsung Heroes of International Media’s China Coverage

The Wǒ Men Podcast is a discussion of life in China hosted by Yajun Zhang, Jingjing Zhang and Karoline Kan. Previous episodes of the Wǒ Men Podcast can be found here, and you can subscribe to Wǒ Men on iTunes here.

To many readers of mainstream English-language media, “news assistant” is an unfamiliar term. Yet the people operating in this role are often integral to many overseas outlets’ coverage of China. Also sometimes referred to as “news researchers,” they are Chinese passport holder journalists working for foreign media who often do far more than mere research yet are rarely credited for their work.

News assistants’ responsibilities can include research, looking for interviewees, arranging interviews, translating, and some “researchers” even interview and write the stories independently — but with no byline. The Chinese government has rules prohibiting Chinese nationals from being full-time journalists for foreign media publications, but over the past few decades many Chinese writers and reporters have managed to take advantage of a loosening system or regulatory oversights to grow into experienced journalists and hugely talented — and hugely important — storytellers.

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In the latest episode of Wǒ Men Podcast, we talk to a “news assistant” living and working in Beijing about the good, the bad and the ugly sides of the job, the changes that they have witnessed over the past few decades in the industry and what the future looks like for them.

Listen below on Mixcloud, or find Wǒ Men on iTunes here.