Are you curious about China’s thriving skateboarding scene? Do you find yourself wondering about the best skating spots in Shanghai? If you answered ‘yes’ to either of these questions, crack yourself a Pabst Blue Ribbon and buckle up: Structure, a new short film by Shanghai-based skating brand Avenue & Son, will hit social media platforms on June 26.
Movie poster for ‘Structure’ featuring Avenue & Son team members and Shanghai’s iconic skyline. Image via Instagram
Mainly shot in Shanghai with only a few sequences recorded in other Chinese cities, the short film took over a year to complete and is accessible to international skateboarding aficionados.
“The process was delayed by Covid-19, and we didn’t have much time to travel to other locations,” says Avenue & Son’s founder Boss (alias).
Nevertheless, Boss is confident that audiences will be riveted, as everything about Structure, from its music to shooting locations, fully embodies the collective’s style.
He tells RADII that the shooting process came naturally to the team: “We mostly shot in skating spots that we go to very often. We would go out skating and, meanwhile, take some videos.”
In addition to glimpses of some of Shanghai’s most iconic spots, including the Oriental Pearl Tower, Structure also captures hilarious interactions between the skaters and non-skateboarders, such as security guards and elderly Shanghainese locals.
Also, gear up for a hearty dose of spectacular skate tricks — and hold on to that Pabst!
Founded by Boss and three other professional skaters in 2014, Avenue & Son is a leading name in China’s skateboarding scene. Selling boards, trucks, wheels and stylish skateboarding apparel, the brand boasts a large following on the Chinese micro-blogging platform Weibo and sponsors a team of more than 20 professional skaters in China and abroad.
According to Boss, Avenue & Son was built for and around the skateboarding community and champions important values found in street culture.
In 2021, the label opened its first flagship store in the Shanghai district of Pudong. A Mecca for local skaters, the sleek brick-and-mortar store has even attracted the attention of international architecture publication ArchDaily.
The exterior of Avenue & Son’s flagship store in Pudong district, Shanghai. Image via Weibo
According to Boss, skateboarding culture in China is still niche and primarily influenced by the U.S., but he hopes it will continue developing and reaching a greater audience.
Both a plus and a negative, China’s general indifference towards skateboarding accounts for a lax attitude towards skaters, who are often free to make the most of newly-built, concrete-filled urban spaces.
Since China officially tightened its rules for private tutoring companies, many tutoring centers and teachers have sought other means to make the best of their skillsets.
Enter Dong Yuhui or Michael Dong, a former teacher at the famous New Oriental Education and Technology Group. Dong has recently gone viral for his livestreamed sales methods.
From teaching audiences how to order steak in English — while selling steak, of course — to making melancholy references to W. Somerset Maugham’s novel The Moon and Sixpence and a Shakespeare sonnet during a laundry detergent sales pitch, Dong’s approach is knowledgeable, poetic, and philosophical.
The newest Chinese Livestreaming phenom is DONG Yuhui aka Michael, ex New Oriental English teacher, now hawking goods via Livestreaming Ecommerce. The twist is, you get bilingual English / philosophy lessons at the same time. Ppl are calling it “The most cultured livestream.” pic.twitter.com/oqu9BAe6zX
Founded in the early 1990s, New Oriental had been a successful tutoring agency for decades, that is, until the recent crackdown on for-profit tutoring. In January 2022, the company saw its market value drop by 90% and revenue decrease by 80%. Furthermore, 60,000 employees were laid off.
Founder Yu Minhong has since pivoted his business to ecommerce and agricultural product sales.
After being rebranded as Oriental Selection, the company’s remaining employees, including Dong, have found themselves hosting livestreams and selling food while teaching their audiences English.
Former New Oriental teacher Dong Yuhui killing two birds with one stone by selling products and teaching English
Dong is arguably Oriental Selection’s most popular livestreamer and has directed considerable traffic to the ecommerce platform. The studio now has millions of followers on livestreaming platform Douyin, and the hashtag for New Oriental’s hosts has garnered an incredible 220 million views on the microblogging platform Weibo.
Growing up in a small village in Northwest China, Dong only started studying English in middle school but became the top student within a year. When Dong joined New Oriental in 2015, it didn’t take long for him to become the youngest department head in the company.
Many of Dong’s fans have professed to feeling touched by Dong’s authentic, heartwarming, and wholesome stories during his livestream sessions.
One netizen wrote, “The New Oriental host Dong Yuhui glows when he shares his childhood stories. After listening to him, I feel like there is nothing you can’t do, so long as you have enough determination and perseverance!”
Another fan posted, “Teacher Dong has made me see how knowledge can make for a charming personality.”
Compared with previous generations, youths in China today are faced with exceptionally high hurdles like academic peer pressure, the gaokao, a ruthless job market, and all kinds of uncertainties caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. But personalities like Dong give everyone hope that anything is possible by employing a positive outlook and putting in hard work.
Potentially the biggest news of the week: Elon Musk’s 18-year-old transgender daughter has filed a request to change her name in hopes of reflecting her new gender identity and cutting ties with her biological father.
The former Xavier Alexander Musk has asked the Los Angeles County Superior Court to change her gender recognition from male to female and to document her new name, Vivian Jenna Wilson.
“I no longer live with or wish to be related to my biological father in any way, shape or form,” said Wilson in a Reuters report.
I can’t imagine having Elon Musk as a father and coming out as trans. He has spent the last year subtweeting his own daughter and pushing transphobia. What kind of deadbeat father do you have to be to make the life of your own child a living hell like this? pic.twitter.com/6AkStg0pE2
— Alejandra Caraballo 🇵🇷🏳️⚧️ (@Esqueer_) June 20, 2022
On June 21, the news quickly went viral on the Chinese microblogging platform Weibo after it was revealed by Western media. The hashtag for Wilson’s name change has been viewed 140 million times, though it incorrectly referred to her as Elon Musk’s son.
Many netizens expressed confusion about the news, while some wished they were in a position to inherit the Tesla founder’s fortune.
“Is it a son or daughter?” reads the most upvoted comment under a news post.
Another opined (again, mislabeling Wilson as Musk’s son), “In reality, so many people have fought over inheritances. By severing the father-son relationship, Musk’s son is giving up his inheritance of the huge family fortune. How stupid.”
It’s worth mentioning that Chinese people often get confused about pronouns as the Chinese language is mainly genderless, and colloquially all pronouns sound exactly the same — ta.
However, with the increasing awareness of gender identity, Chinese queers and gender activists have also been advocating for more gender-neutral and gender-inclusive Chinese pronouns.
From June 17 to 19, Shanghai Fashion Week (SHFW) took place across multiple virtual venues. After an initial postponement due to Shanghai’s months-long Covid lockdown, SHFW announced that its autumn/winter 2022 showcase(AW 2022) would be held entirely online.
Spread across domestic and international social media platforms such as Douyin (China’s version of TikTok), YouTube, and Instagram, SHFW was fully livestreamed to a global audience.
While the event was technically not the organization’s first virtual fashion week (which would be Cloud Fashion Week during the first Covid-19 outbreak in 2020), AW 2022 occupies a whole new category of its own. The weekend was packed with a multitude of unconventional events involving the metaverse and wholly immersive experiences.
From simulated catwalks to digital drops and head-turning collabs, a creative variety of online events at SHFW’s AW 2022 session more than made up for the lack of live shows.
1. Shuting Qiu Opening Show
Far from a newbie at Shanghai Fashion Week, Shanghai-based fashion designer Shuting Qiu has showcased several of her romantic and modern collections during past editions of SHFW.
After being locked down for more than 60 days, Qiu burst back onto the scene with a collection of ‘quarantine-chic’ garb. Think practical, comfy faux-fur hoodies and a reimagined version of America’s iconic Ugg boots.
2. Nike x Labelhood — At The Moment
Founded by fashion entrepreneur Tasha Liu, Labelhood has evolved from a boutique to an all-round incubator for young Chinese designers.
Deemed one of the pillars of SHFW, Labelhood partnered with Nike for At The Moment. The campaign conveyed the adrenaline and poise required of athletes to succeed and featured five young Chinese athletes from a range of sports, from skateboarding to basketball.
3. Metaverse Catwalks
What made SHFW’s AW 2022 showcase stand out from other hybrid fashion weeks worldwide was its setting in the metaverse and abundance of digital fashion, both of which are on the rise in China and abroad.
Several designers decided to present their collections in an entirely virtual setting featuring virtual models and digital clothing.
Like something straight out of The Matrix, Feng Cheng Wang’s dark, digital environment matched his cyber-goth garments. Meanwhile, Leaf Xia relied on a kawaii, gamified virtual setting to showcase colorful maximalist pieces.
4. Yu Prize
Founded by entrepreneur and philanthropist Wendy Yu, the Yu Prize awards emerging Chinese designers with cash and mentorship opportunities similar to the prestigious LVMH Prize.
This year’s winners were announced at SHFW’s AW 2022 edition on June 19. Gender-neutral label Ponder.er snagged the top prize (granted in collaboration with Li Ning) for its auto racing-inspired collection Formula Uncategorized.
Meanwhile, AlienAnt, a New York-based brand by designer Yuchen Han, was bestowed with the Yu Prize Rising Voices Award (in partnership with Ugg).
The Yu Prize, an annual initiative for which @PascalMorand, Executive President, is a member of the jury, aimed at stimulating and supporting the careers of the most promising talents in Chinese fashion. Discover winning chinese fashion designers… https://t.co/JroVHlvUpapic.twitter.com/LWYKMocSKD
— Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode (@FHCM) June 19, 2022
5. Shushu/Tong Closing Show
Hailing from Shanghai, Liushu Lei and Yutong Jiang, the designers behind Shushu/Tong, are fueled by nostalgic imagery from China’s recent past.
The label, founded in 2015, is not only a favorite among Chinese Zoomers but has also gained international prominence, becoming one of China’s hottest brands with a global reach.
Ashes Of Roses, the designers’ latest collection, saw their signature schoolgirl silhouettes with puffy sleeves, white socks, and clunky platform shoes taking center stage.
Founded by Dr. Lu Gang in the early 2010s, TechNode is one of the leading tech media in China, providing news and in-depth coverage of China’s tech and startup community in English and Chinese. TechNode specializes in giving readers an authentic view of the fast-moving landscape of China’s tech sector by focusing on the country’s tech majors, mobility industry, e-commerce, consumer electronics, games, and social media platforms.
For us at RADII, this partnership makes sense on multiple levels. Much like TechNode, we aspire to highlight China’s incredible technological innovations and its rapidly evolving digital lifestyle to a curious global audience.
Both sides also strive to build bridges between China and people worldwide: TechNode by supporting and bridging the tech and startup ecosystem between China and the rest of the world, and RADII by sharing engaging stories that cut through preconceived notions and strengthen cross-cultural understanding. From where we’re standing, this alignment of goals is more important than ever in an increasingly polarized global political environment.
In the near term, RADII followers can expect a regular flow of TechNode’s hottest and most insightful tech industry coverage gracing RADII’s platforms. TechNode readers will also be treated to a selection of RADII’s content sitting at the intersection of tech and society, art, and entertainment.
We hope to expand this collaboration as we advance to also include joint events, video content, and collaboratively researched and written articles created by members of both publications’ outstanding editorial teams.
We’re confident this partnership will help expand the horizons of global followers of both publications, and we’re amped to invite you along for what’s sure to be an exciting ride.
It’s hard not to marvel at a good reunion story — those rare instances when the barriers of emotional baggage, bureaucracy, borders, and the passing of time are broken down in the search for a long-lost family.
My China Roots is in the business of making these odds-defying endeavors a reality for Chinese people worldwide. It’s their proverbial bread and butter — or, uh, bao and BBQ.
Erin Ross is one such success story: A Chinese-Brazilian millennial, Erin grew up in California, where her unique cultural background often drew curiosity from her peers.
With the help of MCR, she was able to locate relatives in China who, for generations, were estranged by circumstances beyond her control. Erin’s story is of not one but two improbable pursuits in which defying the odds are, oddly enough, a defining feature. And it all begins with her grandfather, Chen Yiwei.
“He was a trailblazer in every way,” Erin says proudly of her late grandpa. Her parents describe him as quiet and stoic, but she remembers Chen as a warm presence in her life.
“Of all the grandkids, I was the only one to ask, ‘Grandpa, can you give me my Chinese name?’”
Chen didn’t take the request lightly. He gave Erin the auspicious title of Si Zhong (思中), which carries the dual meaning of being ‘in midthought’ and ‘missing China’ — an ever-present sentiment in his years away from home that would also come to define the life of his granddaughter in the coming decades.
From China to Brazil
Chen grew up in the mountainous province of Hunan in South-Central China. Despite being his family’s youngest son and in a village with limited access to education, he attended a boarding school outside his hometown. By age 12, he was the most educated person in the community.
Two years later, amid the chaos of the Chinese Civil War, Communist-Nationalist fighting blocked Chen’s path home from school, severing communication between the 14-year-old and his family.
Unable to return home, he followed a neighbor to Taiwan and continued his education, eventually becoming the first member of his family to graduate with a degree in English.
Upon graduation, a friend offered Chen a teaching job in Brazil, and he decided to take the leap. He moved to Rio de Janeiro, learned Portuguese, opened a neon sign business, and started a family of his own.
Today, Brazil is home to 200,000 to 300,000 Chinese people, the majority of whom are based in São Paulo. The country even recognizes August 15 as Chinese Immigration Day. But like many Chinese emigrants who moved to Brazil to pursue a better life, political strife would upend Chen’s life again.
In 1964, Brazil faced a military coup that led to crippling economic instability and inflation throughout the 1970s and ’80s. Amid the hardship, Chen relocated to the United States, where Erin would later be born.
“He was very strong to handle all of that. And smart! He spoke four languages and married an educated girl from a higher social class,” Erin recalls. “My grandma comes from a family of doctors and high political figures. My grandpa comes from very little. He had to be super open-minded.”
Returning Home
But in all his years away from home, Chen’s desire to return to China, to reunite with his family, never faded. More than 35 years after he left his homeland, that dream became a reality.
It would be years before Erin understood the full story of her grandpa’s journey home. Still, she had long cherished two photos of Chen and his brothers taken on that visit, along with a wedding photo of her grandparents before they departed from Brazil.
Chen sadly died of Parkinson’s disease in 2017, and with his passing, much of his family history remained a mystery.
“I always dreamed of going back to his hometown with him,” says Erin. “When he died, my dream was gone too.” Instead, she poured her grief into the pursuit of a master’s degree in engineering. After graduating, however, she decided it was time to begin her search.
“I got sick of waiting and thinking I’ll do it later. I’m just going to do it!”
— Erin Ross
Erin wrote a detailed post explaining her situation and recruited friends to share the text on WeChat, China’s ubiquitous social media platform. Nonetheless, she knew the odds were against her.
“That’s when I knew I had to find a company. I Googled, and My China Roots came up,” she says.
Erin connected with MCR researcher Liu Jingwen, who wasted no time getting to work. Liu contacted every organizational level of the Federation for Returned Overseas Chinese, from the Hunan provincial office to the Henyang city office, but heard nothing for a month. As it turns out, the federation forgot to pay their phone bills and had their lines cut.
Incredibly, when Liu finally did make contact and got officials on board with the search, it took only two hours to find Chen’s family. At 10 AM, they shared his photo in a WeChat group for village leaders; by noon, they had made contact.
“When we got the news, my mom couldn’t believe it,” says Erin. “Fifteen more cousins? This must be a dream!”
Finally, Erin learned the story behind the photos she had long cherished of her grandpa.
In 1981, Chen made the journey from Brazil to Hong Kong with little more than the clothes on his back and some mementos to ease the long-overdue reunion. From there, he met a relative who guided him back to his village.
“It was otherworldly for him to return. His whole family had thought he was dead,” says Erin. “When he came back, everybody was crying. Cousins, second cousins — he met family [members] he didn’t even remember.”
Finding Family
Erin soon learned that in the years since her grandfather’s return home and relocation to the U.S., her family in China had also been searching for Chen and his relatives abroad. Through the U.S. Embassy, they even managed to find his first address in California, but after learning of his passing, they feared it was a lost cause.
“They had records I had no idea about,” she adds. “A zupu [family tree book] that my mother’s cousin wrote up… and the letters and photos my grandfather brought back by hand. I could recognize his handwriting.”
In getting to know her Hunanese kin and rediscovering her heritage, Erin’s reverence for her grandfather has only grown stronger.
“It’s clear they’re very traditional. Once we’re married, we join our husband’s family,” she says. “But my grandpa was very different. He took a huge interest in me, and I’m his daughter’s daughter.”
While Erin was never able to make the journey home with her grandfather, she is eager to retrace his steps when travel to China is possible once again. In the meantime, she’s happy to stay connected with her family via WeChat, and everyone in Hunan is just as eager to be present in the lives of their North American counterparts.
Chen Yiwei’s life was forever changed on one fateful day in his childhood. His trans-continental journey, from Hunan to Taiwan to Rio to California, has since defined not only his own life but the lives of all those who succeed him.
By rediscovering her grandfather’s life and legacy, Erin hasn’t just expanded her family tree, she has also come to understand herself better.
“With zero contact, it’s so difficult to find your identity,” she says. “Connecting with your roots…it helps you know who you are in the world.”
Editor’s note: A version of this article written by Chrislyn Choo originally appeared on My China Roots. The names in this story have been changed to protect the family’s privacy.
RADII founder Brian Wong is an investor in My China Roots. That said, RADII’s editorial staff operates independently, and this story was selected and run based on its own merits.
Cover image compiled by Zhuohan Shao; all images courtesy of My China Roots
STORIES
Menu
VIDEOS
Menu
ABOUT
Menu
Menu
CATEGORIES
VIDEOS
ABOUT
NEWSLETTER
Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox