Wrestling With Chinese Characteristics: This Art Is All the Right Vibes

Every so often, the team at RADII comes across an example of artistic expression that is too good not to share with our valued readers. Today is one of those days: P-Nut Butter Studio, an art studio based in Thailand, has released a series of quirky and colorful images to help promote Middle Kingdom Wrestling (MKW) — a Chinese professional wrestling organization based in Shanghai.


According to MKW’s 35-year-old founder, Adrian Gomez, the aim behind the art featured below was to blend pro wrestling imagery with elements of Chinese culture and society.


“The original motivation to make these images was to find fun and unique ways to cross pro wrestling with Chinese culture,” says Gomez, adding, “I feel that a softer and more lighthearted approach towards promoting MKW and pro wrestling could help to better enter into the subconsciousness of people’s minds.”


Middle Kingdom Wrestling


Wrestling in China


Gomez, an American expat in China, says MKW was created with a mission to introduce pro wrestling to Chinese audiences and offer Chinese wrestlers proper training and an opportunity to make a living from the sport. The organization also aspires to foster a pro wrestling culture within China.


“One of the more important missions of MKW is to build up a pro wrestling culture within China. North America, Mexico, Japan — all have deep pro wrestling elements instilled in their cultures,” Gomez tells RADII. “We feel laying the groundwork for Chinese culture and pro wrestling to mix together is one of the most important keys to the success of MKW and Chinese pro wrestling.”


Middle Kingdom Wrestling


Chinese wrestling


Gomez arrived in China in 2010. He was inspired to move to the country after watching an episode of Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservations in which the iconic chef and TV host visited the Northeast China city of Harbin.


“I consider this episode one of my favorite TV episodes of any show I’ve ever seen — reality show or otherwise. It made me pack up my things and head to Harbin to work as an English teacher,” says Gomez.


Middle Kingdom Wrestling


In 2015, he founded MKW, and in 2019 he quit teaching to focus on the organization full-time. Since its inception, MKW has celebrated several noteworthy achievements, including the MKW Belt & Road Championship Tournament 2018 in Harbin and 2019 in Kathmandu, Nepal.


In addition to matches and tournaments in China and Nepal, MKW has produced events in Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, and Vietnam, and reached nearly 7 million concurrent viewers with its broadcasts in China.


Year of the Tiger


Year of the Rabbit


Wrestling X Lying Flat Poster


The collab between P-Nut Butter Studio and MKW is not the first time the wrestling organization has tapped into Chinese culture and society to help advance its mission to promote wrestling in China.


In 2022, MKW co-opted the ‘lying flat’ working philosophy, which refers to the unbothered attitude adopted by China’s young, burnt-out workers, to promote wrestling in a fun YouTube video. The video features wrestlers from around the globe telling viewers, “Don’t lay flat, get up and wrestle,” a statement that served as the organization’s slogan last year.


Middle Kingdom Wrestling, Chinese wrestling, wrestling in China


Middle Kingdom Wrestling, Chinese wrestling, wrestling in China


Beijing Winter Olympics meets Chinese pro wrestling


If you dig this artwork and want to support MKW’s mission to promote wrestling in China, check out these awesome T-shirts. And, if you are a fan of combat sports, you’d be remiss not to check out our 2022 content series on mixed martial arts (MMA) in China.


All images courtesy of P-Nut Butter Studio

Netizens Furious Over Alleged Mistreatment of Panda at Memphis Zoo

Chinese netizens are up in arms over the plight of Ya Ya, a 22-year-old giant panda who has been on loan to the Memphis Zoo in the U.S. since 2003.

Ya Ya is scheduled to return to China when her loan contract ends in April. However, netizens are calling for an earlier return, provoked by the death of the Memphis Zoo’s other panda, Le Le, earlier this month and by photos and videos of Ya Ya’s condition.


International animal advocacy groups like In Defense of Animals have been campaigning for the pandas’ return for over two years. Their initiative was supported by famous American singer Billie Eilish and nearly 100,000 petitioners on Change.org.


billie eilish retweeting a post in support of returning giant pandas from the memphis zoo back to china

Billie Eilish retweeted In Defense of Animal’s campaign to return Le Le and Ya Ya. Image via Twitter


Ya Ya and Le Le’s return was announced in December. However, according to Reuters, the Memphis Zoo said the animals’ departure had nothing to do with the animal advocates’ campaign.


The end of the contract came too late for 24-year-old Le Le, who died on February 1.


One netizen wrote on the Chinese microblogging platform Weibo, “Le Le was so lively, and he didn’t make it back, hurry up and bring Ya Ya home.”


Ya Ya the panda very skinny and dirty

Recent images of Ya Ya in her enclosure at the Memphis Zoo. Image via WeChat


Though Memphis Zoo denies accusations of neglect, World Animal News wrote last year, “The pandas are distressed and malnourished and spend their days pacing or sleeping, clearly bored in their dirty, small enclosures. Ya Ya has a chronic skin condition, and Le Le has significant teeth issues resulting in broken molars.”


Most concerning of all for many netizens is how skinny Ya Ya is.


“I have never seen such a skinny giant panda. It would not look like this even if it were in the wild. It is so pitiful; do not loan out any more [pandas] in the future,” commented one Weibo user.


Giant pandas — considered one of China’s national treasures — live about 15-20 years in the wild but can live past 30 in captivity.


ya ya the panda eating bamboo

Ya Ya eating bamboo. Image via Weibo


Panda diplomacy is the name for China’s policy of leasing out the cuddly-looking creatures as a political and economic tool.


In its modern form, panda loans date back to 1941, when the wife of China’s then-leader Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek gave the Bronx Zoo two cubs. The first recorded example, though, was way back in 685 CE, when Empress Wu Zetian gifted a pair of bears to Japan.

In recent decades, pandas are typically leased to foreign zoos for 10-year periods. In the past, trade tensions between China and the U.S. have called continued loans into question; Memphis Zoo’s treatment of Ya Ya may do the same.


Cover image via Depositphotos

‘Bride Prices’ Continue to Soar in the Chinese Countryside

A man from Jiangxi province, going by the pseudonym Xia Jun, recently told China’s state-backed Xinhua News Agency that he would need at least 700,000 RMB (101,000 USD) to afford marriage.


In his calculations, he included a car, the down payment for a home, and cai li (彩礼), which directly translates to ‘colorful gift,’ referring to a mutually agreed-upon and usually one-time payment from the groom’s family to the bride or her parents before marriage.


This figure is out of reach for Xia, who earns 6,000 RMB (869 USD) a month. The cai li, also known as ‘bride gift’ or ‘bride price,’ commonly costs 200,000 to 300,000 RMB (29,900 to 43,500 USD), a figure that has steadily increased over the years.

Xinhua also reported that these high bride prices have caused a new phenomenon — families negotiating the bride price before a potential couple has even gone on a date.


Economic Daily, a Chinese state-run newspaper, has come out to condemn the antiquated custom, calling these exorbitant costs a “financial burden,” a “[pollutant] to the social atmosphere,” and a “restrictive factor for rural development.”


Many people, however, see bride prices as a necessary guarantee of future economic stability and compensation for their financial loss during pregnancy, as many women miss promotion opportunities or even lose jobs as gender discrimination persists in workplaces.


So how did this practice come about, and why are costs continuing to soar?

What is a Bride Price, Exactly?

Also known as a betrothal gift, this transaction has been an important marriage custom for almost 3,000 years. Traditionally, men pay this reverse dowry with money, jewelry, clothing, furniture, animals, or food.


bride prices, china bride price, marriage in china


Li Yongping, a professor at Nankai University, told a Chinese media outlet that in North China, the bride price is typically transferred back to the newlyweds. In contrast, in the South, bride prices are ‘compensation’ for the bride’s parents, and the amount given is generally lower.


Li explained, “If the man’s economic conditions are poorer, [the bride’s family] will ask for more. The woman may feel that if she can’t get a large betrothal gift when getting married, she will have no guarantee for the future.”

Why the Rising Costs?

The gender imbalance in China’s countryside is among the most significant factors in the rising bride prices. According to official government data from 2021, there are nearly 108 men for every 100 women in rural areas.


This imbalance — primarily due to China’s now-defunct one-child policy — has led to increasing bride prices, beginning in the 1990s.

The hukou, China’s household registration system, is also an important factor. Urban hukous generally allow citizens access to more opportunities — particularly for people registered in major cities like Beijing and Shanghai, and the easiest route to a hukou change is marriage.


Social comparison, the practice of evaluating one’s own success in relation to others, as well as women’s growing autonomy, have also increased marriage costs.


Li said, “There is not necessarily a correlation between the promotion of women and high bride prices. [But,] for example, in northern rural areas, the bride price is ultimately given to the daughter. When a woman’s status improves, she will also fight for a high betrothal gift for herself.”


In 2017, the average bride price was as much as 16 times rural residents’ annual per capita income. So, for men like Xia, marriage is a near impossibility.

Are Limits on Bride Price Futile?

In 2021, marriage registrations — and the birth rate — hit a historic low in China. Some regional governments have tried to limit high bride prices in an effort to increase marriage rates.


Marriage is crucial to reversing or slowing China’s population decline, especially given the difficulties single mothers and illegitimate children face in the country. But interventions into high bride prices haven’t seemed to work thus far.


Towns like Dingxi in North China’s Gansu province and Guixi in Jiangxi province in the southern part of the country have created local councils whose role is to intervene in marriage negotiations; other places are using grassroots movements to encourage doing away with the tradition.

Zhengning, a county in Gansu, set a limit of 80,000 RMB for bride prices last year. However, according to the South China Morning Post, the county government clarified in a website post that “it’s quite difficult for [bride prices] to be changed by any hard and fast rule.”


Because of the various forms in which bride gifts can be given, the price is hard to regulate — and may well continue to rise due to the rural gender imbalance. High bride prices are likely here to stay, at least until China’s greater demographic issues can be solved.


All images via Depositphotos

5 Fitness Trends Sweeping China and Getting Chinese Youth in Shape

China is emerging as a significant player in the fitness market. In 2020 alone, the industry generated 2.74 trillion RMB (400 billion USD) in revenue, and the number has been steadily increasing since then. As interest in healthier lifestyles grows, young people with more disposable income seek new, fun, and sometimes unexpected ways to become more active.


And since we at RADII love a good listicle, here are five super-hot fitness trends currently sweeping China.

1. Ultimate Frisbee

The sudden rise of the ultimate frisbee in China may come as a surprise to some, but the reasons behind its popularity are pretty simple. For one, the barrier to entry for the sport is low. As people look for ways to socialize post-pandemic, an easy-to-learn group sport is a perfect way to do so.


China Fitness Trends, ultimate frisbee, china fitness

Group of friends at a frisbee game. Image via Xiaohongshu


Moreover, influencers on Chinese social media, such as Xiaohongshu, one of China’s top lifestyle platforms, have marketed the sport as part of a trendy lifestyle, appealing to users’ aesthetic sensibilities by posting pictures with brightly colored discs and workout clothes.

2. Skiing

Winter sports, especially skiing, have experienced astronomic growth in China thanks to the 2022 Beijing Winter Olympics and star athletes from the Chinese national team like Su Yuming and Eileen Gu, whose impressive performances dominated Chinese media headlines during the international sporting event.


China Fitness Trends, skiing, china fitness

Chinese kids preparing to hit the slopes. Image via Depositphotos


Skiing is most popular amongst young Chinese professionals, but parents in major cities are also encouraging their children to get involved.


There are even indoor skiing simulators in malls that allow people to practice during the off-season.

3. Recreational Dance Classes

Recreational dance studios have popped up across China, offering classes in hip hop, jazz, contemporary, and many other dance styles. The activity’s popularity surge is partly due to the rise of idol culture in East Asia and the growing appreciation for the beauty of dance.

Luvia Yao, a sophomore in college in Shanghai, has been attending recreational dance classes in the city since 2022. She enjoys having a healthy hobby and making friends through the activity.


“I feel like I’m working on something I love,” she says.


For many participants, dancing and performing are not just a means of staying fit but also a form of artistic expression.

4. Yoga

Though yoga has long had a presence in China due to its close proximity to India, its recent boom in popularity can be attributed to digitalization. And unlike other activities listed here, yoga has spread to China’s rural areas.


Woman practicing yoga

Yogis show off their skills. Image via Xiaohongshu


In conjunction with the rise of yoga — or perhaps the cause of the trend itself — the brand Lululemon has also seen a massive surge in sales in China, with the country currently standing as its second-largest market.

5. Cycling

Seen as both a fun way to explore a city and exercise, cycling has become especially popular among Chinese youth. Bike sales have risen 46.4% since the pandemic, and a related hashtag has garnered more than 121.5 million views on Xiaohongshu.


China Fitness Trends, cycling, china fitness

A biking enthusiast shows the items they bring on their daily rides. Image via Xiaohongshu


Bikes have long enjoyed popularity in China as a transportation method. In 1996, there were 523 million bicycles in the country, while there were more than 197 bikes per 100 urban households three years prior.


Cover image via Depositphotos

These Asian Nations Use Tech to Bridge the Gaping Urban-Rural Divide

This article is part of our Sustainable Future series done in association with East West Bank. This article explores how innovative tech is helping to improve livelihoods in backwater towns in China and across Asia and tempering the rural-to-urban migration trend. It also examines how Singapore is bringing countryside agriculture to the urban environment.


The western portion of North America is home to a staggering number of ghost towns, with decaying monuments to the boom-and-bust cycle of resource extraction littering the landscape from Alaska through the Yukon, western Canada, and the U.S. right down into Mexico. In California alone, there are hundreds of ghost towns, many of which were once bustling mining settlements that are now deserted following the cessation of resource extraction operations in the late 18th and early- to mid-19th centuries.


In recent times, Japan faced a similar phenomenon: an epidemic of ‘akiya,’ or empty homes. Low birth rates, an aging population, and many people leaving rural villages for major metropolises have given rise to an unprecedented number of vacant properties, left with no residents, no agent, and no one interested in purchasing them.


Settlement abandonment is a problem worldwide, and many ghost towns serve as evidence of failed urbanization attempts scuttled by war, disease, and natural or manufactured disasters. Other ghost towns symbolize the fickle nature of opportunity, when a collapse of jobs, resources, or infrastructure eventually renders a place economically unviable.


But what if steps could be taken to help improve life and business in small rural settlements before they are abandoned? Many Asian nations are trying just that — taking measures to prevent rural areas from becoming ghost towns. Countries like China and Indonesia, for example, are using innovative strategies to help strengthen employment opportunities and help raise living standards outside major cities.

From ‘Hollow Villages’ to ‘Taobao Villages’

China has its very own kind of ghost town. Called ‘hollow villages,’ small towns in rural areas across China are facing a population crisis that does not only concern their size but also their composition. Young men — and sometimes women — flock to big cities to work in factories or as delivery men, leaving behind their parents and offspring, known as ‘left-behind elderly’ and ‘left-behind children.’


Besides the near-universal pattern of rural-to-urban economic migration, another factor contributing to the phenomenon of ‘hollow villages’ is China’s household registration system (known as hukou).


The hukou system prevents rural citizens from accessing free or subsidized healthcare and schooling in urban areas and often breaks families apart. While parents move to urban areas for work, children have to stay in villages where they can receive cheaper education, and it often falls on grandparents to take care of them.


an abandoned village or ghost town in china, urban-rural divide

An abandoned village in China


For more than a decade, ecommerce has represented the best way out for residents of ‘hollow villages,’ who are adept at creating a specific good and selling it nationwide on platforms like Taobao. Specialized villages have mushroomed all over China — especially in regions with better infrastructure — and earned the nickname ‘Taobao villages.’


One of these villages, Wontou in East China’s Shandong province, saw a significant bump in residents’ income since the arrival of ecommerce businesses in the early 2010s, with sales growing steadily yearly. The town’s improved economic fortunes have encouraged some people who’d left Wontou for the promise of the big city to return.


“Even some university graduates and those who have done pretty well in cities now come back to operate online stores,” a villager told South China Morning Post.

TikTok, Bees, and AI Fish Feeders

In the past few years, rural citizens in China have increasingly mastered the production and distribution of specific goods and their marketing on domestic social media.


The advent of online platforms like Douyin and Kuaishou, which combine short videos, livestreaming, and a built-in ecommerce function, make for the perfect tool for rural residents to market and sell their products in creative ways. Moreover, thanks to China’s high internet penetration rate, all this can be achieved without sellers ever leaving the countryside.


Ma Gongzuo, a beekeeper from Lishui, in East China’s Zhejiang province, is one of the millions of rural residents-turned-digital entrepreneurs who participate in China’s agricultural e-commerce industry — a market that has grown exponentially in the past few years, reaching 63 billion USD in 2021.


Now in his 30s, Ma had previously moved to the city for better employment opportunities. He then returned home when he realized technology like livestreaming would allow him to make a living without abandoning his hometown.


taobao villages, ghost towns in china, urban-rural divide

Ma Gongzuo, a beekeeper, livestreamer, and entrepreneur from Zhejiang


“In my grandpa’s eyes, selling honey is hard work and a very low-end job,” Ma tells RADII, smiling, “But it’s different now.”


The influencer sells his honey directly on Douyin — China’s version of TikTok — and helps other farmers do the same. He splits his days between his small office and the nearby mountainous area, where he shoots short videos and goes live to sell his products.


taobao villages livestreamer

Ma livestreaming


Far from being a job for lazy people, managing this kind of e-commerce business takes up to 12 hours every day. But, according to Ma, it has been gratifying.


“Because of our efforts, all these hard years of work, our living standards have improved, and our parents at home are better off, too,” he says.


Other instances of technology making living and working conditions in rural areas significantly better can be found across Asia. In Indonesia, for example, local tech startup eFishery is helping countryside fish farmers become more efficient.


a fish farmer in indonesia

A fish farmer at work in Indonesia


By leveraging automation and AI, they aim to reduce the environmental impact of the fishing industry while addressing the country’s food security issues.


Introducing their automated feeder, eFishery CEO Gibran Huzaifah tells RADII: “[Feeding the fish manually] is really hard work. With our device, the farmers can just stay home, and the system will report to them on their phones.”

Farming in the Sky

While eFishery is bringing urban technology to rural communities and effectively preventing those areas from losing their population to big cities, other metropolitan areas lack resources such as food and water, which are generally abundant in rural areas.


A prime example is Singapore, a country trying to combine urban innovation with rural agriculture — out of necessity. And while the city is at no risk of becoming a ghost town anytime soon, it faces real challenges when trying to guarantee its food security.


With a territory smaller than New York City and an entirely urban population, Singapore has no space for farming. The city imports over 90% of its food supply, becoming intensely vulnerable to inflation and disruptions in the supply chains, such as Malaysia’s ban on chicken exports in 2022 and the Covid-19 pandemic.


singapore's green architecture

A prime example of Singapore’s green architecture


The country announced its ‘30 by 30’ goal in 2019 to tackle this issue, aiming to produce 30% of its nutritional intake locally by 2030. Given the physical restraints of Singapore’s urban environment, innovative companies like Artisan Green are essential to reaching its goal.


“The concept behind vertical farming is growing plants in multiple planes, rather than just a singular plane that we usually see in outdoor crops,” Artisan Green’s founder Ray Poh tells RADII.


vertical farming

Indoor vertical farming allows for surfaces not traditionally associated with agriculture to be utilized in food production


The tech company uses vertical farming technology to grow space-saving crops, which are crucial to making the city-state more self-reliant when it comes to food security. Besides space optimization, vertical farming boasts benefits such as the absence of pesticides.


However, the innovative technology is far from free of limitations, such as the fact that lower-value crops are less profitable to grow vertically than they are for traditional farms. According to Poh: “Vertical farming isn’t here to replace outdoor farming. I think it’s here to grow hand in hand together with outdoor farmers.”


As shown by the stories of China’s rural digital entrepreneurs and startups like eFishery and Artisan Green, technology brings urban convenience to countryside areas and pastoral resources to huge metropolises across Asia, reducing the existing urban-rural divide, or in the words of Ma Gongzuo, “bringing cities and countryside closer and closer together.”


This article was made as part of our Sustainable Future series in association with East West Bank to highlight the innovative tech that’s making the world more green and regenerative. East West Bank offers unparalleled services for individuals and companies who wish to build connections and foster collaborations between the U.S. and Asia. Together, we will reach further. For more information, visit eastwestbank.com


Additional reporting by Isabel Su


Cover image designed by Haedi Yue; all other images via RADII

5 Food Collabs From China That Caught the World’s Attention

Though 2022 saw a few terrible marketing flops, from a provocative (read: sleazy) coconut milk advertisement to a cringey KFC rap, several brand collaborations were exemplary forms of advertising, especially the ones between international and domestic brands.


Below are five of the best brand collaborations of 2022 that RADII covered:

1. Pizza Hut x Genshin Impact

We’ve ranked this campaign first for obvious reasons: It was so popular that the cops had to get involved (no, seriously).


Last September, miHoYo, the company behind the hit video game Genshin Impact, teamed up with Pizza Hut to release limited-edition meals with both real-life and in-game perks, like branded merchandise and complimentary Mora, a form of currency used in the world of Genshin Impact. Some Pizza Hut staff even embraced cosplay inspired by the game.


marketing in china, marketing collaborations, best brand collaborations 2022

Customers queuing up outside a Pizza Hut outlet on the first day of the campaign’s launch. Image via @nise_yoshimi/Twitter


Certain branches of the fast food restaurant in Shanghai and Nanjing were so crowded that police had to shut them down, citing Covid-19 concerns.


What made the campaign so successful was Pizza Hut capitalizing on an existing and extremely dedicated fanbase.

2. Harry Potter x Holiland Bakery

For a brief stint, fans of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter could cop a slice of magic via Holiland Bakery’s Mid-Autumn Festival campaign.


Released on July 31 to coincide with Harry Potter’s birthday, the mooncakes were inspired by objects and characters from the books, like the Golden Snitch, Hogwarts school badges, Chocolate Frogs, and Hedwig, Harry’s beloved pet owl.


The collab took off thanks to two things: Catering to the right audience and good timing. An estimated 200 million copies of the Harry Potter books have sold in China, and what better time to release exciting new products than during one of the most significant festive periods in the country?

3. KFC x Zhou Hei Ya

In October 2022, KFC China and Zhou Hei Ya, an iconic purveyor of duck products, reintroduced their braised duck sandwiches and wraps for the first time since 2021.


The return of the specialty sandwich seems to indicate that people in China couldn’t get enough of the seemingly odd but truly satisfying combination of KFC chicken and Zhou Hei Ya’s signature duck slathered in a secret sauce.


American fast-food chain KFC has done incredibly well in China thanks to its creative localization efforts over the years. The chain restaurant often offers regional food items, like Wuhan’s hot and dry noodles (reganmian) and Changzhou’s world-famous soup dumplings known as xiaolongbao.

4. Oreo x The Three-Body Problem

Deriving inspiration from science fiction author Liu Cixin’s novel The Three-Body Problem, American cookie brand Oreo released an exclusive set of Oreos featuring different shapes and symbols from the book. The collab also included a telescope-like gadget that served as a projector (of sorts) when an Oreo was placed in one of its slots.


While some might deem the collaboration gimmicky, it still did well, especially since the products dropped when the internet was buzzing about various TV adaptations of The Three-Body Problem.

5. Holiland Bakery x Wang Lao Ji

As you can tell by now, Holiland has a propensity for tasty collaborations, including this one with Wang Lao Ji, a popular Chinese herbal tea company.


In anticipation of the Chinese Lunar New Year, the pastry company rolled out a collection of desserts that included an ‘Instagrammable’ herbal tea-flavored cake resembling Wang Lao Ji’s signature beverage can. Another treat was modeled after the Chinese character ji (吉), which features in Wang Lao Ji’s name and means ‘good fortune’ — an auspicious reference heading into a new year.


Cake-in-a-can and a cheeky play on words? What’s not to love about this campaign by two highly successful Chinese brands?


Read more about advertising and marketing campaigns in China here.


Cover image via the author