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Cindy Yu

Cindy Yu

Broadcast Editor at The Spectator

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Location
United Kingdom
Languages
  • English
Covering topics
  • Politics

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Recent Articles

spectator.co.uk

Haunted by my great-grandfather’s second wife – by Alice Mah

Alice Mah didn’t enjoy finding her roots. Even though ‘ancestor tourism’ is increasingly popular among westernised descendants of Chinese émigrés like her, she felt a nameless sort of dread when visiting the village in the Cantonese county of Taishan where her great-grandfather came from. It didn’t help that she’d just attended the morbid Qingming festival,
spectator.co.uk

From Chimerica to Cold War II: how US-China relations soured

It’s easy to forget that, as recently as the start of this century, the US was China’s biggest ally. Why have relations cooled quite so fast?
spectator.co.uk

China’s fear and loathing of the Japanese

Chinese nationalism is a mixture of self-pity and cultural arrogance Ten-year-old Shen Hangping was walking to school when he was stabbed. Japanese on his father’s side, Chinese on his mother’s, he was a pupil at the Japanese School in Shenzhen. There are only a small number of these expat schools across China, and they have
spectator.co.uk

What would a second Trump presidency bring for China?

Trump is tough on China, but what really motivates his hawkishness? Does he care at all about China's human rights abuses?
spectator.co.uk

Why China’s nostalgia industry is booming

Nostalgia is a thriving industry in China. I first noticed this while walking around Nanjing last summer. There were shops with names like ‘Finding Childhood’ or ‘Childhood Memories’, selling sweets and toys that had long been discontinued. There were posters of TV shows and celebrities from the 1980s and 1990s. The customers were like me
spectator.co.uk

How oil became the latest Chinese food scandal

The Chinese middle class can now be very discerning about what they eat, and who can blame them?
spectator.co.uk

The rootlessness that haunts the children of immigrants

As a child, Edward Wong had no idea that his father had been in the People’s Liberation Army. The only uniform the young Wong associated with his parent was the red blazer of Sampan Café, the Chinese take-away his father worked at in Virginia. China was seldom spoken of, with Wong getting only snatches and
spectator.co.uk

Why China loves Taylor Swift

‘Swifties' are extremely dedicated to the cause and Chinese fans are no different. How popular is American pop music in China?
spectator.co.uk

How China is quietly cutting out American tech

Biden has finally signed a bill that would take TikTok off app stores in the US. But how much do we know about China's efforts to decouple from American tech?
spectator.co.uk

The problem with Netflix’s Three-Body Problem

How many modern Chinese books, TV shows or films do you count among your favourites? Perhaps Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon comes to mind, or maybe Crazy Rich Asians, or Jung Chang’s Wild Swans. If you don’t have many more beyond that, I don’t blame you. For many reasons (not least the Chinese Communist party’s Big Brother approach to anything
spectator.co.uk

Life on the margins: how China’s rural deprivation curbs its success

Too often our stories about China are dominated by the urban experience. How do the poorest in China live today?
spectator.co.uk

An insider’s account of the CCP’s stranglehold on China

All families have secrets, but few family histories are classified by the state. After the death of Snow’s father, his study is cleared out by officials from the Chinese Communist party; but Snow discovers letters and unmarked hard drives hidden in hollowed-out dictionaries that they’d missed. The material reveals that her father was a high-ranking
spectator.co.uk

How China cornered the green market

When Rishi Sunak announced that the 2030 ban on new petrol and diesel cars would be delayed by five years, he framed it as a common-sense move. What he didn’t say is that he had been advised that, had the original deadline stuck, Britain’s electric vehicle (EV) market would have been handed over to China.
spectator.co.uk

125,000 Hong Kongers have come to the UK. Where are they?

Weekly magazine featuring the best British journalists, authors, critics and cartoonists, since 1828
spectator.co.uk

How I got to know Westminster’s ‘Chinese agent’

On Monday, I was surprised to discover a photo of myself in the papers next to a parliamentary researcher who had been arrested on suspicion of being a ‘Chinese agent’. The photo was taken in February at a panel in parliament entitled ‘Defeating the dictators’. The man and I are both twentysomething China watchers who
spectator.co.uk

Chinese cities are being sacrificed to save Beijing

Bazhou and Zhuozhou, two small cities to the south of Beijing, have been submerged in record floods since late July.
spectator.co.uk

Why China is courting Hollywood again - The Spectator

Until a few years ago, Hollywood dominated Chinese cinemas. In the People’s Republic, Marvel’s superhero romps were the people’s favourite. In 2019, Avengers: Endgame took more than 4 billion RMB (£510 million) at Chinese box offices. That success might partly explain why the Chinese Communist party went on to effectively ban Marvel films for the next three years. Real heroes should be Chinese. Other Hollywood smash-hits such as Top
spectator.co.uk

China is paying a high price for opening up - The Spectator

Though zero Covid had ended by the beginning of December, cities across China emptied out again as the virus swept through the population.
spectator.co.uk

China is obscuring the scale of its Covid wave - The Spectator

One University of Hong Kong model has forecast that there could be up to a million Covid deaths in China over the coming months. That would be a political problem for the Chinese Communist Party, which prides itself (or tries to) on its competence. But it turns out the CCP has a rather elegant solut…
spectator.co.uk

The fading legacy of Deng Xiaoping | The Spectator

Xi Jinping’s China has its own characteristics
spectator.co.uk

Frozen: can China escape its zero-Covid trap? | The Spectator

To understand what Xi Jinping wants from the Winter Olympics, look at the man chosen to direct the opening ceremony. Zhang Yimou is one of China’s most famous film directors, but his hits (such as Hero and Raise the Red Lantern) are better loved by foreigners than by the Chinese. His job is to wow t…