Search results for sex
More on Chinabounder - the 'Sex and Shanghai' blogger.rnrnHe was not the first Western guy to treat China as his own personal sexual buffet. To put it in the D&D terms that many of the guys who benefit most from the effect will readily understand, living in China gives you +4 attractiveness.
Hunxuer recounts some old memories of gamesmanship and sexual conquests in China during his younger days.
Li Yinhe, China's first female sociologist on sex issues, was born in Beijing in 1952.
She was once listed as one of China's 50 Most Influential People by Asian Weekly. Summarizing her research in the past decade, Li says that a sexual revolution is silently going on in China.
Who or what is 'Chinabounder'? *Someone* knows and isn't telling. And that might be best for all concerned.
Now this is a top 10 list I can get into - no pun intended. ESWN outlines the ten best (or at least most talked about) sex-related incidents of 2006. And yeah, there's some photos.
People come to China for different reasons. I came to China to escape my impoverished surroundings, so the little luxuries like bread and shoes which I can now enjoy make the difficulties of living in an alien land more bearable. Some come to China because back in their own countries their career
A small writeup of the Sexgate for people who missed out on it so far.
A post (in translation via ESWN) from professor and blogger Zhang Jiehai where he makes a call-to-arms for all Chinese netizens to "hunt down" the blogger behind the popular Sex In Shanghai blog for his crimes against morality (towards the virtues of Chinese women).
Violet Eclipse has a humorous entry about trying to decode a Chinese advertisement.
Excerpt:"I searched Dorothy's booklet for a clue. There was a twenty-something girl in a sundress, three smiling nurses
The Sydney Morning Herald just reported that the whole Chinabounder blog seems to be a hoax! The blog was set up by performance artists, both men and women, from Britain, Australia, Japan and China. They 'fabricated its content as an investigation into online vigilante behavior.' If this is true
So, y'know that guy wanted for allegedly raping his daughter who turned out to be hanging in Suzhou, not really hiding at all? Bill Dobson of This is China knew him, had lunch with him, and says he gave few signs of being the extremely creepy individual we've heard about in the last week.
This, the latest Chinese Internet tale, is filling up the Chinese forums with comments on who is telling the truth. Aside from a bit of a voyeuristic sexual read about a chick in a band that brings new meaning to Communism, one wonders why it is such big news.
Regardless, it does say something a
Sex via the Chinese Internet. Order girls from your cable connection, browsing by age, vital statistics, location, etc. This has a serious point: This website operates on the edge of HK law and would be illegal in China. A test case of hosting websites in HK that wouldn't make it in the mainland.
Looks like the times they are a'changin' and China's youth are all about the nookie. A China Daily article recently discovered that an "overwhelming majority" of high school girls would not turn away requests for sex by their boyfriends.
Though, the article points out, only 6.2% h
Just Another Laowai asks the title question after visiting a local Chinese pharmacy where he was told the biggest purchasers of Viagra are men in their 20s and 30s. If that's not funny enough, it was the shops "Buy It As A Gift" ad that originally drew him in.
Husband gets erection problems after a work accident.
Wife sues for lack of sex asks for 120,000 RMB for vibrators.
Wife also claims to have spent 8,000 RMB (US$1,000) so far this year on sex toys and `neccesary hygenic' products.
Sexually frustrated wife has claim rejected by the courts.
The putrid aroma of hypocrisy hangs heavily over the furor generated by publication of compromising photos of the Twins star Gillian Chung Yan-tung in Easy Finder magazine.
Where were all those solemn media personalities clad in black to be found when far more intrusive and damaging media reports dragged the families of suicidal teenagers into the public domain?
The Chinabounder's response to Chinese professor and blogger Zhang Jiehai's witch hunt for the Sex In Shanghai author's identity.