Commentary

Bollywood’s Sex Workers: Pained and Powerful

In Indian popular imagination, few figures are as overburdened with symbolism as the sex worker—and no machine has shaped that symbolism more powerfully than...

Defining ‘Consent’: A Turning Point for Sexual Justice?

If you search “Hong Kong sexual offences law reform” right now, you won’t just find legal jargon: you’ll find a city grappling with how...

How ‘Lookism’ Became a Career Tool

In South Korea, cosmetic surgery, beauty treatments, and appearance management have quietly become part of the modern career toolkit, as essential to some jobseekers...

How ‘Retirement Villages’ Are Redefining Ageing

Across Asia, the idea of how to grow old is quietly—but radically—changing. For generations, ageing was assumed to happen at home, surrounded by family,...

Not Soft, Not Silent: Māori Women and The Haka

The haka is often framed internationally as a fierce pre-match spectacle, but for Māori women and girls in Aotearoa New Zealand it is something...

Malaysia Can’t Afford to Lose Its Women

Malaysia likes to tell a reassuring story about women and work. Girls outperform boys in schools and universities, women dominate lecture halls in medicine,...

A New Criminal Code and the Return of Moral Law

Indonesia’s new Criminal Code, set to take full effect in January 2026, has become one of the most closely watched legal reforms in Southeast...

Why Asian ‘Kidults’ Are Obsessed With Toys

From capsule toys and vinyl figurines to plushies, LEGO sets and limited-edition collectibles, Asian kidults are reshaping the global toy market—and redefining what adulthood...
Auntie Spices It Out
Commentary

‘Last Call’: Japan’s Most Controversial Reality Show

January 31, 2026

I watched Last Call the way I watch most things that make Japan collectively squirm: with one eyebrow raised, one hand on my tea, and a very familiar sense of déjà vu. Because everyone is acting shocked — shocked! — that a reality show about hostesses would be ruthless, judgmental, transactional and obsessed with looks, when in fact it is simply holding up a very clean mirror to a society that has been quietly running on these rules for decades. Let’s get one thing straight. Last Call did not invent...
Commentary

The Secret Trips Women Take for Money

January 31, 2026

I have lost count of how many times I’ve heard this story in different accents, different cafés, different WhatsApp voice notes whispered late at night. The geography changes—Jakarta to Kuala Lumpur, Surabaya to Johor, Batam to wherever the ferry is cheapest—but the logic stays depressingly familiar. Go quietly. Stay briefly. Earn fast. Come back clean. Lie politely. What fascinates me isn’t that Indonesian women travel to Malaysia to sell sex. That part is boringly predictable in a region built on labour arbitrage and moral hypocrisy. What fascinates me is how...
Commentary

On Tokyo Trains, Men Are Groped Too

January 30, 2026

I have taken Tokyo trains at rush hour often enough to know that the experience is sold internationally as a kind of urban spectacle. Look at us, we say, marvel at our discipline, our efficiency, our ability to compress millions of bodies into steel carriages that still run on time. What rarely makes it into the tourist brochures is what that compression actually feels like when you are inside it—and what it quietly enables. Let’s be honest: when bodies are pressed together so tightly that breathing becomes a collective activity,...
Commentary

Inside An Underground Market For Female Desire

January 30, 2026

I read about the police bust in Bắc Ninh and sighed the kind of sigh that comes from being proven right yet again. This case confirms exactly what I’ve been saying for years, often to polite smiles and raised eyebrows: prostitution does not exist because people are immoral, greedy, or broken. It exists because pleasure, desire, and intimacy are hemmed in by social, religious, and cultural constraints so tight they leave very little room to breathe. What shocked the public in this case was not the secrecy, not the messaging...
Commentary

A Law That Treated Wives As Stolen Property

January 30, 2026

When I first read about Malaysia finally killing off the “seduction of a married woman” law, my initial reaction wasn’t relief. It was a tired, bitter laugh. Because the law didn’t invent the idea that women belong to men; it merely wrote it down in neat colonial prose. It gave it a number. Section 498. As if ownership could be indexed, footnoted, and archived. The logic was painfully clear: a married woman could not be seduced unless she was taken. Stolen. Damaged goods. The crime was not that her consent...
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