Commentary

When Friends Marry and You Don’t

They say adulthood has a script — house, spouse, kids, commute — and when you reach your 30s in Singapore without that script being...

Love Advice From Bollywood’s King of Romance

When Shah Rukh Khan speaks about love, people listen — not just because he’s Bollywood’s “King of Romance,” but because his words carry an authenticity...

Inside “Natural”: Japan’s Dark Girl-Scouting Network

A shadowy criminal network operating in the red-light district of Tokyo, known simply as Natural, has suddenly grabbed headlines again — this time not...

South Asia: Girls-Only or Co-Ed Schools?

Across South Asia, the debate over co-educational versus single-gender schools captures the region’s deepest tensions around gender, safety, tradition and modernity. While many governments...

The Raw, Intimate World of “Queerpanorama”

With its raw honesty and bold vision, Queerpanorama — directed by Jun Li — is making waves as 2025’s most provocative LGBTQ+ film out...

Singapore’s Male Host Clubs

In the haze of Singapore’s nightlife, there’s a growing trend that’s got people whispering — and some even shouting — about “boyfriends for hire.”...

Tachinbō: The Long Shadow of Japan’s Street Trade

Tokyo’s nights have long inspired a mix of fascination and unease, especially in districts like Kabukichō where the blurred lines of Japan’s vast fūzoku...

China’s Business of “Child-body” Dolls

Under the glare of global scrutiny, Chinese authorities have quietly moved to shut down a factory accused of producing “childlike” — or what regulators...
Auntie Spices It Out
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...
Commentary

When Queer Activists Challenge The Political Elites

January 30, 2026

I loooove the courage of these brothers and sisters. Truly. In a region where “progressive” politics so often means adding one rainbow flag to an old boys’ club and calling it a day, what these Nepali activists are doing feels bracingly honest. They’re not asking politely to be included in someone else’s dinner party. They’ve cooked their own food, set their own table, and marched straight into the political hall with it. Nepal likes to congratulate itself for being enlightened. Third gender recognition, court rulings, constitutional language that looks fabulous...
Commentary

Bidding on Women: Korea’s Dating Auctions

January 30, 2026

Spicy Auntie has lived long enough to recognize an old trick when it shows up wearing new tech. Call it an “online date auction,” call it entertainment, call it sogaeting with Wi-Fi and PayPal—Auntie calls it the same dusty patriarchy, freshly rebranded for the livestream age. Let’s be honest. This isn’t really about dating. Dating implies mutual curiosity, awkward silences, a coffee you can escape from if the vibes are off. Auctions are about dominance, money, and spectacle. When men throw cash at a screen to “win” a woman while...
Commentary

Inside Old Bugis Street’s Wild Nightlife Scene

January 29, 2026

I was a bit too young to actually enjoy the nightlife of old Bugis Street, but I remember it vividly anyway. Memory is funny like that. It doesn’t always need alcohol or lipstick or bad decisions to lodge itself in your bones. Sometimes all it takes is one evening, one old aunt, and a street full of people who refuse to make themselves small. An auntie — not my mother, of course, but one of those aunties who smoked, laughed too loudly, and didn’t explain herself — took me to...
Commentary

Gray Divorces: When Old Marriages Break Down

January 29, 2026

Spicy Auntie has a soft spot for gray divorces. Not because I enjoy broken hearts—Auntie is not a monster—but because 熟年離婚 (jukunen-rikon) feels less like a scandal and more like a long-overdue exhale. When I read about couples finally calling it quits after 20, 30, sometimes 40 years of marriage, my first reaction is rarely shock. It’s usually: What took you so long? Let’s be honest. Many of these marriages were never romantic partnerships in the modern sense. They were contracts built on 我慢 (gaman)—endurance as virtue—and rigid role division....
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