Commentary

Breaking the Silence Around Cervical Cancer

It sounds an almost impossible tragedy: in the forests, paddy-fields and dense urban sprawl of Southeast Asia, a silent killer stalks women and girls...

She Codes, He Leads

In the bustling digital marketplaces of India, where bytes drive business and algorithms hum like an unseen workforce, women are steadily stepping onto the...

Liberation, One Condom at a Time

In a culture where conversations around sexuality often linger in the shadows, one young Vietnamese entrepreneur has dared to shine a light. Phan Thị...

Secret Surgery, Sacred Faith

When 76-year-old Sari Kartina Abdul Karim flips open her well-worn notebook – penned over decades in a mixture of Bahasa Melayu and Dutch –...

Bhutan’s Daughters Are Leaving

The joke in Thimphu, these days is that every family has at least one daughter in Australia, one son thinking about Australia, and one...

Rising Sun for the Queer Travelers

Picture landing in Japan’s vibrant Kansai region or the subtropical island paradise of Okinawa and finding more than just temples and sea — you...

The Hidden Lives of Geylang

In Geylang’s narrow lorongs, a quietly pulsing human story unfolds. On a humid Tuesday morning, 58-year-old Serene, a part-time outreach worker, ambles through the...

Love on the Office Clock

In the buzzing open-plan offices of modern India, love sometimes sneaks in by the elevator shaft and takes the quick-coffee route. Imagine two colleagues...
Auntie Spices It Out
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....
Commentary

When Online Sex Advice Crosses China’s Red Lines

January 29, 2026

Auntie has seen this low-rated soap opera before, and it never really changes. Dress it up as “consumer protection,” “scientific standards,” or “moral clarity,” and it’s still the same old story: women talking about sex, desire, confidence, and power always get scrutinized more closely than the men who sell crypto fantasies, hustle myths, or fake success courses. Let’s be clear — a lot of these so-called “sexual intelligence” gurus are nonsense merchants. Overpriced courses, recycled stereotypes, the same tired promise that if women just tweak their behavior, love will magically...
Commentary

How ‘Scouts’ Modernize Tokyo’s Sex Economy

January 29, 2026

Spicy Auntie has been watching Japanese scouts evolve for years, and let me tell you: this is no longer about sleazy men loitering outside train stations with a laminated club menu and a fake smile. The modern scout is digital, data-driven, and frighteningly efficient. If you imagine Kabukicho scouting as some analogue relic of the bubble era, you’re already behind the curve. Today’s scouts don’t need to shout at women on the street. They slide into DMs. They stalk Instagram stories, TikTok clips, X posts. They know who just moved...
Commentary

Why Asia Is Obsessed With “Heated Rivalry”

January 29, 2026

I’ll say it upfront: I’m a big fan. Not in the “oh this is nicely made” way, but in the “why am I still thinking about that pause in episode four?” way. Heated Rivalry has crawled under my skin and refused to leave, and honestly, good for it. Auntie respects a series that knows exactly what it’s doing and has the nerve to do it slowly. Let’s clear one thing first. This is not about hockey. If you came for slapshots and locker-room bravado, you’ll stay for the unbearable tension,...
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