Relationships

Shamed in the Barangay Hall

In the small village of Barangay Layog in Pagalungan, Maguindanao del Sur, in the south of the Philippines, what began as a routine community...

The Battle for Mixed-Faith Couples

Their eyes met across a breakfast table in Jakarta’s Sudirman district: the man wore a peci, the woman sported a Balinese kebaya. Love bloomed,...

Love, Marriage and Empty Cradles

A generation ago, having children soon after marriage was almost automatic for Cambodian couples. Today, that certainty is gone. From Phnom Penh to Siem...

Porn, Power, and the Badge

New Zealand has always liked to think of itself as a country where clean institutions and public trust go hand in hand. But 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...

Soul-searching in a Blind Box

In the breezy evening of a Shanghai weekend, a 21-year-old college student named Jin Ling stepped into a sleek Korean barbecue restaurant and paid...

Love Child, Lost Fortune

A Singapore man’s divorce deal has collapsed with the same inevitability of a well-constructed detective plot: after years of apparent calm, one truth has...

The Anti-Valentine’s Day

When the date 11/11 lights up the skyline of Shanghai — a sea of LED-advertisements, live-stream shopping hosts, and parcels flying from warehouses —...
Auntie Spices It Out
Commentary

Asian Men’s Top Fantasy? The Woman Next Door

January 25, 2026

I’ve lost count of how many times men—usually smug, usually underwhelming—have told me that men are “visual creatures” and therefore need porn stars with impossible bodies and Olympic flexibility. Darling, if that were true, Asia would look very different after dark. What Asian men actually click on, linger over, and return to again and again is not the spectacular. It’s the plausible. It’s the woman who looks like she could borrow your charger and complain about the aircon. This does not surprise Auntie in the slightest. For decades, Asian societies...
Commentary

When ‘Dangdut’ Dancers Cross Religious Red Lines

January 25, 2026

Spicy Auntie has seen this movie before, and honestly, I could recite the dialogue in my sleep. Sexy dangdut singer appears. Hips move. Men cheer. Phones come out. Someone yells “haram”. Someone else yells “culture”. Cue apologies, moral outrage, calls for punishment, and a sudden national panic about the collapse of civilisation — all triggered by a woman doing her job on a stage. What amused me this time is the performance of shock. As if Indonesia woke up yesterday and discovered that dangdut involves bodies. As if villagers have...
Commentary

The Radical Feminism of Studio Ghibli’s Girls

January 24, 2026

Hollywood? Pixar? Disney? Princesses, princesses, mermaids, sparkly eyelashes and sidekicks who exist mainly to applaud? Pffff. Auntie yawns. Give me the girls and women of Studio Ghibli any day, every day, preferably with wind in their hair, dirt under their nails, and absolutely no interest in being “chosen.” What I love about Ghibli women—those created by the wonderfully stubborn Hayao Miyazaki—is that they don’t perform strength. They live it. They work. They get tired. They get scared. They mess up. They don’t strike power poses or announce themselves as icons....
Commentary

The Seductive, Erotic Power of Old Shanghai Style

January 24, 2026

Spicy Auntie has another embarrassing confession to make. I am weak for Old Shanghai kitsch. Put me in a dim bar with red velvet curtains, a jazz trio pretending it’s 1936, and a hostess in a perfectly tailored cheongsam, and my critical faculties immediately start fighting my pleasure receptors. I know exactly what is being sold to me — and yet, like so many of us, I keep buying the fantasy. Because Old Shanghai nostalgia is erotic in a very specific, very manipulative way. It doesn’t shout sex. It whispers...
Commentary

Rich Women, Young Gigolos, Old Hypocrisy

January 24, 2026

I have several friends in Jakarta—well… acquaintances. Women I meet at dinners, at art openings, at those polite, exhausting lunches where everyone pretends not to notice who arrived with whom. Some of them, discreetly, unapologetically, enjoy the services—sorry, the company—of younger men. And honestly? Good for them. I’m not particularly fond of rich ibu-ibu, in Jakarta, Bogor, or anywhere else in Asia, but that’s not the point. The point is the hypocrisy. The thick, sticky, moralistic hypocrisy. When older men do this—especially powerful, wealthy, “respectable” men—it barely registers. A middle-aged...
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