Tag:ride-hailing

The Women Riders Who Bring Your Food

On the streets of Metro Manila, a woman on a motorcycle with a delivery box no longer turns heads. In the Philippines, female drivers...
Auntie Spices It Out
Commentary

Why Podcasts Have Become China’s Intimate Media

February 8, 2026

I’ve been listening to Chinese podcasts lately the way one listens at night in a conservative family house: low volume, door half-closed, ears sharper than usual. Not because the voices are loud — they’re not — but because of what they refuse to say out loud. Sex is everywhere in these conversations, precisely because it is never named. Desire appears disguised as “emotional needs.” Marriage anxiety walks in wearing a psychology degree. Queerness shows up as “close friendship” that somehow lasts decades and survives everything. There is something both heartbreaking...
Commentary

The Women Riders Who Bring Your Food

February 8, 2026

I see them every day. Sometimes I’m still in my pyjamas, hair doing its own little protest, when the doorbell rings and there she is: helmet off, phone in hand, sweat on her brow, polite smile fully intact. The woman who just brought my food. Not a mascot. Not a “girl boss”. A worker. And yet, somehow, we still talk about women riders as if they’re a curiosity. As if they appeared out of nowhere on motorbikes one fine feminist morning. Let me be very clear: women did not join...
Commentary

Seeking Intimacy in a Secret “Love Hotel” System

February 7, 2026

Secrecy can be delicious. Let’s be honest. The locked door, the stolen hour, the phone on silent, the feeling that the world must not know—this is the stuff of old novels and bad decisions and very good kisses. Secrecy sharpens desire. It makes hands bolder and time sweeter. It tells lovers: this matters enough to hide. But Auntie has lived long enough, and crossed enough borders, to tell you this: secrecy is a spice, not a diet. In some countries, secrecy is playful. In others, it becomes labor. Emotional labor....
Commentary

Where Trans Are Killed and Police Look Away

February 7, 2026

Spicy Auntie here, and no, I’m not shocked. Angry, yes. Tired, absolutely. But shocked? Not after years of watching how “tolerance” evaporates the moment it starts to look like rights. The shooting outside trans activists’ homes in Karachi wasn’t a random act of violence. It was a warning shot—literal and symbolic. A message saying: We see you. Stop existing so loudly. And let’s be honest, Pakistan is far from the only place where that message is being delivered with bullets, batons, or court rulings wrapped in religious language. But Pakistan...
Commentary

‘Hoesik’ Nights: Where Women Feel Trapped

February 7, 2026

I have nothing against food, alcohol, or people laughing together after work. I’ve eaten my way through more office dinners across Asia than I care to remember. But hoesik—that sacred Korean ritual of “voluntary” after-work bonding—has a special talent: it turns grown, competent women into decorative furniture wedged between drunk men with loosened ties and fragile egos. Let’s be honest. Hoesik isn’t really about bonding. It’s about testing obedience. About proving you can endure discomfort with a smile. About showing that your body, your time, your liver, and your evening...
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