Tag:showgirls

Tokyo Moulin Rouge: Women, War And Censorship

On a busy Shinjuku street in the early 1930s, a red windmill spun above a theatre that promised escape, laughter, and just enough danger...
Auntie Spices It Out
Commentary

Periods, Privacy And The Right To Education

February 2, 2026

I read the Supreme Court ruling and, for once, I didn’t feel like clapping politely from the feminist sidelines. I wanted to stand up, adjust my auntie red shawl, and say: finally. Finally, someone in power has said out loud what millions of girls have known in their bodies for decades — that periods are not a personal inconvenience, they are a structural issue. What struck me most was not the free sanitary pads, though God knows they matter. It was the language of dignity. Dignity is a big word...
Commentary

Tokyo Moulin Rouge: Women, War And Censorship

February 1, 2026

I have a deep, slightly obsessive love for Asian history—not the postcard version with temples at sunset and wise men dispensing aphorisms, but the messy, sweaty, power-soaked kind. The kind that, if you scratch just a little below the surface, reveals the same story over and over again: patriarchy changing uniforms, accents, and justifications, but never its core mission. Keep women in line. Control their bodies. Police their pleasure. Call it morality. What fascinates me is how creative this control has been. Imperial bureaucrats, military strongmen, colonial administrators, postwar reformers—different...
Commentary

A Pious Minister Says That Stress Makes You Gay

February 1, 2026

I laughed when I first read it. I really did. That sharp, involuntary laugh you make when the absurdity is almost elegant in its stupidity. Work stress makes you gay? Darling, if that were true, half of Asia’s middle management would be marching in Pride parades by now, waving rainbow lanyards and asking HR for trauma leave. The joke practically writes itself, and judging by Malaysian social media, the public got there very fast. But once the laughter fades, what’s left is not funny at all. I’m not surprised —...
Commentary

The Diplomatic Genius Of Asian ‘Aunties’

February 1, 2026

I have met this auntie everywhere in Asia. In Jakarta, she wears batik and pretends not to understand why a young woman “needs” to live alone, while quietly wiring her rent money every month. In Seoul, she clicks her tongue at an unmarried niece, then slips her a business card for a lawyer, a gynecologist, or a therapist she knows “just in case.” In Bangkok, she laughs loudly about farang men and loose morals, then watches the door while a girl packs her bags to leave a bad marriage. In...
Commentary

The Rise And Fall of Japanese Idol Girls

February 1, 2026

I have always been fascinated—not by the idols who “made it,” but by the thousands of girls who didn’t, and who were quietly taught that this was their fault. In Japan, the idol dream was sold to girls as something gentle and hopeful. No rebellion required. No broken rules. Just effort, smiles, and patience. Be cute, be grateful, be improving. Someone will notice. Someone will choose you. It was ambition without sharp edges, desire without teeth. And that, of course, is why it was allowed. What strikes me most, looking...
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