This boy is on fire: Vietnam drag queens electrify Hanoi
Makeup artist by day, cross-dresser by night, Betty is among a vanguard of Vietnamese drag queens shaking up Hanoi’s nightlife — and social norms — in a city where such performances remain
Makeup artist by day, cross-dresser by night, Betty is among a vanguard of Vietnamese drag queens shaking up Hanoi’s nightlife — and social norms — in a city where such performances remain
The owner insists she isn’t dining out on the Obama fame and has resisted offers from customers wanting to buy the table.
They all want to dip their spoon into Obama’s noodle bowl.
In the waning years of the 19th century, the great powers of Europe were in the thick of their empire-building spree. The competition was often unruly.
I have been following an American TV comedy series. It is about this girl from Manhattan who was dragged by her father to move to the suburbs, in a town
Unsurprisingly, the cheapest international flights are those that leave Manila at midnight. Which means you arrive, fuzzy-haired, at some strange airport during witching hour, and you’re not sure whether the folks at immigration are squinting suspiciously at you and your passport photo or just trying to fend off sleep.
Thirty-seven years after the end of the Vietnam War, the country’s cultural and official capital, Hanoi, still seems mysterious to many Filipinos.
The latest in global fashion, beauty, and culture through a contemporary Filipino perspective.
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