Are you the new site manager or owner? I think not. You are the pot calling the kettle black, by the way. You…
Serpentza has brainwashed you. He uses propaganda and recycles video clips to make you believe the events are current when they are years old. He even uses videos from China towns in the USA and Hong Kong. If you go on YT do a search for Serpentza lies.
Shanghai held its inaugural Gay Pride Week last year from June 7-13, 2010 the first event of its kind staged on the Chinese mainland. There was no mass parade but 3,000 people attended the week long activities, which included art exhibitions, movie screenings and indoor parties.
Hong Kong held a similar festival in 2008. Beijing got involved last month with its Jing Pride. This saw drag queens and straight guys dressed as women raising money for AIDS charities and raising the profile of the conservative capital's LGBT community. Guangzhou recently, last year, had an LGBTQ event. I have had students who are openly gay/lesbian and nothing has happened to them. One of my co workers who came from Canada was Gay and found friends in the city we worked in.
Just because the shows are not on T.V does not mean they are banned outright in China. People can still download or watch online.
Does this site work for China? It's strange to me that they don't promote Japanese series but take care to promote…
Of course it works in China. I am teaching here and I see many Japanese and Korean movies and T.V series. China is not a dictatorship either but if you haven't been there you wouldn't know.
Is this the right movie? Or is there another movie with the same name? The actor shown on this article who played Wang Qu Qu was born in 1973 so he would have been 42 in this movie playing a teenager.
He even uses videos from China towns in the USA and Hong Kong.
If you go on YT do a search for Serpentza lies.
Shanghai held its inaugural Gay Pride Week last year from June 7-13, 2010 the first event of its kind staged on the Chinese mainland. There was no mass parade but 3,000 people attended the week long activities, which included art exhibitions, movie screenings and indoor parties.
Hong Kong held a similar festival in 2008. Beijing got involved last month with its Jing Pride. This saw drag queens and straight guys dressed as women raising money for AIDS charities and raising the profile of the conservative capital's LGBT community.
Guangzhou recently, last year, had an LGBTQ event.
I have had students who are openly gay/lesbian and nothing has happened to them. One of my co workers who came from Canada was Gay and found friends in the city we worked in.
Just because the shows are not on T.V does not mean they are banned
outright in China. People can still download or watch online.
China is not a dictatorship either but if you haven't been there you wouldn't know.
Didn't even bother to finish watching it.
Her profile says so.