"Peach Blossom Utopia" received the Best Short Film Award at the 2006 Handsome Monkey Animation Awards in China. In the same year, at the DigiCon 6+2 Contest sponsored by Japan Tokyo Broadcasting System, Inc., it received the First Place Golden Award.
Meet three underprivileged children from the countryside, all of whom share a love for reading.
A simple simulation shows that even a low-speed rear-end collision has the potential to cause severe injury for passengers without a safety cushion.
The Family Chronicles Oral History Photo and Video Project inspires young people to dig deep and learn about their family history.
Art helps one to understand how other people feel.
If something is meant to be, then what is yours is yours.
Cherish everything that you encountered, because you might never see it again.
The joy of collecting comes from when someone can resonate with you through his/her work.
Your collection can be anything that is meaningful to you.
Sometimes you might need to give up what you love but then you can cherish it in another way.
Collecting is hard. One must know how to pick out the classics that will last in order to be called a real "collector".
Yao Chien is a famous lyricist in the Chinese music industry. This interview talks about his other hidden identity as a collector.
The artist talks about how in his day conversation was more lively and people weren't looking at their phones all the time.
The artist talks about how art progresses and how that progression has to move slowly.
This story is about Han Prime Minister Cao Cao's six-year-old son, Cao Chong (196 to 208 B.C.). The theory this little boy used to weigh an elephant is similar to Archimedes' Principle (287 to 212 B.C.), which is that the weight of an object submerged in fluid is equal to the weight of the displaced fluid.
This idiom indicates that something seemingly bad may turn out to have been a good thing in the end, a blessing in disguise. The story in the video explains it quite well. And, while the idiom can also have the opposite meaning (a good thing becoming something bad), the former is more frequently used.
There are many different Chinese idioms out there that people use today in modern Chinese. "Dui Niu Tan Qin" literally means, "Playing the Zither for a Cow." It means that some people will just never understand or appreciate certain things.
This video concerns one of the stories from the very famous Chinese novel, "Journey to the West." It informs us from where the idiom, "to wolf down your food," originates.
This Chinese legend sheds light on the origin of the famous saying, "How you treat others is how you will be treated." It involves the famous and influential Chinese philosopher, Mencius, giving sage advice to a king during the Warring States period.
Learn the story behind the saying, "To kill two birds with one stone."
Find out how a passage from Cao Pi inspired the saying "to draw cakes to allay hunger" (To comfort oneself with illusions).
A strange tale begins when a fight breaks out on a bus between an old man who lifts up a young woman's skirt and her boyfriend. When the old man begins foaming at the mouth, things get pretty weird...
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