Our host talks to a woman who is going to meet up with her online gaming friends, friends she's never met in real life. Once the business dies down a bit, our host and the boss play some games together.
Our host is getting sleepy as the night continues. He talks to a high schooler who's at the internet cafe very late. The high schooler talks to the host about his family situation and how he comes to the internet cafe to listen to music and get away from it all.
Our host barely makes it through the night as even the early morning customers start to come in. He expresses his thanks to the boss and the staff and sums up his new understanding of the world of internet cafes in China.
Captain Han and his team lie in wait for the grave robbers. What was it about the tombs that made him take their ransacking so seriously?
Captain Han comes up with an idea to ensnare the culprits in the case by having Xiong make a call to one of them, but things don't go according to plan.
Lv is taken in for questioning, but there's something about his story and that of his accomplice, Qiu, that doesn't quite add up.
We learn the ingenious way that the urn was filled with wine and begin the remarkable story of how it came to be housed in the Shanxi History Museum.
The series of coincidences that led to the true value of the urn being discovered are revealed.
What would the ancient poet, Libai, have had to say about the magnificent celadon urn, especially given his predilection for alcohol?
These drum performers have brought to the "Heritage" stage the traditions of China's villagers.
This is an introduction to the Panzhongxi, a type of folk art that exists in the Beijing hutongs.
This video introduces the famous Siheyuan number 42, once home to famous scholar from Fu Jen Catholic University.
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