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Mr. Popo (ミスター・ポポ, Misutā Popo) is a fictional character from the Dragon Ball manga series created by Akira Toriyama.Within the series, he is a genie who serves as the assistant to Earth's guardian deity and the caretaker of their residence, which is located high above the sky.
The show replaced the second half of the 7.00 pm drama timeslot, airing weekdays from 20 October 2014, 7.30 pm to 8.00 pm on weekdays making the 1st long form half an hour drama airing together with news-current affairs programme Hello Singapore at 6.30pm. It is the longest running Chinese drama produced by Mediacorp.
Tian Genzheng as Mr. Xing, a family who adopted Xi Zhu in the special episode (31). Zhang Hui as Mrs. Xing, a family who adopted Xi Zhu in the special episode (31). Yu Chun as Mr. Wan; Liu Jia as Mrs. Wan, a person whom Si Teng mistakenly thought that Bai Ying was possessed by her. Jiang Jinxu as Wan Jia's little daughter
Lie to Love (Chinese: 良言写意; pinyin: Liángyán xiěyì) is a 2021 Chinese television series based on a novel with the same title by Mu Fusheng, starring Luo Yunxi and Cheng Xiao. It aired in iQIYI and Tencent Video on 30 November until 27 December 2021 every Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays for 32 episodes.
Nothing Gold Can Stay (Chinese: 那年花开月正圆) is a 2017 Chinese television series directed by Ding Hei and starring Sun Li and Chen Xiao. [1] The series aired on Dragon TV and Jiangsu TV from 30 August 2017 to 8 October 2017. No official credit is given, however, it's clear the series borrows the title from a Robert Frost poem of the ...
Tears in Heaven (in Chinese:海上繁花; Hai Shang Bang Hua, also known as "My Dear Chief") in Spain, Tears in Heaven, in Mexico, Tears in Paradise is a Chinese television drama series based on the novel written by Fei Wo Si Cun and directed by Hua Qing.
The First Half of My Life (Chinese: 我的前半生; pinyin: Wǒ de Qiánbànshēng) is a 2017 Chinese television series based on Hong Kong novelist Yi Shu's novel of the same name and centers on a group of city dwellers who have to make choices about love and career. [2]
A Weibo user was quoted by the South China Morning Post: "Why did they take away this drama? [...] There are millions of reasons to cover their move, but the truth is that they are afraid of gay [issues]." [1] Chinese activist Li Maizi argued regarding the series' censorship: "The recent hit gay-themed Web dramas show that the LGBTQ market is ...