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Ming Pao (Chinese: 明報) is a Chinese-language newspaper published by Media Chinese International in Hong Kong. In the 1990s, Ming Pao established four overseas branches in North America; each provides independent reporting on local news and collects local advertisements.
1995 – Ming Pao Enterprise Corporation was taken over by Tiong Hiew King; 1997 – Ming Pao Daily News expanded to New York; 2000 – Yahoo! took equity stake in mingpao.com; 2001 – 72.3% of Nanyang Press Holdings was bought by the Malaysian Chinese Association from the Hong Leong Group; 2004 – Ming Pao Daily News expanded to San Francisco
Ming Pao Monthly is not a radical journal with a clear advocacy, which is due to its creed of "independence, freedom, and tolerance". Ming Pao Monthly has been committed to the long-term exploration of certain academic topics such as Redology and Traditional Chinese Medicine versus Western Medicine. The journal's primary focus is on culture and ...
Ming Pao Daily: Print: Chinese Megafone Media Corp. Online: Chinese Omni Television: TV: Chinese Philippine Reporter: Print: Philippines Msimulizionline: Print & Enewspaper: East African/Swahili/English Russian Guide: Print: Russian Sing Tao Daily: Print: Chinese Thoi Bao: Print: Vietnamese The Weekender: Print: South Asian The Weekly Voice ...
Post-wedding rituals include the two single brothers or relatives of the bride giving the couple a wa-hoe set, which is a bouquet of flowers with umbrella and sewing kit, for which the bride gives an ang-pao in return. After three days, the couple then visits the bride's family, upon which a pair of sugar cane branch is given, which is a symbol ...
Sunday — Ming Pao Weekly (明報加東周刊), a tabloid-sized entertainment magazine with content covering the latest gossips in Hong Kong and Canadian entertainment industry. Sunday — Zhōnghuá Tànsuǒ (中華探索, "Exploring China"), a magazine containing political criticism from Hong Kong's Ming Pao Magazine and Yazhou Zhoukan
Go's father, Go Puan Seng, was the publisher of The Fookien Times, then the Philippines' largest Chinese-language newspaper which also published the Philippine edition of the Sing Tao, [6] and was a family friend of then Sing Tao Group's Sally Aw.
Zaobao is regarded as pro-Beijing by Western media outlets. [4] [11] The newspaper has included articles from pro-Beijing sources such as People's Daily, [12] HK01, Ming Pao, Global Times, [13] China Times and United Daily News. [14] It is one of the few foreign newspapers allowed in China, where all media is tightly controlled and content ...