
China's Investors Are Much Warier Now About Investing In A Kushner Family Project
"I became interested in this because the family is close to Trump — but now it seems that may not make a difference," one attendee told BuzzFeed News before the event.


"I became interested in this because the family is close to Trump — but now it seems that may not make a difference," one attendee told BuzzFeed News before the event.

The song is a direct remake of a Japanese song from the '70s that was criticized for sexism during the height of Japan's women's movement.

Whether you celebrate Spring Festival or not, this song will help you make it to the other side of any family gathering.

But people in China were wary about being too excited over the conclusions from Francis Fukuyama.

It only took them five years.

Clocks? Nope. Umbrella? Nope. Pears? YOU MONSTER.

Everything. Is. Soooooooooo. Wrong.


BuzzFeed News went through some of the Chinese government's state-run Twitter accounts to watch how China went from "gravely concerned" to just fed up.

Muscatine, Iowa, with its four Chinese restaurants, connection with Mark Twain, and scenic river view, is not exactly the place you’d expect to become a hub of Chinese culture for the Midwest — but that’s just what it’s trying to do.

The traditional red envelopes stuffed with cash are being replaced with apps that have families glued to their phones in hopes of a big payout.

The video, that was filmed in a Beijing store and managed to completely consume the Chinese internet, led to the arrest of at least four people, Beijing police said Sunday.

This year, the fiftieth anniversary of the start of one of China's most tumultuous periods, the government is urging everyone to "look to the future" — these seven people can't.

Photographer Bruno Barbey has been taking color photos of China — from its elites to its everyday citizens — since 1973.

It's still going to be demolished, despite the unblinking face of Xi Jinping warning against it.

A prominent women's rights expert launched an "Armpit Hair Competition" on Sina Weibo, a Chinese microblogging site. Now thousands of people are discussing whether it's OK for women to have hairy armpits.

The U.S. Supreme Court decision inspired them to seek their own version of a same-sex marriage, one bride said.

The only name mentioned in the alleged story is a Chinese phone-recycling company that is hiring people to run publicity stunts.

Among the banned songs are such classics as “3 2 1 I'm Sorry,” "I'm Going To School," "Those Who Get Rooms Together Aren't Always Couples," and "Fart."

Living the life of an ancient Chinese emperor's is no longer only the stuff of dreams — sort of.