video journalist, producer

podcast

 podcast

Bianca hosts and produces World Journal’s Mandarin podcast, World Journal On Air (世界OnAir), where she speaks to experts and reporters to help make sense of current events, answering the whys and what-nexts.

 

Lahaina’s historical Wo Hing Museum burned to the ground in deadly Maui fire. Museum docent on how she escaped.

I brought glove puppetry from Taiwan to the streets of NYC

I know people living inside Cambodia's scam operations. This is what they told me.

Enemy or friend? When AIGC becomes this powerful, will illustrators lose their jobs?

"My hometown is a ghost town." A heartfelt conversation with Taiwanese author Kevin Chen.

How to prevent deadly crowd crush accidents like the one in Itaewon, Seoul from happening again, according to an emergency management expert.

I quit my job as a doctor and become a ginseng farmer in Wisconsin.

Russia just opened fire in Ukraine. A Chinese international student has chosen to stay and help others evacuate.

Bhutanese feature film Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom was nominated for an Oscars. What does it mean for Bhutan? In conversation with Bhutanese director Pawo Choyning Dorji.

What is it like to be a Chinese stand-up comedian in Texas?

He escaped the falling World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. “It’s about time I move on.”

The Chinese businessman who decided to stay in Kabul, Afghanistan after the Taliban takeover.

Inside the life of a forensic psychologist, and what it’s like to talk to maximum facility prisoners.

As a physical therapist for the indigenous people in Canada, she’s heard too many heartbreaking stories from their dark days in Indian residential schools.

How to understand the Israeli-Palestinian conflicts? This Palestinian social movement scholar tries to find the answer.

A healthcare reporter helps us dissect the reasons behind Taiwan’s second Covid-19 outbreak.

Sex, racism and massage parlors… The dark side of the Atlanta shootings.

The death of three girls in a foreign land, and what we learned from their tragedy.