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Feature image of Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

2 mins read

2 mins read

Feature image of Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

Our photo theme this week: Singles’ Day Fever. Wild ads, e-commerce madness and other virtual ephemera surrounding the consumer-tastic November 11 holiday for all the lonely hearts out there.

Omg, it’s Singles’ Week!

Singles’ Day, if you don’t know, is a holiday celebrated on November Eleventh (11/11) that started on college campuses in Nanjing the early ’90s and in recent years has been transformed into a bona fide cultural event. What once was kind of an internet joke, and then became a pretty huge marketing plank for Chinese e-commerce giants like Alibaba and JD.com, is now a made-up holiday that dwarfs the West’s two biggest shopping days (Black Friday and Cyber Monday) in terms of money changing hands online:

According to Fortune, in the U.S. “Cyber Monday 2016 was the biggest day in the history of U.S. e-commerce,” hitting $3.45 billion, to follow up Black Friday’s online sales of $2.72 billion. However, Cyber Monday and Black Friday combined were dwarfed a few weeks earlier on November 11 when China’s Singles’ Day saw $17.8 billion changing hands.

This year, Singles’ Day kicked off almost two weeks in advance with offline specials tying in to Alibaba founder Jack Ma’s “new retail” model: brick-and-mortar stores with no cash and no cashiers.

And pre-gaming a consumer spectacle weeks in advance is not the only move that Singles’ Day has cribbed out of the Western holiday playbook: it’s also blanketed China’s major cities in ads. So we’ll kick off this week’s photo series with one of a few bus stop spots I’ve seen from T Mall — Alibaba’s Amazon-like marketplace for brands to set up official stores — visually celebrating the wonderful bounty there to be picked up at a discount by the singles with expendable cash.

VR is a good choice for singles, for obvious reasons.

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Feature image of Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

2 mins read

Our photo theme this week: Singles’ Day Fever. Wild ads, e-commerce madness and other virtual ephemera surrounding the consumer-tastic November 11 holiday for all the lonely hearts out there.

Omg, it’s Singles’ Week!

Singles’ Day, if you don’t know, is a holiday celebrated on November Eleventh (11/11) that started on college campuses in Nanjing the early ’90s and in recent years has been transformed into a bona fide cultural event. What once was kind of an internet joke, and then became a pretty huge marketing plank for Chinese e-commerce giants like Alibaba and JD.com, is now a made-up holiday that dwarfs the West’s two biggest shopping days (Black Friday and Cyber Monday) in terms of money changing hands online:

According to Fortune, in the U.S. “Cyber Monday 2016 was the biggest day in the history of U.S. e-commerce,” hitting $3.45 billion, to follow up Black Friday’s online sales of $2.72 billion. However, Cyber Monday and Black Friday combined were dwarfed a few weeks earlier on November 11 when China’s Singles’ Day saw $17.8 billion changing hands.

This year, Singles’ Day kicked off almost two weeks in advance with offline specials tying in to Alibaba founder Jack Ma’s “new retail” model: brick-and-mortar stores with no cash and no cashiers.

And pre-gaming a consumer spectacle weeks in advance is not the only move that Singles’ Day has cribbed out of the Western holiday playbook: it’s also blanketed China’s major cities in ads. So we’ll kick off this week’s photo series with one of a few bus stop spots I’ve seen from T Mall — Alibaba’s Amazon-like marketplace for brands to set up official stores — visually celebrating the wonderful bounty there to be picked up at a discount by the singles with expendable cash.

VR is a good choice for singles, for obvious reasons.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

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Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Feature image of Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

2 mins read

2 mins read

Feature image of Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

Our photo theme this week: Singles’ Day Fever. Wild ads, e-commerce madness and other virtual ephemera surrounding the consumer-tastic November 11 holiday for all the lonely hearts out there.

Omg, it’s Singles’ Week!

Singles’ Day, if you don’t know, is a holiday celebrated on November Eleventh (11/11) that started on college campuses in Nanjing the early ’90s and in recent years has been transformed into a bona fide cultural event. What once was kind of an internet joke, and then became a pretty huge marketing plank for Chinese e-commerce giants like Alibaba and JD.com, is now a made-up holiday that dwarfs the West’s two biggest shopping days (Black Friday and Cyber Monday) in terms of money changing hands online:

According to Fortune, in the U.S. “Cyber Monday 2016 was the biggest day in the history of U.S. e-commerce,” hitting $3.45 billion, to follow up Black Friday’s online sales of $2.72 billion. However, Cyber Monday and Black Friday combined were dwarfed a few weeks earlier on November 11 when China’s Singles’ Day saw $17.8 billion changing hands.

This year, Singles’ Day kicked off almost two weeks in advance with offline specials tying in to Alibaba founder Jack Ma’s “new retail” model: brick-and-mortar stores with no cash and no cashiers.

And pre-gaming a consumer spectacle weeks in advance is not the only move that Singles’ Day has cribbed out of the Western holiday playbook: it’s also blanketed China’s major cities in ads. So we’ll kick off this week’s photo series with one of a few bus stop spots I’ve seen from T Mall — Alibaba’s Amazon-like marketplace for brands to set up official stores — visually celebrating the wonderful bounty there to be picked up at a discount by the singles with expendable cash.

VR is a good choice for singles, for obvious reasons.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

RADII NEWSLETTER

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Feature image of Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

Photo of the day: Who Needs a Mate When You Have VR?

2 mins read

Our photo theme this week: Singles’ Day Fever. Wild ads, e-commerce madness and other virtual ephemera surrounding the consumer-tastic November 11 holiday for all the lonely hearts out there.

Omg, it’s Singles’ Week!

Singles’ Day, if you don’t know, is a holiday celebrated on November Eleventh (11/11) that started on college campuses in Nanjing the early ’90s and in recent years has been transformed into a bona fide cultural event. What once was kind of an internet joke, and then became a pretty huge marketing plank for Chinese e-commerce giants like Alibaba and JD.com, is now a made-up holiday that dwarfs the West’s two biggest shopping days (Black Friday and Cyber Monday) in terms of money changing hands online:

According to Fortune, in the U.S. “Cyber Monday 2016 was the biggest day in the history of U.S. e-commerce,” hitting $3.45 billion, to follow up Black Friday’s online sales of $2.72 billion. However, Cyber Monday and Black Friday combined were dwarfed a few weeks earlier on November 11 when China’s Singles’ Day saw $17.8 billion changing hands.

This year, Singles’ Day kicked off almost two weeks in advance with offline specials tying in to Alibaba founder Jack Ma’s “new retail” model: brick-and-mortar stores with no cash and no cashiers.

And pre-gaming a consumer spectacle weeks in advance is not the only move that Singles’ Day has cribbed out of the Western holiday playbook: it’s also blanketed China’s major cities in ads. So we’ll kick off this week’s photo series with one of a few bus stop spots I’ve seen from T Mall — Alibaba’s Amazon-like marketplace for brands to set up official stores — visually celebrating the wonderful bounty there to be picked up at a discount by the singles with expendable cash.

VR is a good choice for singles, for obvious reasons.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

NEWSLETTER

Get weekly top picks and exclusive, newsletter only content delivered straight to you inbox.

Faed13eb14ea23df053d7983500766f0

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Titillate your taste buds with coverage of the best food and drink trends from China and beyond

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Unpacking Chinese youth culture through coverage of nightlife, film, sports, celebrities, and the hottest new music

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