Festivals Without Borders: The Cultural Tapestry in Singapore

Where can you find glittering Christmas lights twinkle beside the soft, warm glow of red lanterns? In Singapore, it is a familiar sight. Streets come alive with doors draped in Christmas wreaths, the rhythmic energy of dragon dances, children in Halloween costumes weaving past homes bright with Deepavali colours, and markets overflowing with festive treats from every culture imaginable. Here, holidays coexist; they overlap, mix and evolve seamlessly, creating a vibrant cultural tapestry that is unique.

Where Christmas Meets the Tropics: Fiji’s Festive Traditions

While a typical “white Christmas” is associated with snow, fireplaces, and America’s favourite evergreen trees, Fiji is centred on Christian worship, with special church services, nativity plays, and carolling filling Christmas Eve and Day. Christmas is one of the three most significant holidays in Fiji, rooted in the early Christianization of the islands and evolving into a versatile festival of togetherness, food, and fellowship.

Goodbye Hawkins: A Final Look at the Duffer Brothers’ Last Stand

10 years of production, 42 episodes, over 50 credited performers, and a budget of $480 million on season five alone. Stranger Things has certainly evolved. From its beginnings as a dubious proposition, rejected countless times by numerous networks, to shaping a devoted fan base driven by their appetence for nostalgia and the innovative spin the show takes from conventional storytelling. The Duffer Brothers were able to span the multigenerational divide with the program’s meticulous recreation of the 1980s, depicting the era’s aesthetics, music, fashion and making artful allusions to the pop culture at the time.

Why Is Japan’s Christmas a “Second Valentine’s Day”, and What Are Its Other Traditions?

Japan is known for its unique take on Christmas – a secular, commercial, and romantic holiday. But what are its origins? Why is it celebrated as yet another Valentine’s Day? Today, very few Japanese are Christian, mainly due to the historic policies of the ruling shogunate, which saw Christianity as a political threat to its authority and national stability, leading to its brutal suppression and a nationwide ban for over 250 years.