Featured Stories

  • Can AI speak the language Japan tried to kill?

    More than a century after colonisation, the Ainu language almost vanished. Now machines are listening to hours of old recordings and learning to give it a new voice | BBC Future

  • What happened to China’s fake Van Goghs?

    Dafen once produced 60 per cent of the world’s oil paintings—now this village of copyists is under threat | Financial Times

  • The Women Who Fought Japan’s Empire

    Japanese colonialism is infamous for its brutalization of women, abducted and forced into sex slavery. Less known is women’s role in fighting against the Japanese Empire, brilliantly brought to life in two recent novels | Jacobin

  • How a dog stolen from China sparked a British luxury craze

    Meet “Looty,” a dog stolen by the British in the looting of China’s Old Summer Palace and gifted to the queen. Her journey sparked a craze–and left behind a legacy mired in imperialism and racism | CNN

  • ‘It’s difficult to survive’: China’s LGBTQ+ advocates​ face jail and forced confession

    Trans and queer people and their supporters suffer ‘systemic persecution’ as country pushes increasingly conservative values | The Guardian

  • Planning my multicultural wedding was already difficult. Finding a dress was even harder

    I wrote about how my wedding dress anxieties became less about the look itself, and more about what it had come to represent—my identity in a mixed-race marriage | CNN

  • Deported to a Country You Can’t Remember

    The Biden administration sent Phoeun You, a former child refugee, to Cambodia after more than four decades in the US | The Nation

  • China’s war on Christmas hasn’t deterred kids from sending thousands of letters to Santa

    One Christmas, 12-year-old Wang’s classmate died of cancer. It was the first time one of her friends had passed away, and she wasn’t sure how to feel. Wang had written a letter to Santa the year before, so she decided to sit down and write another | Quartz

  • Myanmar’s Women Are on the Front Lines Against the Junta

    Protesters are using the military's fear of women against it | Foreign Policy

  • “We’re All Chinese, Aren’t We?”

    Jessie Lau ponders Emily Feng’s “Let Only Red Flowers Bloom: Identity and Belonging in Xi Jinping’s China” | LA Review of Books

  • Hong Kong Is Still Waiting for Its Feminist Uprising

    Women and girls in the ongoing protest movement are up against a deeply unequal society | The Nation

  • The Ghost Villages: A Guide to Hong Kong’s Abandoned Hakka Settlements

    Just a short minibus ride from the MTR, the rich history of Hakka villages lies in ruins along the Starling Inlet | Zolima Citymag


Films

I love exploring new and creative forms of storytelling. In recent years, I’ve worked on investigative documentaries as a multimedia reporter, producer, narrator, presenter, translator, fixer and researcher. Following the detention of China’s prominent #MeToo journalist Sophia Huang Xueqin in 2021, I fronted the BBC Eye documentary “China’s Silenced Feminist” investigating her “disappearance.” Watch it on YouTube or BBC iPlayer (UK access) I also executive-produced, reported and narrated the short film “China’s Feminist Fightback,” which explains the country’s dynamic feminist movement. It aired on the Channel 4 News show “Uncovered” on Facebook Watch.

Podcasts

I’m co-host of the NüVoices podcast, a biweekly show featuring interviews with women and gender minorities working on China related topics. Since we launched in Beijing in 2021, the podcast has been downloaded more than 40,000 times. The show is a part of NüVoices collective, a US-based non-profit with chapters across the world including in Britain, where I serve as head of the London chapter. Listen to all our episodes here.

Audio Block
Double-click here to upload or link to a .mp3. Learn more

The Guardian

Financial Times

BBC

LA Review of Books

The Economist

CNN

Times Literary Supplement

WIRED Magazine

The Guardian • Financial Times • BBC • LA Review of Books • The Economist • CNN • Times Literary Supplement • WIRED Magazine •

Portfolio

Deported to a Country You Can’t Remember
Jessie Lau Jessie Lau

Deported to a Country You Can’t Remember

Former child refugee Phoeun You was paroled from California’s San Quentin State Prison in 2021–only to be deported to Cambodia. He’s free, but can’t return to the only home he remembers

Read More