A recent survey showed that around 91 percent of respondents have changed their eating habits during the COVID-19 epidemic, the China Youth Daily reported Thursday.
Cautious reopening of businesses, recreational spots and major scenic attractions across the country, has boded well for China's hard-hit tourism industry that is desperate to cater to surging domestic travel demands.
Jiang Mingtao, a ginseng farmer in Marathon County in the US state of Wisconsin, has maintained the daily routine of taking care of his ginseng fields, weeding and spreading hay to prevent small animals from digging and eating the crop.
Tourist sites in Hubei province rebounded in business after scrapping entrance fees for domestic visitors, a token of gratitude for nationwide assistance during the COVID-19 outbreak.
Viktor & Rolf's autumn/winter 2020 collection combines fantasy and creativity reflective of pandemic times
The 10th Beijing International Film Festival, a highly anticipated event expected to boost the recovery of Chinese film industry, will show more than 300 movies, with around 100 titles released in 18 cinemas, said the organizers on Thursday.
Okay, I've done it. Finally! I've gone boldly where no colleague or friend in Beijing has presumably gone since the COVID-19 outbreak.
Theaters will limit their attendance per show to 50 percent of capacity with no adjacent seating, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism announced on Monday.
Li Haichao, vice-president of Peking University First Hospital, and his team have kept their habit of meeting daily at 7 pm since returning from Wuhan, Hubei province, in April.
On Aug 8, the NCPA Orchestra performed under the baton of conductor Zhang Yi. Featured pieces were Bach’s Busoni-Chaconne in D minor BWV 1004, Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg’s Lyric Piecesand Czech composer Bedřich Smetana’s Má vlast (My Motherland).
In February, Wu Qi, associate editor-in-chief of Sanlian Life Week, posted a handwritten mind map on Sina Weibo, sharing with her young daughter how she deals with misfortune.
In what critics are hailing as a further sign of the gradual recovery of the world's second-biggest box office market, following the downturn caused by the COVID-19 epidemic, an increasing number of major film productions are unveiling their theatrical release dates for China.