Home >Arts & Life
  1 of 2
Zou Hong/China Daily
Hong Huang, media personality extraordinaire, is also one of the most fervent advocates of the Made-in-China talent.
A brand new China
By Chen Nan
Published: Aug 29 2010 2:53
Email | Print | Share Text Size 

Hong Huang, also known as Huang Hung, is an author, television talk show host and magazine publisher. Her personal blog has attracted over 100 million hits while some 800,000 fans follow her micro blog. The chief executive of China Interactive Media Group has also starred in a movie and published three books. But most of all, she is a strong advocate of the Made in China brand.

Now she is about to break new ground with the opening of a 540 square-meter shop in Sanlitun Village, Beijing. Brand New China (BNC) will gather about 150 young Chinese designers, showcasing their clothes, accessories and furniture.

"BNC will show off China's up and coming designers to expatriates shoppers and excite local fashion followers," Hong says.

She has consistently spoken up for local designers and local brands and many talented young Chinese have been featured in her magazine iLook. The publication was founded in 1998 as a slick luxury goods periodical and now boasts a readership of nearly 60,000.

Related Articles
    Today in Arts & Design

    "The magazine has focused on one or two local designers in every issue since it was launched. And as the designers grow in influence among consumers, we need to make sure they have more direct access to the public," she says.

    For the interview, the 50-year-old media entrepreneur was outfitted in a loose Chinese-style dress paired with shiny leggings and sandals. She has always managed to present a sharp perspective few others can claim, especially on the cross-cultural gap between East and West, often stirring up controversy with her straightforward comments.

    "I've always been intrigued by why a talented Chinese designer has never made it to the West, never broken through to international markets," says Hong.

    She herself has straddled cultures, having grown up in New York city. She was sent there at the age of 14 by her late mother, Zhang Hanzhi, a former Chinese diplomat who once served as Chairman Mao's English tutor.

    "You can't ignore these designers anymore. The economy is booming. I think Asian designers, especially Chinese ones, are ready to take their rightful places on the world stage. They have been widely exposed to the West and they have their own ideas on fashion," she says.

    Among those Hong praises is Wei Ming hui, who speaks for eco-fashion and was talent-spotted by iLook years ago.

    Readers' Comments
    Add Your Comment