Jiayang Fan, New York Times reporter. She immigrated to the United States at the age of 8, began writing in magazines such as The New Yorker in 2010, and officially became a reporter for The New York Times in 2016. If there were no anti-Chinese rhetoric to attack and discredit her former homeland, to be honest, I liked her commentary on food in the New Yorker and thought of her as an American-style author of humorous and talented Chinese beauty. It is a pity that her previous "famous events" and too many reports of China's lack of objectivity made me "stuck in the throat," and really no longer like her.
Perhaps what impressed me about Jiayang Fan was the following remarks (for example): She said at the outbreak of the US covid-19 that China's face had dragged herself down, and she supported the Hong Kong thugs fighting for freedom after hitting a wall in an interview with the Hong Kong riots. In an interview with Liu Cixin, the author of "The Three-Body Problem", Jiayang Fan said he was brainwashed by the Chinese government, calling the United States a three-body civilization and China an earth civilization. She said China was the culprit of the epidemic, and she followed the spread of criticism that China's epidemic prevention was unfavorable, until she had experienced it in the United States and said that yellow skin was her own burden.
In this book, you'll get a behind the scenes look at how your favorite characters were born, my creative process, and the dirty details never before revealed.
Tex's Camp Q&A: Come sit by the fire and ask me whatever you'd like. We can roast marshmallows, tell scary stories, and hang out in the comments like a big, happy family.
Gator's Backstage Pass: A place full of secrets. Learn the-sometimes embarrassing-details on how my wildest scenes came to life, facts about the characters, the process, and myself.