2023 Year of the Rabbit

Lunar New Year is now a state holiday in California
Ryan General
16 mins ago

California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Assembly Bill (AB) 2596 on Friday, officially making Lunar New Year a state holiday.

The new state law, authored by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell), authorizes any state employee to receive eight hours of holiday credit rather than personal holiday credit and utilize eight hours of vacation, annual leave or compensating time off to observe the Lunar New Year.

The Lunar New Year, which usually takes place at the end of January or beginning of February, is predominantly celebrated by Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese and other Asian communities.

“Recognizing this day as a state holiday acknowledges the diversity and cultural significance Asian Americans bring to California and provides an opportunity for all Californians to participate in the significance of the Lunar New Year,” Newsom said.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom has signed a bill officially recognizing Lunar New Year as a state holiday.

Assembly Bill (AB) 2596, authored by Assemblymember Evan Low (D-Campbell), was among the number of bills Newsom passed before the Friday midnight deadline.

The new state law authorizes any state employee to receive eight hours of holiday credit rather than personal holiday credit and utilize eight hours of vacation, annual leave or compensating time off to observe the Lunar New Year.

With the addition of the Lunar New Year, California now has three new state holidays, including Juneteenth and Genocide Remembrance Day.

“The Lunar New Year celebrates a chance to leave behind the troubles of the past year and invite prosperity and good luck moving forward,” Newsom wrote in his signing message. “Recognizing this day as a state holiday acknowledges the diversity and cultural significance Asian Americans bring to California and provides an opportunity for all Californians to participate in the significance of the Lunar New Year.”

According to Newsom, he is “immensely proud of the richness of diversity and backgrounds represented in our state and understand the importance of wanting to see one’s own experience reflected in state holidays.”

The Lunar New Year, which usually takes place at the end of January or the beginning of February, is predominantly celebrated by Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese and other Asian communities. Based on the lunar calendar, the special event marks the arrival of spring.

Earlier this year, Rep. Grace Meng (D-N.Y.) introduced a new bill that would recognize Lunar New Year as a federal holiday in the U.S.

Featured Image via CGTN America

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Johnnie Walker Blue Label Year of the Rabbit.

Johnnie Walker Unveils 2022 Lunar New Year Bottle
By Kyle Swartz - November 28, 2022

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Year of the Rabbit.

Johnnie Walker has unveiled their 2022 Johnnie Walker Blue Label Lunar New Year Limited Edition Design, featuring art from Shanghai-based fashion designer Angel Chen.

The label for the Year of the Rabbit shows a “dynamic, modern interpretation” of 2023’s Zodiac animal, the rabbit, the company says. The rabbit signifies longevity in traditional Asian culture, and as an echo of the Johnnie Walker motto, Keep Walking, rabbits are shown hopping among mountains, the company adds.

Chen, who studied fashion in the Central Saint Martin College of Art (London), says, “There’s a defiant energy to my illustrations which bring to life the vibrant spirit of the rabbit as it leaps across the design, symbolizing how we need to keep moving forward, spreading goodness throughout the year to come.”

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Johnnie Walker Blue Label Year of the Rabbit, 40% ABV, is available now at retailers until supplies last. It has a suggested retail price of $275 per 750-ml. bottle.

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the black rabbit year you say…
I need to get myself one as a pet)

Rabbit stamps

Dec. 12, 2022

USPS Gets Festive With a Lunar New Year Stamp

What:
The U.S. Postal Service will commemorate the Lunar New Year in San Francisco with the unveiling of the Year of the Rabbit Forever stamp.

The first-day-of-issue event for the stamp is free and open to the public. News of the stamp is being shared with the hashtags #LunarNewYear and #LunarNewYearRabbit.

Who:
The Honorable Derek Kan, governor, U.S. Postal Service Board of Governors

The Honorable London N. Breed, mayor, San Francisco

The Honorable Fiona Ma, state treasurer, California

Jay Xu, director, Asian Art Museum

When:
Thursday, Jan. 12, 2023, at 11 a.m. PST

Where:
Asian Art Museum
200 Larkin Street
San Francisco, CA 94102

RSVP:
Dedication ceremony attendees are encouraged to RSVP at: usps.com/lunarnewyearrabbit.

Background:
The Postal Service will issue the latest Lunar New Year stamp celebrating the Year of the Rabbit. This stamp design calls to mind the elaborately decorated masks used in the dragon or lion dances often performed in Lunar New Year parades. This three-dimensional mask depicting a rabbit is a contemporary take on the long tradition of paper-cut folk art crafts created during this auspicious time of year. The rabbit mask design incorporates colors and patterns with symbolic meaning.

Art director Antonio Alcalá designed the stamp and the pane with original art by Camille Chew.

The Year of the Rabbit stamp is being issued in panes of 20. It will always be equal in value to the current First-Class Mail 1-ounce price.

Lunar New Year is one of the most important holidays of the year for many Asian communities around the world and is primarily celebrated by people of Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese, Tibetan, Mongolian, Malaysian and Filipino heritage. Across these varied cultures, many traditions exist for ringing in a new year of good luck and prosperity.

I like the crescent moon. “In the name of the moon, I will punish you!”

2023 Year of the Rabbit films

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Everything Under Control
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The Wandering Earth II

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2023 The Year of the Rabbit ~ My Latest Feature for YMAA

2023 The Year of the Rabbit ~ My Latest Feature for YMAA

Hop up Pop up

Dec 21, 2022
2 min read
Lunar New Year White Rabbit hops into Pacific Place


Artist’s impression of the Lunar New Year decorations at the Garden Court, Pacific Place.

We know, we know, Christmas has barely begun, but already we’re plunging into Lunar New Year.

Pacific Place is getting ahead of the game and has now released details of its Lunar New Year decorations.

This year China celebrates the year of the rabbit and of course symbolic associations with China’s iconic White Rabbit Creamy Candy sweets are perhaps inevitable. White Rabbit candy is a brand of milk sweet that has been produced in China since the 1940s. Today the sweets are China’s top brand of candy; such is their popularity over the years, they have even been gifted by China to an American president.

Pacific Place will be collaborating with the candy brand throughout Lunar New Year with an exclusive pop-up store which opens in early January.


Try a new sweet flavour at the White Rabbit Creamy Candy pop-up.

The pop-up will be launching a new mango flavour of the much-loved White Rabbit sweet for the first time in Hong Kong, along with limited White Rabbit-themed merchandise. Visitors to the pop-up will also be able to sample flavours including red bean and coffee.

And this year’s festive decorations at Pacific Place sees fluffy rabbits jumping through a contemporary Chinese landscape surrounded by peach blossoms and greenery.

Celebrations for what is the year of the Water Rabbit will continue throughout January and February in Hong Kong and China. The sign of the rabbit is a symbol of longevity, peace and prosperity in Chinese culture. People born in the year of the rabbit (2023, 2011, 1999, 1987, 1975, 1963, 1951, etc.) are said to be witty, quick-minded and ingenious.

The White Rabbit Creamy Candy pop-up store and Lunar New Year festive installation will be open from January 10 to February 5, 2023, Pacific Place shopping mall, Admiralty, Hong Kong. Lunar New Year falls on Sunday January 22 with public holidays in Hong Kong on January 23, 24 and 25, 2023.

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Y’all want a creamy candy facial…doncha?

Beauty & Grooming 06 Jan 2023 05:00 PM[URL=“https://www.lifestyleasia.com/hk/beauty-grooming/skincare/sk-ii-white-rabbit-candy-chinese-new-year-collaboration/”]
SK-II rings in Chinese New Year with a White Rabbit candy collab
CHARMAINE NG
Editor

Feeling a little hungry, a little nostalgic with this new release.

We’ve seen plenty of beauty and food brands work together over the years, with high-profile launches including Etude House x Hershey’s, The Face Shop x Coca Cola and even Fenty Beauty x HEYTEA. SK-II’s new Chinese New Year release, though, may just be the best collab yet, especially for us Hongkongers.

To celebrate the Year of the Rabbit, the beauty giant’s cult-favourite PITERA Facial Treatment Essence has been given a new, time-limited look featuring the iconic White Rabbit. Tapping into our childhood nostalgia, the facial essence dons an all-white exterior, replicating the coat of a white rabbit, and is patterned with the candy brand’s recognisable red and blue shades.

To accompany the special-edition bottle, SK-II has prepared matching red lai see packets covered in White Rabbit graphics. Get your hands on them with each purchase of the PITERA Facial Treatment Essence x White Rabbit product at selected stores in Hong Kong.

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incensed… good one

[URL=“https://hongkongfp.com/2023/01/16/poor-taste-thai-kfc-fans-incensed-by-now-deleted-lunar-new-year-promo/”]
Poor taste? Thai KFC fans incensed by now-deleted Lunar New Year promo
Incense has multiple ceremonial uses in Chinese culture, including to honour the dead.

by HONG KONG FREE PRESS
09:00, 16 JANUARY 2023

Fast food giant KFC has incensed its Thai customers with a now-deleted Lunar New Year promo which many found to be in poor taste.


Photo: KFC Thailand via Instagram.
Ahead of the festive season, the eatery shared an Instagram promotion for its new fried chicken incense sticks. It is unclear if the product was real, but each stick reportedly contained 11 herbs and spices to mimic the smell of its fried food, according to news portal Thaiger.

Incense has multiple ceremonial uses in Chinese culture, including to honour the dead.

“[O]ur ancestor can enjoy the scent of KFC…” wrote one Instagram commenter. “That’s so inappropriate,” wrote another user.

“So many things wrong with this. You’d that they would know Chinese culture better,” one Twitter reaction read.

Ho Ching, the wife of Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien, was among those who shared the promotional material, accompanied by the exclamation: “Wah…”

The blunder comes a year after UK newspaper the Observer faced flak for using Chinese funeral joss paper in a “cursed” Lunar New Year food feature.

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Blanc de Blancs = white rabbit?

Year of the Rabbit 2019
The “Year of the Rabbit” celebrates the Rabbit, the 4th of the 12 animals in the Chinese zodiac. It is a vintage Blanc de Blancs, made from a single vineyard Chardonnay block on our Thomas Road Vineyard. The Rabbit symbolizes hope, long life, tenderness and beauty. Rabbit years include 1939, 1950, 1963, 1975, 1987, 1999, 2011, 2023 making this the perfect gift for anyone expecting a baby … and for those celebrating a milestone birthday, like turning 60.

$75.00
Bottle (750 ML)
$900.00
Case (12 bottles)

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2023 Kung Fu Horoscopes

2023 Year of the Water Hare by Wilson Sun (with Gigi Oh and Gene Ching)

New Gods: Yang Jian - Exclusive Clip (2023) Wang Kai, Ji Guanlin

//youtu.be/0amPA6Fr0to

official site

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2023 Year of the Rabbit

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Deep Sea
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Support our forum and buy some!

NEW for 2023 - Year of the Rabbit T-Shirts & Hoodies!

Hoppy New Year!

Hoppy New Year! Read New Gods for a Lunar New Year: A Guide to China’s Light Chaser Fantasy Films ~ My Latest Review for Den of Geek

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Green Snake aka White Snake 2
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Live: CGTN Super Night – 2023 Spring Festival special

//youtu.be/PwgJ3CsfWZg

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Lunar New Year mass shooting in California traumatizes Asian Americans already on edge
Families who started the night celebrating a major Asian holiday in Monterey Park, California, are now devastated by trauma and grief.
Dion Lim Opinion contributor

As we grapple with the tragedy of 10 killed in a mass shooting during Lunar New Year celebrations in Monterey Park, California, I encourage the public to see horrific events like these through a different lens.

Whether this is deemed a hate crime or not, there are families grieving on what is supposed to be a day symbolizing a new, prosperous beginning. No matter who the shooter was, families who started the night celebrating a major Asian holiday are now shattered with trauma and grief.

This attack is not helping the Asian American community already on edge from hate violence that started during the COVID-19 pandemic and is still continuing. The best we can do is to continue the momentum of sharing these stories and continuing the oftentimes painful discussions so that not just our community, but also those who do not look like us, understand that the virus of hate is still alive in America today.

Lunar New Year celebration brought thousands to Monterey Park

Monterey Park, a city of 60,000 east of Los Angeles, is 65% Asian American, 27% Latino and 6% white, according to census data.

Authorities on Sunday released photos of the male Asian suspect who hit the Star Ballroom Dance Studio on Saturday night, killing five men and five women. Ten survivors were rushed to the hospital, some in critical condition. The shooting took place shortly after a Lunar New Year celebration brought thousands of people to the city, where many shops feature signs in English and Chinese.


People watch police near the Star Ballroom Dance Studio in Monterey Park, Calif., on Jan. 22, 2023, the morning after a gunman killed 10 and injured 10.

About 20 minutes after the shooting, L.A. County Sheriff Robert Luna said, a male Asian suspect with a firearm walked into another dance hall in the neighboring suburb of Alhambra. Patrons wrestled a gun from a suspect who fled in a van.

This weekend had marked the first time Monterey Park had held its Lunar New Year celebration since before the pandemic. While the shooting took place away from the city-sponsored event, officials canceled the two-week festival’s second-day events as a precaution.

‘The nail that sticks out gets hammered down’

Reflecting back on the past several years, being on the forefront reporting on the attacks on Asian Americans and the #stopaapihate movement, I know we have come a long way in raising awareness. But there is an astronomically long way still to go.

In the Asian culture, it’s commonplace for many, especially those from an older generation, to adhere to the adage of “the nail that sticks out gets hammered down.” Meaning, speaking or acting out of turn, such as when tragedy or trauma strikes, is dishonorable and looked down upon.

However, I am encouraged by the number of youth who buck tradition and understand the importance of sharing their stories, no matter how painful. They’ve seen how a simple interview can make a major impact.

Just a couple weeks ago, a Chinese woman shared with me a surveillance video of her 78-year-old father being senselessly assaulted and knocked to the ground while walking down the street in broad daylight. While I was relieved and grateful to be trusted with her story, I couldn’t help but feel anxious at the same time.

Would the public continue to care? Could I get this story approved to bring it to a widespread audience?

Dion Lim is an anchor/reporter for ABC7/KGO-TV in San Francisco.
Not to mention that comments from the public such as “it seems like it’s getting better” were becoming more frequent. I’m afraid of frequency fatigue, and that this woman’s father could become “just another victim.”

Dion Lim is an anchor/reporter for ABC7/KGO-TV in San Francisco and the author of the upcoming book “Not Your Model Minority” (Third State Books). Follow her on Twitter: @DionLimTV

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[QUOTE=GeneChing;1324218]
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This year had The Warrior Monks in Action from 1:32:26 to 1:37:32 The performers were from the Henan Shaolin Temple Tagou Martial Arts School…