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The Family Affair

03:24 Min
29, unmarried and still living at home, Haruka is considered to be a 'parasite single' in Japan. Working 18 hours a day, she has no time for dates. Mum, who married at 28 and has been a housewife since, fears that she'll have to take care of her daughter forever. Should Asian parents be worried about today's millennials?
The Family Affair

Family Affair - S3: Career or marriage first for Japan's millennials?

05 Jul 2018 05:29pm
29, unmarried and still living at home, Haruka is considered to be a 'parasite single' in Japan. Working 18 hours a day, she has no time for dates. Mum, who married at 28 and has been a housewife since, fears that she'll have to take care of her daughter forever. Should Asian parents be worried about today's millennials?

The Family Affair

About the show:

The concept of the family is often intrinsically linked to the fundamental trait of being Asian. In fact, some research has even proposed that the Asian family is “an individual’s religious, economic, political, and social core”. But how much of this still holds true today?  
Set in the world’s fastest growing region, Asian families are changing along with the economic landscape. In some, gender roles have been reversed. In others, societal needs have had an impact.  Yet, in all parts of the region, the need to hold on to the family as the core of the Asian existence continues amidst this struggle.
In a world’s first, we bring our cameras into the homes of families across the Asian region, and record these families through the course of 2 weeks.  We witness their conversations, their struggles, their aspirations, their conflicts – all in the name of maintaining the family core.

 

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