The Little Red Podcast Podcast Por Graeme Smith and Louisa Lim arte de portada

The Little Red Podcast

The Little Red Podcast

De: Graeme Smith and Louisa Lim
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The Little Red Podcast: interviews and chat celebrating China beyond the Beijing beltway. Hosted by Graeme Smith, China studies academic at the Australian National University's Department of Pacific Affairs and Louisa Lim, former China correspondent for the BBC and NPR, now with the Centre for Advancing Journalism at Melbourne University. We are the 2018 winners of podcast of the year in the News & Current Affairs category of the Australian Podcast Awards. Follow us @limlouisa and @GraemeKSmith, and find show notes at www.facebook.com/LittleRedPodcast/2025 Graeme Smith and Louisa Lim Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • Bad Apple? How the World’s Greatest Company Changed Chinese Tech
    Jan 7 2026

    In 2013, to mark International Consumers Day, China’s state-run TV network labelled Apple a ‘bad company’. More than a decade later, despite claiming to rely on multinationals from 50 different countries, Apple still has nearly 100% of its supply chain in China. In this episode, we look at how Apple became so dependent on China, what it did to rehabilitate its image in the eyes of the Chinese government, and how it has influenced China’s aspiring global tech giants. Graeme is joined by Jianggan Li, the founder and CEO of Singapore-based Momentum Works, and the co-author of Seeing the Unseen: Behind Chinese Tech Giants’ Global Venturing and Patrick McGee, Financial Times journalist and the author of Apple in China: The Capture of the World’s Greatest Company.

    Image: c/- Gerd Eichmann, 2020. Apple Store on Nanjing Lu, Shanghai.

    Transcripts are available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    49 m
  • Education Nation: China’s Exam Fetish
    Dec 8 2025

    China’s college exam, the gaokao, is fetishized as the ultimate test, yet a lesser-known story is how it entrenches regional education discrimination. Its role at social engineering is also clear, with AI suddenly becoming the sixth most popular major in China, on command from above. This month, the Little Red Podcast sets the first ever podcast gaokao. The intrepid test-takers are Edward Vickers from Kyushu University, co-author of Education and Society in Post-Mao China and host of the Asian Education Podcast, Karron Huang, who is studying for a Masters in early childhood education at the University of Melbourne and sat the gaokao in 2015, and Ruixue Xia from the University of California San Diego who coauthored The Highest Exam: How the Gaokao Shapes China.

    Image: c/- Karron Huang. Morning gaokao study session, Foshan No. 1 High School, Guangdong, 2015.

    Transcripts are available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    48 m
  • The Lead Goose: China’s AI Embrace
    Nov 4 2025

    In the latest episode in our series on belief, we’re looking at the CCP’s faith in Artificial Intelligence. China has embraced AI like no other nation, laying out a plan for AI that would see 70 percent adoption across six sectors - including governance – within the next two years. This aggressive approach is driven by commercial imperatives, the desire to shape international standards, and the hope that AI will solve the Party’s biggest worry: social stability. To explore China’s AI dreams, Louisa and Graeme are joined by China Media Project’s Alex Colville, who also writes the China Chatbot newsletter on Lingua Sinica, and Daria Impiombato, a senior analyst at the Mercator Institute for China Studies.

    Image: Goose, c/- Andy Hazel, 2025

    Transcripts are available at https://ciw.anu.edu.au/podcasts/little-red-podcast

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    53 m
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