A gala party in Beijing and a string of TV programs to be made by Chinese singers, musicians, dancers, acrobats, and other artists from home and abroad will be staged and put on a live television show around September 18, the day this year’s Mid-Autumn Moon Festival falls on.

It is a Chinese tradition for all the members of a family to reunite, as well as to dine, have a picnic or watch TV programs, and have fun together during the festival. Many migrant workers toiling in the cities usually take a train or bus ride back home to visit their beloved ones.

This year’s party organizing group has sent out invitations by means of TV, radio, internet, newspaper, and magazine advertising to Chinese worldwide. According to the group, 80 million invitations were sent out by sina.com, China’s biggest portal website, on August 10.

It is reported that the 80 million invitations is the largest ever in the world and the organizers have applied it to be booked by the Guinness World Records.

If you can’t get Moon Cakes in the States, now, you know why!



  1. Hi John,
    I live and have been living in Taiwan for 18 years. The chinese also all look at the moon and claim, “It looks so big and so close you can touch it. Good article on podcasting by the way.

  2. MEH says:

    I doubt there would be a shortage of moon cakes. Lets do a future exchange on that commodity.


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