A boba tea company apologized after Simu Liu called them out for cultural appropriation on his Canadian reality series Dragons’ Den. After the business partners introduced their bubble tea ...
Charlie Hall is Polygon’s tabletop editor. In 10-plus years as a journalist & photographer, he has covered simulation, strategy, and spacefaring games, as well as public policy. “If we knew ...
Liu, a general partner at the venture capital fund Markham Valley Ventures, called Fiset and Frenette out for not including the origins of boba, which is a Taiwanese drink, on the cans of their ...
According to Fiset and Frenette, Bobba offers “unique” ready-to-drink bubble tea with “popping boba.” Bubble tea typically combines flavorful milk or regular tea with chewy tapioca balls ...
The first U.S. boba drink shops opened in the 1990s but there’s conflicting reports on whether the San Francisco Bay Area or Southern California was the starting point, Phun said.
Taichung, Taiwan – Standing in line at her favourite boba tea shop in Taiwan’s second-biggest city, Lisa Chen was perplexed to hear that her preferred beverage had been embroiled in a headline ...
A boba company is apologizing after Chinese Canadian actor Simu Liu voiced concerns about cultural appropriation on CBC’s “Dragons’ Den.” On Thursday's episode of the “Shark Tank ...
After pitching their drink—which unlike traditional boba comes in cans and bottles and with tapioca balls that explode in the drink—Simu raised some questions about the product. “I’m ...