For Mae and her daughter Alia, Beît Ballout is more than an olive oil brand. It’s a way to show Singaporeans the beauty of ...
Bad financial habits are often shaped by childhood experiences, but we can undo them rather than pass them on to our children ...
Raised in a generation where men didn’t speak of their mental illnesses, Phillip, 72, bore his pain quietly—but he never ...
Making friends with other 23-year-olds is overrated. Gigs by retiree band Feel Young are where the real fun is at.
After decades of working and raising families, a bunch of retirees began showing up in Chinatown with their instruments, ...
The only indication that Meng Joke is in palliative care is Amy’s weekly art therapy sessions. Amy explains that art therapy ...
In the last few weeks, one TikTok series has gotten local foodies in a tizzy. At the centre of the debate is content creator ...
Singapore is often seen as a model of religious harmony. Yet quiet stereotypes linger, shaping how we see—and don’t see—one another.
RICE feeds your mind with Singaporean stories of human interest that make you think, engage and empathise.
Renée Ting was barely 19 years old in 2011 when she first got the call telling her that she was hired at BooksActually. To the quiet teenager, the bookstore was her escape from the volatility of home.