主持人:Cruzanne Macalligan
It’s estimated that around 117 billion people have lived on Earth. That’s 117 billion different ways to be human.
100 Billion Ways, hosted by Cruzanne Macalligan, is a weekly conversation exploring what it really means to live those differences - and what we can learn from them.
The programme brings together thoughtful conversations, personal stories and music, as guests share their lived experiences of identity, culture, disability, faith, neurodiversity, parenting, advocating and belonging. Moving beyond labels and assumptions, the show focuses on how people navigate the world through their own perspectives and experiences. Listeners are invited to reconsider what difference really means, and discover that even in our differences, there is often far more that connects us.
Sundays, 3-4pm on RTHK Radio 3.
This week, Cruzanne Macalligan speaks with Eli Zaelo – South African singer, educator, and founder of the AfriChin Experience.
From releasing an original song in Chinese to building bridges between African and Chinese cultures through music, Eli shares her remarkable journey of finding connection across languages, identities and continents – and staying true to oneself and what is truly important. Eli shares what belonging means to her, the courage to embrace another culture with respect and curiosity, and why authenticity, creativity and human connection matter in our world more than ever.

主持人:Cruzanne Macalligan
This week, Cruzanne Macalligan speaks with Eli Zaelo – South African singer, educator, and founder of the AfriChin Experience.
From releasing an original song in Chinese to building bridges between African and Chinese cultures through music, Eli shares her remarkable journey of finding connection across languages, identities and continents – and staying true to oneself and what is truly important. Eli shares what belonging means to her, the courage to embrace another culture with respect and curiosity, and why authenticity, creativity and human connection matter in our world more than ever.