Nuwa Refining Rocks to Patch the Sky by Ren Yi (Chinese, 1840 - 1896)
Nüwa, also read Nügua, is a mother goddess, culture hero, and/or member of the Three Sovereigns of Chinese mythology. She is a goddess in Chinese folk religion, Chinese Buddhism, Confucianism and Taoism. She is credited with creating humanity and repairing the Pillar of Heaven.
Overview
In Chinese mythology, Nüwa (女媧) is considered to be the first being with the ability to procreate and is the creator of all mankind. Ancient Chinese society was fiercely matriarchal, so Nüwa, being the mother of all humans, was considered a very important deity. She has a hand in a number of stories but is most commonly associated with China’s creation myth and for saving humanity by mending a hole in the sky after a great flood. Today, Nüwa is still a popular deity and is usually prayed to by women who need divine assistance with marital affairs or fertility issues.
In art, she’s usually depicted as a supernatural creature with a human face and a long serpentine body but is also sometimes simply drawn as a woman dressed in traditional Chinese hanfu.
Etymology
Nüwa’s name, 女媧, is made up of the Chinese character for woman, nǚ (女), and a character that is completely unique to her name, wā (媧). In other styles of romanization, her name is sometimes written as Nü Gua or Nü Kua. Nüwa is also sometimes referred to respectfully as wā huáng (媧皇) which translates literally as “Empress Wa.”
Mythology
There are two widely told versions of China’s creation story. The most commonly told one is where Nüwa crafts humanity from river clay. The People of Clay
After Pangu (盤古) emerged from his mythical egg and created the physical universe, the earth separated from the heavens and became a beautiful place full of lush, green vegetation, vast rivers, tall mountains, and all sorts of animals.
One day, Nüwa decided to go for a walk in the woods among the mountains and animals. As she walked along, she was suddenly overcome with loneliness. Even though everything around her was strikingly beautiful, Nüwa had no one to keep her company. She decided to pause along the banks of a river and began to make figures out of clay from the mud.
At first she began to make easy shapes like chickens and sheep, and though they amused her, she soon became bored with them. Gazing into the river and seeing her reflection, she was struck with inspiration. Why not make clay figures that looked like her?
She began to shape the mud into figures with faces, arms, hands, and legs. To her delight, they began to dance and talk with her when she put them on the ground. She decided to name them humans (人).
Nüwa was so excited by her creation that she made clay figures until her hands hurt. She took the end of a rope, dipped it in the mud, and began to swing it around her head forming blobs of sticky mud around her. It is said that highborn, noble people are descendants of those that Nüwa created by hand, while working class people were formed from the rope.
Mending the Pillars of Heaven
The world of the first beings was very different from ours now. The earth was just in its infancy and was only separated from the sky by four very large pillars.
One day, Gonggong (龔工), the god of water, and the god of fire, Zhurong (祝融) became locked in a massive battle that would determine the ruler of heaven. Wildfires raged and floods plagued the countryside. Gonggong, who was motivated by evil, ultimately lost the fight. Gonggong was so angered that he bashed his head against Buzhou mountain—one of the four pillars holding up the heavens. The earth began to tremble and the pillar collapsed and ripped a hole in the sky.
At this point, the earth was completely in tatters from Zhurong and Gonggong’s epic battle. Fires had scorched the earth, water was pouring incessantly from the hole in the sky, and the heavens no covered longer the earth. Seeing how her children were suffering, Nüwa immediately sprang to action. She went to the sky turtle, Ao, and begged him to grant her a miracle to save her children. The turtle obliged and used a sword she had given him to cut off his own four legs.
Nüwa then gathered five colored stones and melted them together to fix the hole in the sky. She used Ao’s legs to replace the four broken pillars all the while holding up the sky with her back while rain poured down upon her. The ancient Chinese historian Sima Qian (司馬遷), recorded the following account of Nüwa’s heroic deed:
The pillars of Heaven were broken and the corners of the earth gave way. Hereupon Nü Kua melted stones of the five colours to repair the heavens, and cut off the feet of the tortoise to set upright the four extremities of the earth. Gathering the ashes of reeds she stopped the flooding waters, and thus rescued the land.
One version of the story says that after she was done, she was so tired that she laid to down to rest and died from exhaustion. Another version says that while she was working, she discovered there wasn’t enough stone to fix the sky, so she sacrificed herself to use her body to fill the last bits. Either way, order was restored to earth and humanity was able to live peacefully once again.
Although she did her best, Nüwa couldn’t get the sky and earth to align exactly the way it had before. The earth became permanently tilted and that’s why it’s said that all of the rivers in China run in a Southeastern direction.

Nüwa repairing the pillar of heaven by Xiao Yuncong (1596–1673)
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Empress Wa
Only Canadians will think this is funny:
Snow Rogan where he podcasts really fast with a Jamaican patois
Sorry i have to say this whenever Snow is brought up: he wasn't putting the patois on(not that you said he was), he was basically an orphan who was raised by the people in his neighbourhood that had a high number of Jamaican immigrants, he actually speaks like that, and is apparently still beloved in that community
He was also an actual criminal in jail for attempted murder when Informer came out
I was aware, apparently he's pretty well respected by actual Jamaican reggae guys and plays there more than anywhere else nowadays. Informer is partially so easy to mock because its a good song. If it was bad it wouldnt need to be parodied by Jim Cary, the song itself would do the job. You at least need solid pop sensibilities to have a song with enough hook that people doing a legally distinct parody get it across.
And the show is called the Great White North and plays the Bob and Doug jingle
It is acrually kinda cool and decent that Rick Moranis and Dave Rhomas didnt try to make a Bob and Doug podcast at some point. It would have been really easy.
They had the comedy album and a movie, I think theyre good. Moranis could make a comeback if he wanted it, but after his wife died and he raised his kids alone and then covid... I dunno if he wants to do more. He had a whole career a different life time ago
I said it would have been easy, not that it would be a good idea. Glad they hung it up when they did and didnt pick it back up. It wasnt either of their best work anyway, and I dont think their proudest either.