Next magazine (Chinese: 壹週刊; Pinyin: Yī zhōu kān; IPA in Cantonese: /jʌt7 dzʌl1 hɔːn2/) is a Chinese weekly magazine, published in Hong Kong and Taiwan with different versions.
Billboard (magazine) | Time (magazine) | Vogue (magazine) | magazine | Esquire (magazine) | Harper's Magazine | Life (magazine) | National Geographic (magazine) | Mojo (magazine) | Fortune (magazine) | Variety (magazine) | Slate (magazine) | People (magazine) | New York (magazine) | Magazine | Stern (magazine) | Punch (magazine) | Elle (magazine) | PC Magazine | The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction | Spin (magazine) | Mad (magazine) | The Ring (magazine) | The New York Times Magazine | Mother Jones (magazine) | Scribner's Magazine | Penthouse (magazine) | PC World (magazine) | Maxim (magazine) | Poetry (magazine) |
When Jimmy Lai entered the media industry, Lam followed him, becoming a consultant and later columnist for Apple Daily and Next Magazine.
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Richard Lam Chun-Keung was a Cantopop lyricist with several hundred Cantopop songs to his name, and a columnist for Apple Daily and Next Magazine in Hong Kong.