courtesy of wikipedia:
Sarong Party Girl (also abbreviated to SPG) is a derogatory Singaporean term describing a local Asian (Chinese, Malay, Indian, etc.) woman who usually dresses and behaves in a provocative manner; and exclusively dates and prefers Caucasian men.
The stereotypical SPG has extremely tanned skin, a fake-accent, and is skimpily and provocatively-dressed (her original outfit of choice was thought to be a bikini/tank-top paired with a sarong). She frequents clubs or nightspots that are popular with Caucasians in order to meet and form relationships with these men. Places in Singapore known to be common SPG hangouts are: Next Page, Carnegies, Brix, Brannigans and No.5 Emerald Hill.
This can be considered a variant of the Pinkerton Syndrome, as it involves an Asian woman who only dates Caucasian men and considers them superior to their local counterparts.
First coined in the late 80s or early 90s, the SPG stereotype was popularised by a series of humourous books by Jim Aitchison. The term recently re-gained popularity after a Singaporean blogger going by the moniker "Sarong Party Girl" received attention in the local press. Her blog often discusses controversial topics, documents her exploits with Caucasian expatriates and contains provocative photos of herself.
uptight society. i hate this. but for the fact, im for the idea of inter-racial unions but im NOT a SPG.
you should stop teasing me about it, because SPG is a derogatory term and i dont like that, especially when it comes from you.