•
Sun Wukong shapeshifts into the Cowherd to prank the Weaver Girl in the 1976 Taiwanese movie
Monkey King with 72 Magic (《新孫悟空72變》) • Reference to the story was made by
Carl Sagan in his book
Contact. • Episode 63 of the 1981–1986 Japanese
anime Dr. Slump – Arale-chan, based on the manga
Dr. Slump by
Akira Toriyama, parodies the tale. • The story, as well as the puppetry shown, was told by Meiying to Dre Parker during the
Qi Xi Festival in the film
The Karate Kid. • The tale and the
Tanabata festival are also the basis of the
Sailor Moon side story entitled "Chibiusa's Picture Diary - Beware the Tanabata!", where both Vega and Altair make an appearance. • The post-hardcore band
La Dispute named and partially based their first album,
Somewhere at the Bottom of the River Between Vega and Altair, after the tale. • The JRPG
Bravely Second: End Layer also uses the names Vega and Altair for a pair of story-important characters who shared a love interest in each other years before the game's story began, Deneb being their common friend. • The
K-pop girl group
Red Velvet's song "
One of These Nights" from their 2016 EP
The Velvet also references the legend of the two lovers. •
J-pop band
Supercell also references the story on its song "
Kimi no Shiranai Monogatari". • The novel
Bridge of Birds by
Barry Hughart is centered around the tale, but incorporates many more Chinese folk stories while retelling the tale. • Korean girl group
Dreamcatcher's song "July 7th" from their EP
Alone in the City, is based on this tale. • The
South Korean television series Vincenzo features a reference to the legend of the lovers, in which Vincenzo mixes up the names from the Korean tale. • In the twelfth
Magic Tree House book,
Day of the Dragon King, Jack and Annie save this story from
Emperor Qin's book burning, then use it to escape the
emperor's mausoleum. • In
The Big Bang Theory, S07E19 "The Indecision Amalgamation", Raj references the story to Penny as a romantic folk tale. • The
K-pop boy group
Treasure's song "Bling Like This", the b-side track from their second single album
The First Step: Chapter Two is also based on this story. • The book
Where The Mountain Meets The Moon by author Grace Lin bases Buffalo Boy and the Goddess of Weaving on this tale. • The Japanese rock group
Alice Nine's song "Heisei Jyuushichinen Shichigatsu Nanoka" from their 2005 EP
Alice in Wonderland is based on this story. • This story is also mentioned periodically throughout
When Life Gives You Tangerines. Similar to the
Chang'e space program being named after the
Chinese goddess of the moon, the
Queqiao and
Queqiao-2 relay satellite is named after the "bridge of magpies" from the Chinese tale of the cowherd and weaver girl. The Chang'e 4 landing site is known as
Statio Tianhe, which refers to the heavenly river in the tale. The nearby
far-side lunar craters Zhinyu and Hegu are named after
Chinese constellations associated with the weaver girl and the cowherd. In Japan, the
Engineering Test Satellite VII mission was an automated rendezvous and docking test of two satellites nicknamed "Orihime" and "Hikoboshi." ==Gallery==