Xiao Zhan Fans Graffiti Bomb Fine Arts Institute

Loved-and-hated actor/singer Xiao Zhan turned 29 this week. To celebrate his birthday, fans in Chongqing covered the street in front of the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute with graffiti.

Xiao Zhan’s fans are notorious for grand displays of affection, and social media quickly filled with posts condemning what they saw as an act of vandalism. But the Chongqing News revealed that the so-called “vandalism” was actually sanctioned by the school.

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On Huangjueping Graffiti Street, students and the public are permitted to cover the sidewalk, street, and buildings with (family-friendly) graffiti. The educational experiment has yielded the world’s longest street of public murals. After the nature of the event was clarified, the initial furor was forced to settle.

“Everyone waited in an orderly manner,” wrote one Weibo user. “After the event ended, the atmosphere was still warm and friendly.”

In fandom culture, idols’ birthdays reach a near-holiday status. For Xiao Zhan’s birthday, fans in Chongqing — one of China’s biggest cities — planned a drone show, public billboards, and the graffiti gathering in front of Institute.

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That night, netizens accused fans of yelling and being rowdy in the streets, bothering students and local street vendors. It seemed to many like a textbook incident for Xiao Zhan’s fanbase, who have trended multiple times this year alone for various incidents.

Chongqing News investigated the discrepancies between accounts of the event, finding that many of the accusations being thrown at fans were false. Students and business-owners were mostly unaware anything had occurred, and the claims of graffiti crime were ultimately unfounded.

Earlier this year, Xiao Zhan fans raised over 2 million RMB for medical equipment in Wuhan. Despite frequent positive social work such as this, it’s clear perceptions of those outside the fandom remain largely negative.

Shanghai Police Bust $4.4 Million Fake Mooncake Operation

Shanghai Police have busted a 4.4 million USD counterfeit mooncake operation in the lead-up to China’s Mid-Autumn Festival.

After a month-long investigation by the Shanghai Public Security Agency, over 40 arrests were made in connection with the illegal operation. Some 12,000 fraudulently labeled boxes and 180,000 fake mooncakes were seized, thought to be worth 30 million RMB (4.4 million USD).

https://www.thepaper.cn/newsDetail_forward_9305297

Warehouse in Fujian where fake mooncakes were kept. Source: The Paper

Mooncakes are a thick pastry with fillings such as sweet red bean or lotus seed paste, often with one or two salty egg yolks in the center. They’re traditionally eaten as part of the Mid-Autumn Festival celebration, which this year comes on October 1.

The operation was producing and selling mooncakes under the Maxim brand — a Hong Kong-based food and beverage manufacturer whose artisanal mooncakes are a popular choice during the holiday.

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In August this year, the Economic Investigation Team of the Shanghai Security Bureau discovered that someone was selling Maxim’s mooncakes online at 50%-70% of the original price. An investigation was started and it was soon discovered that the goods were fake.

The investigation led police to a factory in Fujian, where the fake mooncakes were seized. The police issued a reminder to the public that food should only be bought through official channels, and that cheap food could be dangerous to consumers’ health.

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According to officer Zhuang Liqiang, since the beginning of the year, the Shanghai Police have managed to detect over 70 crimes in the food manufacturing sector, making 360 arrests in relation to the crimes, which involved upwards of 270 million RMB.

Chinese City Says “No More Tattoos” for Taxi Drivers, and People Don’t Like It

The northern Chinese city of Lanzhou recently announced that its taxi drivers would no longer be permitted to have tattoos, fearing that the ink might make passengers uncomfortable. Many taxi drivers reportedly said that they understood the reasoning behind the regulation, but the internet as a whole thinks the rule is ridiculous.

China’s tattoo stigma is partially rooted in classical beliefs, and partially rooted in a modern history of strict regulations. In feudal China, if you committed a serious enough crime, you would be tattooed and sent into exile, recognizable as a criminal even if you made it back.

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Although the social stigma around tattoos seems to be lifting, Chinese authorities haven’t quite caught up yet. In 2018, regulators banned celebrities with tattoos from appearing on TV. The move was part of an effort to reduce “low taste content,” a move which also targeted hip hop music. In addition, the tattoo industry itself still isn’t legally recognized in the Chinese mainland — there are no official licenses for tattoo shops, making their existence precarious.

Still, it’s clear that many netizens don’t agree with the stigmatization. When news of the tattoo ban appeared on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo, users were shocked.

“When I call a car and I see the driver has a big tattoo, I pause and think — you have the freedom to have a tattoo, I have the freedom to take the taxi or not,” one user wrote.

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“The Lanzhou authorities seem out of it,” wrote another. “Can we change them?”

Some felt that other regulations would have been more useful. “Don’t bother with these useless things,” wrote one. “Restrict taxi drivers from smoking!”

“I Owe It to My Family”: Awkwafina Donates Music Revenue to Chinatown, Shares Personal Story

Golden Globe-winning actress, producer, writer, and rapper Awkwafina posted a personal story to Instagram touching on notes of discrimination, gentrification, and the effects of the pandemic on her home of New York City, as she announced that her music sales from this quarter will go to The Longevity Fund and two other initiatives supporting small businesses across the five boroughs.

Awkwafina, born Nora Lum, describes her tough great grandmother, who worked as a seamstress on the historic Orchard Street, a street now “unrecognizable in a sea of coffee bars, Whole Foods, and luxury hotels.”

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“She was the kind of Asian grandma that only used her oven as a storage closet for toilet paper,” writes Lum. “At six I saw someone nodding out on heroin on her block, and asked my dad if he was sleeping. I remember thinking it was weird that my dad felt unsafe there, while my great grandma traipsed around unphased by anything. She was strong.”

“I owe it to my family to help struggling businesses during this time,” she added.

Born in Long Island and raised in Queens, Lum has never been shy about expressing her love for her city in her lyrics, arriving in the public eye via her breakout hit NYC Bitche$.

It’s clear that Lum connects deeply with the city, even mentioning her great grandfather started the first Chinese-American restaurant in Flushing. It’s these same Chinese-American and Asian-American businesses, she writes, that have suffered deeply during the rampant xenophobia and economic stasis brought about during the pandemic.

“Bravo for always being a role model, stepping up, and shining a light on people and businesses that need support. ✨??” one user writes.

“Brave and brilliant” writes another.

China Hopes To Strengthen Marriages with a More “Ceremonial” Registration Process

Officials are now recommending couples take vows and have witnesses present at their marriage registration to make the occasion “more ceremonial”.

A statement jointly issued by the Ministry of Civil Affairs and the All-China Women’s Federation introduced new registration guidelines, which ranged from bringing vows to having government officials present.

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The aim is to create a “solemn and sacred ceremony, [where] the parties can realize and remember the responsibility of the marriage and family.”

The policies come as China, where the family unit holds major cultural significance, experiences declining marriage rates and rising rates of divorce.

The guidelines aren’t set in stone, but they are highly recommended by authorities. The government wants to “carry forward the excellent culture of Chinese families” and help maintain happy marriages. Pre-marital counseling, uncommon in China, is also mentioned in the new guidelines.

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Opinions online are divided over the issue. Some users supported the move. One Weibo user said “What’s the big deal? You’re getting married anyway! Doesn’t the inclusion of a ceremony make it a happy event?”

Other netizens commented that it isn’t the government’s place to interfere with people’s marriages, and that the formalization of the ceremony would not have any effect on the outcome of the marriage.

On the website Zhihu, one user commented “there are various reasons for the high divorce rate! It can’t be solved by enhancing the feeling of ceremony!”

Another user sarcastically critiqued the proposed measure of having an ‘official’ stand witness, “if he has an official position and achievements in a certain field, will that make my certification more sacred?”

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This isn’t the first step the government has taken to “strengthen” families. The new guidelines come hot on the heels of a civil code passed by the government in May, which enforced a 30 day ‘cooling-off period’ for a mutual divorce, hoping that couples would use the time to rethink. 4.15 million couples filed for divorce last year, and authorities are eager to reduce that number.

That civil code didn’t come without controversy, either — many women expressed their anger online, calling it a step backwards for women’s rights in China, and a “betrayal of the PRC’s marriage law” (which allowed a woman to get a divorce even if her husband disagreed).

China’s Food Delivery Giants Face PR Crisis After Token Responses to Damning Safety Report

China’s city-dwellers have gotten used to seeing blue- and yellow-clad delivery drivers darting around their streets at breakneck speeds, but the past couple of days have been almost as hectic for the two main companies that employ them. Eleme and Meituan — the key architects of China’s gigantic food delivery ecosystem — have been attempting to run damage control after a damning investigative report on the industry was published by People magazine on Tuesday morning.

People‘s report laid bare the companies’ internal incentive systems and accused them of putting delivery drivers in dangerous yet poorly-rewarded positions in order to maximize profit.

The companies are now facing the worst PR crisis since their founding, partly made worse by some ill-thought-out responses.

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Alibaba-owned Eleme responded first, releasing an overnight statement (link in Chinese) on Chinese messaging platform WeChat as well as the Twitter-like Weibo entitled “Are You Willing to Give Me Five More Minutes?” The announcement outlined two steps: introducing a new feature allowing customers to volunteer for a longer wait (five or ten more minutes) for drivers to complete delivery orders; and a new rewards system for star drivers.

The response was quick, but so too was the backlash. For starters, social media users felt the announcement’s headline was suggesting that customers were to be blame for not being patient enough. Tang Jiansheng, Deputy Secretary of Shanghai Consumer Council, pointed to “logical fallacies,” in comments aimed at Eleme. “In this case, you are asking the customers to take the blame for drivers’ behavior — their [traffic] violations, auto-pedestrian crashes, as well as running red lights.”

Others pointed out that the new measures did little to get to the root of the problem. The most upvoted comment under Eleme’s emergency statement on Weibo reads, “If I give [a delivery driver] five more minutes, he won’t use it to slow down or obey traffic rules, but to take one more order. It is treating the symptom, not the cause.”

Around 18 hours after Eleme’s statement, Meituan released a statement of their own, reversing a previous stance of declining to comment. Clearly taking cues from Eleme’s PR nightmare, their rival sought to admit fault and pledged to “take responsibility to solve the problems around the system.”

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Meituan listed out five ways they’d be addressing concerns: “giving eight minutes of flexibility for drivers,” “strengthening safety,” “improving the incentive system for drivers,” “supporting the safety of drivers and the well-being of their families,” and “taking the public’s suggestions seriously.”

Social media commenters were quick to note how for once, being first in a delivery battle had backfired. “Eleme must regret taking the lead so much,” reads one highly-upvoted comment. “Meituan has monitored the situation and revised its response.”

However, many still feel this compromise doesn’t really get to the heart of the problem. Researcher Ma Liang from one of the top think tanks in China — the National Academy of Development and Strategy of Renmin University — was quoted as saying, “The responses [from Eleme and Meituan] come with a sense of rushed crisis management. But they both fail to face up the problems.”

For the moment, the scandal continues to spark heated debate. But it remains to be seen whether the storm of criticism will fade before Eleme and Meituan are forced to take meaningful action, and how much customers really care about the welfare of the people who make these systems so cheap and efficient for them.