‘Rap of China’ 2022 Unveils Lineup of 24 All-Star Rappers

On June 14, Rap of China, the wildly popular rap competition show, officially revealed its 2022 lineup of 24 all-star rappers. The show’s creators first announced its return in May.

The contestants are Air, Gem, BrAn TB, Bridge, Capper, Gai, Gali, Kungfu-Pen, Huang Xu, Ice, Key.L, JelloRio, MC HotDog, Nineone, Pact, Psy.P, Shengyu, Tizzy T, Vava, Vinida, Wang Yitai, KeyNG, Round_2, and Zhang Yanqi.

The new season is reportedly set to air this summer, although a fixed date has yet to be disclosed.

The iQiyi production has been a favorite among many hip hop fans in China and has often featured high-profile Chinese rappers like Gai, Jackson Wang, and Kris Wu.

The show’s upcoming season has been delayed since at least 2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic and Kris Wu’s cancelation after he was arrested for rape last year.

If online banter is any indication, fans seem pumped for the show’s return and impressive lineup. On the microblogging platform Weibo, a hashtag for Rap of China’s contestant announcement has already been viewed almost 90 million times.

Rap of China

Netizens expressed their excitement for the new season and especially the all-star cast. One fan commented on Weibo, “I love this lineup! Summer is coming!”

“It looks like a year-end gala,” another quipped. “Summer is the time to enjoy some hip hop vibes.”

Rap of China

Rapper contestants also expressed their excitement and competitive spirit on Chinese social media. Gai wrote, “I’m always the best,” while Vava posted, “Remember, I will be the female champion of this elite rap competition.”

All images via Weibo

10 Weirdest Groups on Chinese Social Media Platform Douban

Zeros and Ones is a regular series where we explore how technology and the internet impact everyday people’s lives in China and beyond. This month we’re listing 10 absolutely bizarre and wonderful online communities on the popular Chinese social media platform Douban.


Unless you spend long hours browsing Chinese social media, you’ve probably not heard of Douban and its ecosystem of unique community groups. The user-review platform has been dubbed the social network for Chinese hipsters and has been compared to Reddit, but it also boasts review features, not unlike IMDb’s.


Aside from rating and reviewing movies, TV series, and books, joining various themed subgroups, xiaozu (小组), is arguably Douban’s most popular feature. After all, more and more netizens are seeking a sense of community and belonging in this digital era, which can be isolating.


Inevitably, things can get really weird on social media, and Douban is no different. Here are some of the quirkiest (and most enjoyable) communities we have discovered there:

1. We All Have Rotten Teeth

If you thought you were a hypochondriac, wait till you meet the 41,000 teeth-obsessed worrywarts in this group and view their posts about oral cavity troubles. Established in 2006, ‘We All Have Rotten Teeth’ is packed with gag-inducing pictures of rotten teeth and X-rays you pray never to receive.


Dental x-ray

Image via Depositphotos


While we suppose that some out there enjoy gawking at others’ oral hygiene woes, we warn you: This group is not for the faint of heart — or stomach.

2. Milkteaholics Anonymous

Milk tea has almost become the national drink in China with its thousands of varieties and immense popularity among young consumers. But if you’re worried about the state of your teeth due to too much bubble tea consumption (and don’t want to end up a member of the first group on this list), then the ‘Milkteaholics Anonymous’ group is for you.


yummy, bubble tea

Yum, milk bubble tea with tapioca pearls! Image via Depositphotos


Here, almost 2,000 members share their milk-tea-addiction recovery journeys and encourage each other to stay away from the sugary beverage. One way for recovering milk tea fanatics to demonstrate their strength and determination is to share green tea emojis with other group members. (Presumably, green tea is the preferred crutch when kicking the milk tea habit…)

3. Wet Market Lovers

Don’t get scared away by wet markets. Regardless of whether or not the Wuhan market was the origin of the Covid-19 pandemic, most wet markets in China do not have wild animals.


Instead, these venues are the go-to spot for many people in China to procure groceries — ranging from veggies and tropical fruits to fresh fish, poultry, pork, and beef.


douban chinese social media

A vegetable market in Hong Kong. Image via Unsplash


However, as online shopping and food delivery services become more accessible and convenient, China’s wet markets are disappearing, especially in big cities.


Wet market fans have amassed in a Douban group with more than 144,000 market lovers to document their favorite markets and lament the loss of venues that have gone the way of the Dodo.


Members also share stories about their local markets, and some even try to map out all the best ones in their cities.

4. Bone Fracture Gang

As the name suggests, this 2,500-member group has gathered online for a rather unfortunate reason: to discuss broken bones. Most of them share their recovery journey, while others post questions such as “Is this a bone fracture?” or “Is it true that you get fat when you break a bone?”

5. Subway Culture Aficionados

China boasts the world’s most extensive subway network, with many cities hosting more than 20 metro lines and millions of passengers daily. Some Chinese youth have developed a keen passion for subways and — you guessed it — formed a Douban group to share details from their daily rides.


Some expats in the nearly 6,000-member group also photograph and share images of overseas metro systems.


For members of this unique online community, the subway is not only a means of transportation but rather the emblem of urban life and, ultimately, a place to appreciate and enjoy.

6. My Appendix Has Left Me

Another venue for anatomy-related mourning, this group offers both psychological and logistic support to those who had or are about to get their appendix removed.

Though the group was created in 2007 and only has 600 members, it remains relatively active. While many ask about surgery details and the recovery process, some use the space to publicly wonder if they’ll be able to keep their appendix after it’s surgically removed (yikes!).

7. We All Have Hair Salon-Phobia

Getting a haircut can be a traumatizing experience. You go into a hair salon with complete confidence, but you can never really be sure how you may look when you walk out the door. This 894-member group is for those who would rather give themselves a haircut than deal with the stress of haggling with a hairstylist.


No one wants to go to the hairdresser and come out looking like this lion in the Guangzhou Zoo, which went viral after sporting a rather unfashionable mullet. Image via Weibo

No one wants to go to the hairdresser and come out looking like this lion at the Guangzhou Zoo, which went viral after sporting a rather unfashionable mullet. Image via Weibo

8. Aliens on Earth

Yes, you read that correctly: members of this group claim to have extraterrestrial origins! While social media doesn’t seem like an ideal venue for aliens to reunite, the group is an eclectic mix of conspiracy theories and paranormal journeys. Some of the 4,253 members even complain that they “don’t feel at home on Earth.” Us too, alien friends, us too.

9. Let’s Pretend We Are Mushrooms

Unquestionably one of the more bizarre Douban subgroups on this list, this 13,700-member online community is populated by web users pretending to be mushrooms. As such, discussing human-related matters is very much frowned upon.


douban social media mushroom

A ‘selfie’ posted by a new member. Image via Douban


douban social media mushroom

Creepy mushroom-head dolls. Image via Douban


One of the most popular threads is an angry one, “Why do humans like to eat us?!” Others simply serve as a self-introduction, such as “I am a blue mushroom, who wants to be my friend? No humans, please.”

10. I Want To Turn the AC On

While some hate air conditioning blowing through the room, others can’t live without it. This group welcomes the rants of its AC lovers, who appear to be in a state of permanent war against their roommates, family members, and colleagues. The reason? A sudden disappearance of the AC remote.


These are only some of the hilarious communities we found on Douban. If this wasn’t enough to convince you to dive into Chinese social media and hunt for hidden treasures, well, we don’t know what will.


Cover image via Haedi Yue

Wang Yibo, Xin Liu Among Captains for ‘Street Dance of China’ Season 5

According to posts on the Chinese microblogging platform Weibo, the fifth season of the dance show Street Dance of China will welcome a new lineup of captains. The show is currently under production, and no official broadcasting dates have been announced yet.

Two of the four leaders have previously appeared in the program: Wang Yibo, who is best known for his leading role in the boys’ love TV series The Untamed, and Han Geng, who is a former member of the K-pop band Super Junior.

The other two captains include Korean-American pop star and actor Lee Seung Hyun, as well as rapper and dancer Liu Yuxin (aka Xin Liu), the latter of whom previously appeared as a contestant on Street Dance of China’s second season and a special guest during season three.

Despite rumors of Blackpink’s Lisa appearing in the upcoming season, this doesn’t seem to be the case. Nevertheless, the Weibo hashtag for the lineup has been viewed more than 160 million times.

Since kicking off in 2018, Street Dance of China, which often features international contestants and the world’s best dancers, has become a global hit.

It also helps that the show’s captains are mostly mega pop stars such as Jackson Wang, Lay Zhang, Henry Lau, and Taiwanese-American entertainer Vanness Wu.

Street Dance of china season 5

Wang Yibo will return as a captain in the fifth season of Street Dance of China

While fans have gushed over Wangs return for the new season, many netizens have been especially excited about Liu’s participation as the first female captain in the show’s history.

The 25-year-old dancer and singer debuted in the reality show Youth With You before joining girl group The9, which disbanded in December 2021. Synonymous with her impressive dance skills and androgynous looks, Liu has millions of fans in China.

Street Dance of china season 5

Street Dance of China

Liu’s fans have been quick to show their support online.

“Yay! I love watching Liu dance. I think she is the best street dancer among female celebrities,” reads one comment.

“Captain Liu is so alpha!” wrote another netizen. “She holds everyone’s attention while performing on stage. I’m looking forward to her appearance on the show!”

All images via Weibo

Frank Wang Yefeng Meditates on ‘In-Betweenness’ Through Video Art

Ask Shanghainese multimedia artist Frank Wang Yefeng, and he would know everything about renting a llama in the state of Illinois. He had one standing outside the exhibition hall for his graduation show at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

The animal is a popular attraction at kids’ parties in the United States, but it wasn’t a good idea to have it out on the street.

“I spent a couple of thousand dollars on it, and, after an hour or so, the Chicago Police showed up and detained the llama,” Wang says. “They said it needed a working permit.”

Until authorities inflicted the anthropocentric rule upon the poor llama, the animal was the performative element of Wang’s graduation piece. It related directly to a digital installation inside the building, establishing a conversation between the virtual and the real worlds.

The llama also alluded to the internet meme ‘Grass Mud Horse,’ homophonous with ‘fuck your mother’ in Chinese, which is a creature of the Chinese internet that looks like a llama — or an alpaca, if we want to be exact. The meme became part of the internet lexicon around the time of Wang’s graduation in 2011, used to protest censorship in China.

Frank Wang Yefeng's llama

The llama pop-up in downtown Chicago. Image courtesy of Wang

Criticism disguised as humor is one of the key aspects of Wang’s art. Working in the intersection of video art, writing, and technology, he explores profound subjects like belonging, othering, and racism in seemingly nonsensical 3D sculptures and animations that feature a whole menagerie of bizarre non-human creatures.

Although they may seem goofy and laughable initially, these creatures embody his philosophical views on human existence and the “in-betweenness” that exists within us all.

Fifteen years after moving to the United States, Wang, now New York-based, still muses on his experience as an immigrant and the sense of estrangement that never faded. “Since arriving in America, I have always had this strong sense of the absence of a home and origin. Whenever I went back to China, it didn’t feel like going back home at all. I felt like a tourist. But in the United States, I’ll always be an outsider,” he says.

However, instead of regretting his extrinsic position, Wang chose to extract inspiration from it. “I began thinking of this groundless, in-between space as my constant dwelling and decided to enjoy it and explore subjectivity from it,” he says.

Bird art in New York

Bird-themed street art in New York. Image courtesy of Wang

Such an enduring sense of flux became clearer in Wang’s art through his experimental portrayals of birds, a theme that came to him as he roamed his neighborhood in New York.

“West Harlem has a lot of people of color and a lot of immigrants. One day I was walking around the neighborhood and noticed that all the graffiti in the streets showed birds. I thought it was bizarre at first, but then I started to link things in my head. Birds are migratory animals; graffiti is a gesture of freedom. It’s all symbolic,” he says.

Since then, Wang began collecting photos of these birds and writing poetry inspired by them. In the series of animations BIRDS Volume I, he converts them into his own characters: a mallard adrift in the sea, a group of protesting flamingos, an American eagle in TSA uniform, and a group of sparrows — all registered in post-modernist art ideas.

Wang combines these strange beings with his poetic musings on migration, including revealing verses such as “direction is an obscure assumption” and “departing is to find new ways of arriving.”

To Wang, home is not a physical location but an ontological position.

“You’re constantly surrounded by different ideologies. This migration is not only physical but also on your mind.”

— Frank Wang Yefeng

Wang expands on the notion of direction as something irrational in Moscow Has Nice Weather, an infinite loop showing a twisted plane spinning over a flight map. He devised this piece while being literally ‘in-between,’ flying from China to Germany for an art residency in Berlin.

“On the plane, I was thinking about how uncertainty goes against the way our human brain works. So I started writing these short poems and using my phone to record the screen in front of me,” he says.

In this piece, Wang wanted to reject any form of rationalism. Inspired by the poster of the 1980 blockbuster Airplane!, he modeled his 3D version of an Aeroflot aircraft, albeit twisted as if it didn’t know where it was going.

As timing would have it, he landed in Berlin right at the beginning of the pandemic, when quarantine rules were strict. His lockdown experience in an unknown city resulted in The House of the Solitary, a series combining his poems with 3D models of his surrounding objects.

By then, Wang was already drawn to theories of object-oriented ontology, which, in sum, say that non-human entities maintain independent relations and importance beyond our human-centric perspectives. In other words, your toaster has something to say — even if you can’t hear it.

The House of the Solitary

The House of the Solitary at Vanguard Gallery Shanghai. Image courtesy of Vanguard Gallery Shanghai

“I was stuck with these objects, and they were stuck with me. So, I started transforming them into my virtual characters. It’s almost as if they carry my emotions,” Wang says.

He created slow-motion 3D clips with the objects constantly being inflated and deflated. Though it might appear that these objects will explode sometime, they never do. Tellingly, the soundtrack to these videos is made of background hold music — the type people have to deal with when calling airlines.

Wang had several flight cancellations while in Germany, and his intended three-month stint in the country extended into seven.

Once restrictions eased, he went on what he calls a “discursive” road trip, avoiding highways and driving through secondary roads with no planned itinerary. One day, near the border with the Czech Republic, while passing by a run-down roadside cafe, he noticed the statue of a bird standing in front of it.

“It was making a bizarre gesture, waving at you, trying to make a connection. But the cars were just driving by and ignoring it. The bird was almost like a specter in the middle of the street,” Wang says.

Frank Wang Yefeng

The animated bird inspired by the statue Wang saw during his road trip through Germany

Wang reclaimed the image of this bird and rendered it into an animation clip, BIRDS Volume II — Slow Spectre. In it, the bird first appears in a dark vacuum, waving incessantly at the viewer with a plastic smile and dizzy eyes. Then it appears as a ghost, semi-transparent, under a dark see-through veil. Finally, it contorts itself and melts.

“With my birds series, I was contemplating the ambivalent position and the existential condition of ‘others’ in our society. They’re almost like ghosts: they see everything around them, but they are never seen,” Wang explains. When asked who the ‘others’ are, he says, “immigrants, minorities, you name it. Literally, anyone who’s not Anglo-Saxon.”

Back in New York, with the rise of hate crimes against Asians, Wang was invited to create art for a public screening event in Times Square. He had already been working in public art and thinking of how public spaces can enhance dialogues among different people.

Based on post-humanism concepts, he conceived The Whimsical Characters, an ongoing series of digital bodies made of objects he found online. These characters were displayed on large screens, juxtaposed with stop Asian hate slogans, such as “exotic is not a place” and “not model minorities, listen to our stories.”

Like the bird on the German-Czech border, his Times Square characters continuously attempt to connect with people passing by.

Interestingly, despite their outlandish appearance, their emotions are pretty much real. Wang applied motion capture technology based on natural human behavior to enhance their emotional appeal — the result is rather haunting, especially with a heart-shaped character that weeps desperately.

“Since I used real intense human emotional data, these characters also exist somewhere in between virtual and real. They live in an ambiguous dimension,” Wang explains.

This year, Wang has been exploring the notion of the ‘yellow peril’ that has permeated Asian diasporas in the West for more than a century, notably through the Eurocentric representation of East Asians as a threat to the white world. Among many very unflattering portrayals, the one he finds more outrageous is the association between East Asians with a grotesque, evil octopus reaching its tentacles to seize wealth in Western countries.

Once more, he reclaimed the image of this loathsome octopus and turned it into the central theme for The Levitating Perils, a series aiming to highlight the century-old racist rhetoric and deconstruct harmful Eurocentric notions about East Asians that still prevail today.

“I think it has never been gone,” Wang says about Asian hate.

“But it happens in much subtler ways today, which can be more dangerous. In recent years, not just because of the pandemic, but because of the change in the international order, everything is worse,” he goes on, adding that the rise of China as a superpower threatens Western hegemony and the world’s unipolar dynamics.

“Naturally, all this gets projected into society,” says Wang. “I rarely talk much about politics, but since you asked,” he adds.

Still, Wang says that he’s not pointing fingers. The goal of his octopus series — and his art as a whole — is to deconstruct harmful beliefs and shift fixed ways of thinking toward more open-ended angles and possibilities.

Through his journeys and explorations, and in his constant in-betweenness, he establishes something special: the development of his art in a continuous process of dissimilation and re-framing.

Additional reporting by Lucas Tinoco

Cover image courtesy of Vanguard Gallery Shanghai

‘Squid Game’ Season 2 Gets Green Light, Chinese Netizens Amped

On June 12, Netflix officially green-lit the second season of Squid Game, much to the excitement of fans around the world. China is no exception.

Since Squid Game premiered in September 2021, the show has enjoyed tremendous popularity among Chinese netizens despite Netflix not officially being available in the country. Passionate fans have even nominated their favorite childhood games for a Chinese version of Squid Game.

Several small kiosks specializing in dalgona candies (a Korean honeycomb toffee) inspired by one of the show’s deadly challenges also popped up in major Chinese cities like Shanghai, capitalizing on Squid Games fandom in the country.

Squid Game season 2

Delighted by the news, fans of the show have taken to microblogging platform Weibo to express their excitement for season two, and a related hashtag gained more than 130 million views in under 24 hours.

Though the second season won’t be released until the end of 2023 or early 2024, fans have impatiently urged the production team to get going. One such comment reads, “Please film it quickly; I want to see it soon!”

Squid Game season 2

Young-hee, the motion-sensing animatronic doll from Squid Game‘s first season

So far, Hwang Dong-hyuk, the creator of Squid Game, has only disclosed limited information about the second season. Protagonist Seong Gi-hun and Front Man will continue to be played by Lee Jung-jae and Lee Byung-hun. However, the new season will probably come with a whole new cast of characters.

Some Chinese fans have expressed curiosity about Squid Game season two’s casting and storyline.

“So Young-hee’s boyfriend Cheol-su is going to replace her as the animatronic doll?” wondered one viewer, adding, “I’m looking forward to the new games in season two!”

Squid Game has undoubtedly made its mark upon millions of fans around the world by raising themes of alienation, inequality, and the violent nature of capitalism. How the show’s second season will touch on these themes remains to be seen, of course, but fans in China will be watching to find out.

Cover photo via IMDb; other images via Weibo

Chinese MMA Legend Zhang Weili Scores Knockout Victory at UFC 275

On June 11, Chinese mixed martial artist Zhang Weili stunned fight fans worldwide by winning a highly-anticipated rematch against Joanna Jedrzejczyk at UFC 275 in Singapore.

Not only did the former UFC World Champion defeat her Polish opponent, but she inflicted a spectacular second-round knockout on Jedrzejczyk: A spinning back fist that resulted in Jedrzejczyk tumbling to the Octagon’s floor amidst the roar of the crowd.

After winning the bout, Zhang shouted on the mic, “I want to tell everyone: I am back!”

And back she is, with a chance to reclaim her strawweight title just over the horizon: If comments by UFC boss Dana White before the event are to be believed, Zhang’s next UFC appearance is likely to be a title fight against current UFC Women’s Strawweight Champion Carla Esparza.

Zhang’s victory at UFC 275 made a splash on Chinese social media, with a related hashtag on the microblogging platform Weibo having gained a whopping 350 million views at the time of writing.

Weibo users have flocked to the comment sections of videos highlighting the match and its knockout to congratulate Zhang and express admiration for her power and resilience.

Immediately after being proclaimed the winner, the fighter made an inspirational statement that resonated with Chinese fans, “I told myself I am not fighting Joanna, I am fighting myself.”

Zhang also praised her opponent as a “true warrior” and used her win to uplift women, declaring, “Who says we can’t do it as women? We can.” Her comments were particularly poignant in light of the ruthless attack against four women in the Northeast China city of Tangshan last week, which has horrified the nation.

A hashtag related to Zhang’s comments on female power also received more than 20 million views on Weibo. Many social media users point out how the athlete embodies an ideal of strong women with comments such as “Female power will rise!”

Zhang herself took to Weibo and posted a celebratory statement on her profile: “I am not in a hurry to prove anything to anyone, but I hope I can showcase the beauty and ability of MMA athletes.”

Following the defeat, Jedrzejczyk, who is about to turn 35, announced her retirement from professional competitions, expressing gratitude to the UFC and all those who supported her during her career.

To learn more about rising female MMA athletes, check out the first episode of our two-part documentary on China’s burgeoning MMA scene, Way of the Warrior, below:

Cover image via VCG