China KOL with 19 million fans shut down for faking story about school homework left in Paris caf

March 2024 · 3 minute read

The creators of the videos were a 29-year-old blogger, surnamed Xu, and her colleague, surnamed Xue, state media CCTV reported.

Xu is Thurman mao yi bei.

Investigators said the widely circulated footage had a serious impact on the public. As a result the authorities slapped an “administrative punishment” on Xu’s company.

In China, administrative punishments usually target people or companies which threaten public order and cause bad social consequences.

Penalties can include a warning, a fine, a revocation of a business licence and up to 10 days detention. The exact nature of the punishment in this case was not identified.

In the first video released by Xu on February 16, she was seen being given a book of Chinese unfinished winter holiday homework by a French cleaner who found it in a restaurant toilet in Paris.

The blogger said the book belonged to a Primary One student called Qin Lang. She bought a pencil and completed the homework, the video showed.

“Qin Lang, I will fly back to China immediately and bring back your homework. I easily completed it for you. No need to thank me, haha,” Xu said in the video.

Days later, a man in Jiangsu province in eastern China, who claimed to be Qin’s uncle, but was not, leveraged this fake identity to attract online attention. He has also received an administrative punishment from the police.

On February 19, Xu released a second video saying she had contacted Qin’s mother and had returned the homework to her.

She also shared a screen capture of online chats between her and the so-called mother of Qin, saying: “The story has come to a happy ending.”

However, the authorities said there was no record of a young student called Qin Lang leaving the country during the winter holiday.

Xu confessed to the police that she and her colleague Xue concocted the story to boost her online profile. They bought the winter holiday homework book from a mainland shopping website before going to France to shoot the videos.

Xu apologised in a video on April 12 before her account was shut down the next day.

“I apologised to the public. I feel deeply guilty and sorry. I call on my counterparts in this industry to learn the lessons of my case and not to fabricate or circulate fake content,” she said.

Xu studied fashion design in France and worked as a designer there before moving back to China to be full-time blogger in 2022. She shot to fame over the past three years thanks to her wacky chatting style.

She lost 440,000 followers in the 24 hours after her videos were exposed as fakes.

“Bloggers striving for online traffic should not ignore the law or the society’s bottom lines. The internet is still governed by law. Those challenging the law or regulations will be punished by law,” CCTV said in an editorial about the case.

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