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Despairing over the price of apartments or avocado toast isn’t just for millennials in the US. In China, millennial angst has helped form an entire sub-culture of dejected 20-somethings with a knack for cynical, self-deprecating humor. But the country’s censors aren’t finding it funny.
WeChat announced on Saturday that it’s banned more than 40,000 public accounts since the start of this year – and it’s only March. Among them were the usual suspects: vulgar and harmful content, scams, and frauds.
China is known for its tough stance towards undesirable content, so that’s nothing new. But there’s also a new target: the so-called 「喪 sàng」 culture.
It loosely translates to funeral or mourning, but it can also mean hopeless or dispirited.
Too lazy to pick up dirty laundry from the floor? You’re sàng. Spending 12 hours a day in an office for a salary that barely covers rent? Also sàng. And if you outright refuse to participate in China’s frantic social competition, it’s definitely sàng.
Much like the rest of the world, the trend started appearing just as the job market for millennials in China started worsening. Fueled by pop culture anti-heroes like Netflix’s BoJack Horseman and Chinese sitcom character Ge You, the trend found its home on social platforms like WeChat and Weibo. It’s even spawned musical numbers like So Far, the Sofa is So Far.
But the trend didn’t please the Chinese government mouthpieces, which have called the sàng movement 「spiritual opium.」
BoJack Horseman, a sad-com about a once-famous actor full of self-loathing, also got the boot. The show was removed from one of China’s most popular streaming sites in 2017.
WeChat’s purge of millennial angst came on the heels of Weibo. The platform promised last week to severely crack down on accounts that 「peddle anxiety.」
「Ban negative energy, anxiety, and vulgarity. Just collect a smile tax. Whoever doesn’t have a smile on his face pays tax,」 one Weibo user sardonically responded to the news.
But others were more cautious.
「Trafficking anxiety is not illegal, spreading rumors is illegal,」 said another Weibo user.
And this is where things get a little more complex because sang culture isn’t the only online trend that has found itself under scrutiny lately. China’s 「social media queen」 Mīméng, who is known for her clickbait chicken-soup-for-the-soul articles, was forced to shut down her official WeChat account last week after spreading a fake story that was basically sàng porn.
Mīméng, whose real name is Ma Ling, received the order after a fake story published on her account about a young cancer victim went viral. The story described a young graduate from one of China’s best universities who refused to accept illegal income while unemployed, but ultimately failed to succeed and died of cancer at 24.
Fake news is just as much of a problem in China as in the West, if not more. And so, this may have given China’s content regulators the reason to move in on 「pessimistic values」 online. And now, there are calls for more 「positive energy entertainment.」
Source:
HiTouch/
https://www.techinasia.com/china-censors-purge-internet-millennial-angst
Editor: Crystal Huang
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