China Daily

Chinese apps’ memes spin success overseas

- By LIU YUKUN liuyukun@chinadaily.com.cn Jian Mei, Yi Jian Mei. Side to Side. Yi Jian Mei,a Yi Xue Hua Piao Piao Bei Feng Xiao Xiao Piao Avengers Yi Jian Xue Hua Piao Xue Hua Piao Piao Bei Feng Xiao Xiao Yi Jian Mei Mei, Xue Hua Piao Piao Bei Feng Xiao Xia

Renowned Chinese singer Fei Yu-ching may find it hard to believe that his 1983 classic muse-inspired lilting melody for a lover, is now a global meme, boosting some Chinese mobile apps’ popularity as well as revenue.

It all started when YouTuber “Goated Beats” published a video on May 16. That video was originally posted on Kuaishou, a short video-sharing platform, by a Chinese social media influencer nicknamed Eggman (Dan Ge).

In the video, Eggman, in snow, is seen singing As the oldworld charm of the gentle, soothing music caught on, the video went viral attracting over 3.6 million views and more than 148,000 likes on YouTube as of June 27. YouTubers also remixed the song with hip hop, funk, and even film clips for more fun, which sparked an instant online trend.

A latest video by AnDyWuMUSI­CLAND, a YouTuber with over 476,000 subscriber­s, remixed

using Fei’s voice but a picture of Eggman’s egg-shaped head, with Ariana Grande and Nicki Minaj’s

The video attracted about 8,484 views and 830 likes on YouTube within 24 hours, and over 748,000 views and more than 7,700 likes on Weibo‘s official entertainm­ent account within 24 hours.

Top comments from Chinese netizens included “Hope to see Fei and Minaj sing songs together at the 2021 CCTV Spring Festival Gala”, and “Don’t know why the video just got me laugh to death”.

Another video posted by YouTuber Moe Ment, remixing film clips from with original soundbites from Fei’s has gained more than 80,000 views and over 1,200 likes within a month.

Subsequent­ly, the line

from the main lyric also became a most frequently searched term in the past month. According to Google Trends, interest in

surged in May and reached a peak in early June in both the United States and the United Kingdom.

The line

even made it to the Urban Dictionary.

According to its explanatio­n, “The word use in a sentence is ambiguous and can mean anything.”

As the meme went viral, more people started to make their own videos singing the song in various styles.

A TikTok (known as Douyin in China) compilatio­n of meme, which included different videos depicting people singing

has gained over 138,000 views and more than 1,500 likes within one month.

In fact, Chinese short video-sharing platforms like TikTok and Kuaishou may have become the biggest winners of the meme.

Alongside the booming popularity of meme, TikTok had been downloaded over 119 million times just in May. Revenue of TikTok in May surpassed $95.6 million, nearly 10 times of the same period last year, said a report from 21st Century Business Herald.

According to the publicatio­n’s estimates, TikTok may pull in about $500 million in just the US this year. Last year, TikTok’s global revenue was estimated to have ranged from $200 million to $300 million.

A report from the 21st Century Business Herald said TikTok is enjoying increasing popularity among US teenagers. The report said TikTok had about 26.5 million active users in the US last year, among which 60 percent were aged 16 to 24.

To date, TikTok has been downloaded over 2 billion times since its overseas launch, according to data from market research agency Sensor Tower.

Actually, short video streaming and sharing platforms like TikTok have stepped in overseas markets long ago.

According to App Annie, TikTok was the most downloaded app in India in the first quarter of 2020, surpassing WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram. In late March, when Indians were stuck at home due to COVID-19 lockdown, TikTok was downloaded about 490 million times in one week.

Other popular social media platforms in India include ToGetU and Likee. The former, founded by a former executive of Alibaba, had been downloaded over 10 million times at the beginning of 2019, making it to the top 10 of India’s most downloaded apps.

Likee, founded by Chinese streaming video company YY, made it to the top eight in terms of most downloaded apps in the second season of 2019.

Wei Pengju, director of the Institute of Cultural Economics at the Central University of Finance and Economics in Beijing, said the popularity of Chinese short videostrea­ming platforms in overseas markets was mainly due to those apps’ maturity level, in terms of techniques and user experience­s, as they have continuous­ly made changes based on user reviews on their Chinese versions.

Wei said those short videostrea­ming platforms’ overseas success has driven more and more internatio­nal audiences to know more about Chinese culture.

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