Hindustan Times (Delhi)

US-China ‘bromance’ sparked by stolen iPhone

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

SHANGHAI: It was a rare, if bizarre, moment of tenderness in the otherwise tense US-China relationsh­ip: an American journalist embracing the Chinese man who had been using his stolen iPhone.

Matt Stopera and Li Hongjun met for the first time on Tuesday night at an airport in southern China, in the latest chapter of what some Chinese are calling an internatio­nal “bromance”.

In February, Stopera, a New York-based writer for website Buzzfeed, became famous in China for an article describing how photos from China began to appear on his phone’s photo stream after his iPhone was stolen in New York.

Chinese netizens tracked the photos, and the stolen iPhone, to Li Hongjun, a 30-year-old restaurate­ur in Meizhou, a city in the southern province of Guangdong. Li and Stopera, who is 25, connected online and planned this week’s meeting in Meizhou.

Li, known online as Brother Orange after his selfies with tangerine trees showed up in Stopera’s photo stream, said his nephew gave him the secondhand phone as a gift last October, but he had no idea where the phone came from.

Many iPhones stolen in the US end up in China.

Fittingly for a relationsh­ip developed over the Internet, the activities of Stopera and Li in Meizhou were exhaustive­ly documented online.

Stopera, whose month-old Weibo account has nearly 180,000 fans, posted pictures of himself eating Chinese porridge and pickled radish, planting a tree, and taking a selfie with Li and tangerine trees.

Weibo users seemed tickled by the duo. “A genuine and slightly serious middle aged man versus an amiable, smiley American fellow such an interestin­g pair,” wrote one user.

 ??  ?? Matt Stopera and Li Hongjun
Matt Stopera and Li Hongjun

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