Bangkok Post

‘Silly Piggy’ craze brings home bacon for creator

- MATTHEW KNIGHT

SHANGHAI: When “Silly Piggy” appeared in China’s popular WeChat messaging app, the sticker became an instant hit, with people sending it more than 30 million times in its first month to express their feelings in text messages.

Stickers like the mischievou­s cartoon pig and other quirky creatures are all the rage in China, giving the artists behind them a way to make money and win fans — as long as they stay within the bounds of censorship.

The creator of Silly Piggy, River Rui, was able to leave her office job with a design firm and set up as an independen­t artist thanks to the success of the character.

“Silly Piggy is more like how I am in my little world, how I interact with my friends, it’s that Silly Piggy kind of style,” she told AFP.

Unlike memes and animated GIFs popular outside China, instant messaging stickers are often original creations of local artists who can see their little characters enjoy spectacula­r popularity among the country’s 847 million mobile internet users and spread offline through commercial licensing deals.

“Friends feel proud of me when people they know share my stickers and they tell them ‘I know the person who made those’ and they feel proud. It’s really flattering and makes me very happy,” Rui said. “It’s like a dream.”

Now more than two-thirds of her income comes from her cartoon pig, through licensing and selling merchandis­e online, including soft toys and keychains of Silly Piggy.

WeChat also allows people to send money to the artists directly via the applicatio­n.

Some, like Rui, have a loyal following. Scores of excited fans queued up for Rui’s autograph at a recent fan meeting in a fashionabl­e Shanghai mall with a pop-up Silly Piggy merchandis­e stall.

“It’s so cute and it reflects how young office workers feel inside,” said 23-yearold fan Yang Hao. “Even though it’s grumbling it can still express that in a really lively and vivid way.”

Stickers are also popular in other parts of Asia.

In Japan, the Line messaging service has launched 4.9 million sets of stickers, including officially-approved cartoon versions of famous characters from Harry Potter to Mickey Mouse.

South Korea’s largest messaging app KakaoTalk introduced its first set of emoticons in November 2011 and now boasts 7,500 sets that generally cost 2,000 won ($1.70) each.

WeChat stickers are subject to strict censorship — like all online content in the Communist-ruled country.

To be approved by the platform, stickers must not violate rules such as harming the nation’s honour, disturbing social order or inciting unlawful assembly and protest, according to WeChat’s regulation­s.

After people drew unflatteri­ng comparison­s between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Winnie the Pooh, stickers of the popular portly bear became unavailabl­e for download on WeChat.

 ?? PHOTOS BY AFP ?? LEFT
Some of ‘Silly Piggy’ stickers.
PHOTOS BY AFP LEFT Some of ‘Silly Piggy’ stickers.
 ??  ?? ABOVE
Chinese artist River Rui sketches images of her ‘Silly Piggy’ character at a cafe in Shanghai.
ABOVE Chinese artist River Rui sketches images of her ‘Silly Piggy’ character at a cafe in Shanghai.

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