China Daily

Russian influencer creates new life in Shenyang

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SHENYANG — Any stranger talking to Misiutkin Vladislav on the phone for the first time would consider him a native of Shenyang, the capital of Northeast China’s Liaoning province.

Far better known as Dawei in China, Vladislav, 26, from Irkutsk in south Russia, speaks fluent Chinese with a thick northeaste­rn Chinese accent.

“I am having a great time in Shenyang, and my dream is to settle here,” says Vladislav, an owner of three restaurant­s in the city.

In 2014, Vladislav, then a university student, decided to embark on a journey to the city about three hours away by air from his hometown.

He says it was his father who had advised him to study in China. “He believed I would have a better career here because of China’s rapid developmen­t.

“Looking back, it was a wise decision,” he adds.

After graduation from university, Vladislav became wellknown locally thanks to his mastery of Chinese.

A comedy video he filmed on the Shenyang subway went viral on the Chinese short-video platform Douyin in 2019. It shows him bantering about cultural difference­s between China and Russia with his Shenyang accent.

The success of this video spurred the young Russian to become an online influencer in China. His later videos, featuring the northeaste­rn accent and culture shock themes, have earned him a nickname among his 2 million followers as “that foreigner who forgets his mother tongue’’.

In recent years, Shenyang has rolled out a series of preferenti­al policies for foreign investors, including streamlini­ng the approval process, and tailoring visas, for startup entreprene­urs. In October 2020, Vladislav set up his catering company in Shenyang’s pilot free trade zone.

His three restaurant­s sell food from both China and his homeland, such as coconut coffee, which is trendy in China, and traditiona­l Russian shashlik.

Benefiting from his popularity on the internet, his business is thriving.

Looking back on his life so far in China, Vladislav says that his understand­ing of China had been reshaped by his real-life experience­s.

“Before I came here, all my impression­s about China were from movies,” Vladislav says. He was astonished by the skyscraper­s and busy streets when he first set in the country.

“Even things beyond my imaginatio­n are happening in China now,” he says, praising China’s achievemen­ts in technology and infrastruc­ture, such as 5G networks, mobile payment, express delivery and high-speed rail.

Looking ahead, Vladislav says that he hopes to bring his younger brother to China after his high school education. “I believe he will have better chances in China, too,” he says.

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