The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Meet China’s elderly influencer­s cashing in on the internet

- Danni Zhu and Noel Celis

BEIJING: Exquisitel­y garbed in a traditiona­l cheongsam dress, 76-year-old Sang Xiuzhu is one of an unlikely vanguard of elderly influencer­s storming Chinese social media with videos of glamour in the golden years.

Two years ago she joined the ‘Fashion Grandmas’, whose oneminute clips and livestream­s of them turning Beijing’s streets into a catwalk are devoured by millions of fans.

They mix elegance with epithets of wisdom — on marriage, love and life — from a generation who are now increasing­ly integral to both the economy and online culture of China.

“Our young fans say they are not afraid of ageing a er seeing grannies like us living fashionabl­e and happy lives,” said Sang.

China is ge ing old fast and Beijing is faced with the monumental challenge of how to provide for tens of millions of retirees. But this has also opened opportunit­ies for those who are financiall­y comfortabl­e in their dotage and able to harness the commercial possibilit­ies of technology.

It is an economy worth hundreds of billions of dollars, craving longevity, entertainm­ent and consumer goods, and hooked like everybody else to their smartphone­s.

The ‘Fashion Grandmas’ collective has 23 main members, with dozens more fringe contributo­rs across the country, all aged between their late 50s and their mid-70s.

They make money from pop-up ads in their videos and livestream­ing product sales.

“They can sell 200 units of a product within a minute of starting a stream,” says their agent He Daling.

Their videos also carry messages of inspiratio­n, such as ‘beauty is not only for the young’, or ‘even the elderly can live a wonderful life!’ as well as serious messages such as call-outs of domestic violence.

One of their videos shows a man raise a hand to hit his girlfriend in a store, before a furious older woman grabs his arm and waves for him to be dragged away by security guards.

‘Domestic violence is illegal’ reads the text on the screen, adding that it is ‘shameful’ to hit women.

Another shows a pregnant woman being threatened by her husband before an elegant granny has him pinned back in his chair by bodyguards and gives the woman a hug.

“The elderly should live how they want and be optimistic,” Sang told AFP. “Age is just a number.”

Actually we know everything

A generation of Chinese born in the 1960s are reaching their mandatory retirement age of 60 for men and 55 for women.

These new retirees are the first group to receive higher education a er the Mao-era Cultural Revolution, which scorned the ‘bourgeois’ pursuit of learning and le a generation without social mobility.

“They are richer and highly educated,” said Bian Changyong, chief executive of the Beijing Dama Technology Company, which helps run the elderly influencer­s’ social media.

“That improves the ‘cashabilit­y’ and quality of China’s elderly internet industry.”

The value of China’s ‘greyhaired’ economy is estimated to reach 5.7 trillion yuan (nearly US$900 billion) this year, according to iiMedia Research.

Bian said the Covid-19 pandemic had also pushed the elderly deeper online, hunting for shopping and entertainm­ent.

To reach this vast untapped pool of older consumers, Bian’s company also provides online courses for senior citizens to learn singing, dancing or kung fu through livestream­ing channels.

“China’s mobile internet industry has earned money from every group... men, women, youngsters, parents, but not the elderly,” said Bian.

“This could be the last structural opportunit­y of the industry.”

Granny Ruan Yaqing, 58, has her own video channel and uses an iPhone to reach over six million fans as she tours Beijing’s history and culture.

She fell into the world of videostrea­ming to avoid becoming a ‘nagging’ presence stuck at home, she jokes.

But she also carries a message on the virtues of age from a golden generation refusing to be pushed into the background of modern China.

“Young people assume the elderly know nothing,” she says. “Actually we know everything.” — AFP

Our young fans say they are not afraid of ageing a er seeing grannies like us living fashionabl­e and happy lives.

Sang Xiuzhu

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ during a performanc­e on the China Central Television (CCTV) show called Xingguang Dadao’, due to be broadcast in July in Beijing.
— AFP photos Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ during a performanc­e on the China Central Television (CCTV) show called Xingguang Dadao’, due to be broadcast in July in Beijing.
 ??  ?? Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ dressed in traditiona­l costumes.
Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ dressed in traditiona­l costumes.
 ??  ?? Combinatio­n pictures show members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ during a rehearsal and dressed in traditiona­l costumes.
Combinatio­n pictures show members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ during a rehearsal and dressed in traditiona­l costumes.
 ??  ?? Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ during a rehearsal.
Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ during a rehearsal.
 ??  ?? Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ waiting backstage a er their performanc­e.
Members of the ‘Fashion Grandmas’ waiting backstage a er their performanc­e.
 ??  ?? Social media influencer and granny Ruan Yaqing scrolling through her channel on video-sharing app Kuaishou, while editing her videos.
Social media influencer and granny Ruan Yaqing scrolling through her channel on video-sharing app Kuaishou, while editing her videos.

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