The Borneo Post

Hilarity ensues as China’s ‘Edison’ churns out gadgets

- By Anna Fifield

YANG VILLAGE, China: His fans call him “The Useless Edison.” But inventor Geng Shuai doesn’t mind. In fact, he kind of likes it.

“People say my inventions are useless, but I think there are two dimensions to usefulness: practicali­ty and amusement,” said the 30-year-old former welder, who left his job last year to focus full time on making his questionab­le contraptio­ns, such as a motorbike with its own toilet. “I like doing this. So it’s useful.”

Every country has its toolshed inventors. But China - which gave the world movable type printing, gunpowder and the compass - has spawned a population of tinkerers who display the kind of outsize ambition that has helped the country become a global economic giant.

There’s a surprising­ly large subset of farmers and other DIY devotees who have built submarines and light aircraft, various kinds of robotic ploughs and monster truck-style tractors.

Geng may now be the bestknown among them - a new kind of social media star whose calling card is his quirkiness.

Standing in his workshop in this tiny village outside Beijing, Geng shows off his inventions. There’s the meat cleaver turned hair comb. And there’s a tennis racket size watermelon-slicer.

There’s the earthquake-proof noodle bowl that swings in its stand to allow the eater to continue slurping through seismic waves. There are the slippers made from metal nuts.

But Geng is most proud of his hammer bag. It’s a hollow steel mallet with a compartmen­t that slides out of the head. Perfect, he says, for storing your phone, keys and wallet. It has a strap so it can hang over the wearer’s shoulder.

“It’s very fashionabl­e,” he said, with apparent seriousnes­s, modelling his creation. “And if someone tries to steal your bag, you can just throw it at them.”

But Geng, who grew up making things in his family’s pump factory, is a special kind of Chinese entreprene­ur. He does not make money from his inventions. Well, not directly. He makes a living through inadverten­tly hilarious videos - filmed with the Chinese beauty filters that make everyone look like an airbrushed star - in which he shows how he makes his inventions and then hams it up for the camera as he demonstrat­es how to use them.

With smoulderin­g eyes, he combs his messy hair with the meat cleaver. He falls out of the slippers while trying to walk down a country road in them. And he presents a motorbike with a seat that lifts up to reveal a squat toilet. Just turn the throttle to flush. (Luckily the video cuts out before Geng unzips his fly.)

He now has almost two million followers on the video site Kwai, and they give him mobile phone “tips” for his performanc­es - the internet equivalent of a busker getting cash dropped in a hat. His biggest tippers get their names on plaques on the wall in his workshop, which is often the set for his videos. The bigger the tip, the bigger the plaque.

Geng tries to come up with a new invention every week and to make videos two or three times a week. He makes about US$150 (RM630) every time he does a live-streamed broadcast - decent money in a town where five people can have a lavish lunch for a total of US$25 (RM105). He makes enough to support his family - he and his wife have two children - and his brother, who shoots the videos.

“Most people think I’m an entertaine­r, but I think of myself as an inventor,” he said, naming as his hero the eccentric Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla.

Geng attributes his fame to China’s rapid industrial­isation, which has seen millions of people migrate from rural regions to small apartments in the big cities, where they work long days.

“Chinese people love inventions and inventing stuff, but because of economic developmen­t, most people don’t have the time to do it,” he said. “That’s why I am popular - they watch me making things because they can’t make things themselves.”

It’s a similar phenomenon to the “live eating” videos that started in South Korea and are now popular in China. Internet stars eat in front of the camera, often so viewers can eat with them and not feel alone.

Once, a fan who was living particular­ly vicariousl­y through Geng’s videos sent him US$720. Which is fortunate, because he wouldn’t make much if he had to rely on sales.

When he first quit “boring” constructi­on work to follow his passion, he started making slingshots out of metal nuts soldered together. He offered them for sale on WeChat, the ubiquitous Chinese social media app, for about US$10. He sold two or three.

No one wanted his water pipe that supposedly filtered toxins out of cigarettes. But the metal nut cannon, which shoots rubber bands, has been one of his bestseller­s. He’s sold four.

Geng’s most popular product is the meat cleaver smartphone case, which he makes to order depending on the customer’s phone. He walks around with a meat cleaver handle sticking out of his own pocket, which he grabs to whip out his phone as needed. So practical. He’s sold 10.

But it’s the videos that have catapulted him to success.

“People might not want to buy my inventions, but they like watching my videos, so they support me by tipping,” he said.

His family didn’t quite share his passion. Geng’s wife, Ji Xiangying, was initially against his decision to throw in his steady job for a fickle life of Internet renown.

“But I came to accept it after seeing how many people like his inventions,” she said, holding their baby, the younger of their two children, on her hip.

And when Geng told his grandma that he had garnered more than one million fans online, she asked how he could possibly eat that much. The phrase in Chinese sounds a lot like “one million bowls of rice noodles.”

Now, his fans are encouragin­g him to push the boundaries. Some threaten to stop following him if he dares make anything that is actually practical.

“I realised that my small inventions can’t satisfy you anymore, so I spent a lot of money to buy this motorcycle,” Geng said into the camera in one of his recent videos. “This time, I’m going to make something really useful.”

Cut to the next shot and there’s Geng with a wheelbarro­w with half a motorbike on the back. A motor barrow. He proceeds to tear around a warehouse with it, barely able to control the contraptio­n which, fortunatel­y, is empty for the filming.

For Geng, the lack of sales is neither here nor there. It’s the online celebrity that is motivating him. After all, before it was only his family and friends who laughed at his inventions. Now he’s got almost two million people laughing at him. — Washington Post/Luna Lin contribute­d to this report

People say my inventions are useless, but I think there are two dimensions to usefulness: practicali­ty and amusement. — Geng Shuai, 30-year-old former welder

 ??  ?? Geng Shuai gave up a constructi­on job and now supports his family through his videos of his inventions. He aims to complete one product and two to three videos a week.
Geng Shuai gave up a constructi­on job and now supports his family through his videos of his inventions. He aims to complete one product and two to three videos a week.
 ??  ?? Geng Shuai, a social media star for comic videos demonstrat­ing his offbeat inventions, stands in his workshop in the village of Yang. — Photos for The Washington Post by Yan Cong
Geng Shuai, a social media star for comic videos demonstrat­ing his offbeat inventions, stands in his workshop in the village of Yang. — Photos for The Washington Post by Yan Cong
 ??  ?? Geng Shuai cuts a piece of stainless steel to craft a cellphone case.
Geng Shuai cuts a piece of stainless steel to craft a cellphone case.
 ??  ?? Cellphone cases designed to look like meat cleavers are Geng Shuai’s hottest product. He’s sold 10.
Cellphone cases designed to look like meat cleavers are Geng Shuai’s hottest product. He’s sold 10.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia