Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

It’s good to be in Sylar’s doghouse

- By Danielle Paquette and Luna Lin

BEIJING — An warehouse stood where Sylar’s mansion sprawls.

Over the past year, builders have transforme­d the two-acre lot into his “paradise,” a sign informs guests at the wooden gates. Beyond them lie a spa, a trampoline, an indoor pool, two murals of Sylar’s face and a party room with chalkboard walls, where someone has scrawled: “I love you.”

This is what half a million dollars can buy a border collie in Beijing. It’s also a symbol of love, economic progress and the internet’s unique power to make you famous — sometimes overnight.

“Before I had Sylar, I had nothing to live for,” said owner Zhou Tianxiao, 31, scratching his dog’s ears. “He gave me a purpose.”

Five decades after Chairman abandoned once new Mao’s Red Guards were known to kill pet dogs — a “bourgeois” accessory the communist leader sought to quash during his purge of Western values — China’s youths are increasing­ly lavishing money on animals.

The Chinese are projected to spend the equivalent of $7 billion on furry friends by 2022, a surge from $2.6 billion last year, according to the German market research firm Euromonito­r.

Theories abound as to why affluent Chinese seem so devoted to their pets; poorer folks in urban centers tend to be priced out because licensing dogs can cost hundreds of dollars. But analysts tie some of the fervor to the country’s rigid “one child” policy, in effect from 1979 until early 2016.

Marriage rates and birth rates have fallen in recent years as a generation without siblings, saddled with extra family pressure to shine, has pursued more education and often refused to settle down, said Cheng Li, a China scholar at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington.

“They have a sense of independen­ce,” Li said, “but they still want a companion.”

Zhou, an only child, used to feel lonely.

Four years ago, the Beijing native was unemployed and living downtown with his grandmothe­r. He had dropped out of school at 15 and spent most of his time playing video games at Internet cafes.

Then, one day, a friend urged him to check out some puppies for sale. What happened next Zhou described as magical. He locked eyes with a blackand-white bundle of fluff. The puppy’s tail wagged with a joy Zhou yearned to feel.

“It was love at first sight,” he recalled.

He named the puppy Sylar after a character in one of his favorite American television shows, “Heroes.”

Hollywood’s Sylar was a watch repairer who “desired to be special instead of ‘ordinary,’ ” as one fan site puts it, so he learned to kill superheroe­s and steal their abilities.

Zhou imagined that canine version would his powers for good.

He watched YouTube videos of dog trainers in the United States, studying their techniques late into the night. He taught Sylar to high-five, play dead, walk like a human and leap on tables. One command sent the dog between Zhou’s legs, a paw on each foot, so they could stroll together.

Zhou used his phone to shoot footage of Sylar’s tricks, set to Lady Gaga songs, and posted it to Meipai, a Chinese video site.

Sylar soon had nearly 800,000 followers on social media. Fans throughout China wrote to him, drew pictures of him and asked to meet.

Zhou had stepped into a

Chinese social media is crawling with celebrity animals: An American Eskimo dog named Niuniu and a Scottish fold cat called Duanwu each has more followers than Kanye West.

Amy Huilin Tsang, a sociologis­t who studies Chinese the use unwittingl­y cultural obsession. class identity, says the pet fixation may have something to do with self-expression.

“The dog can be a fashion statement,” she said. “Or the newest status symbol.”

The spotlight on Sylar encouraged Zhou to open a dog food and toy store on a Chinese e-commerce site.

By 2017, he had enough cash to start a new life.

And then he started to wonder: What does a dog really want?

Space. Much more space. Zhou found the old warehouse in Shunyi, an upscale Beijing suburb, and designed the renovation himself. His girlfriend, Liu Wei, 37, helps him run the place and manage a staff of 10, who live next door.

Before Sylar, Zhou “was lazy and spent most of his waking hours playing video games,” Liu said. “He’s now enterprisi­ng and conscienti­ous.”

They mansion May.

Canines can stay the night in air-conditione­d rooms with giant pillows and personal backyards. And humans can join their pets in the pool, as long as they don’t mind the floating clumps of black collie fur. opened Sylar’s to the public in

 ?? YAN CONG/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ??
YAN CONG/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST

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