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Viral Week Ep. 195

Hard-headed workers, banned eggs, Durex disgusts Weibo, and Tencent turns on the Switch—it’s Viral Week

Viral Week is our weekly round-up of the weekend’s trending memes, humor, rumor, gossip, and everything else Chinese netizens are chatting about.

This week, construction bosses prove hard-headed, netizens are disgusted by Durex, Italy bans preserved eggs, and an award-winning children’s author is accused of illegally selling books at schools. But first…

Chicken run leads to stabbing

The death of an Anhui man stabbed by his wife allegedly for forgetting to bring home chicken drumsticks, after years of verbal and physical abuse, has drawn attention to female-on-male domestic violence

Helmet hazards

A construction worker posted a now-deleted video on Kuaishou showing how easily his safety helmet could be broken, and how his manager’s helmet was much more durable by comparison, drawing further attention to China’s poor worker-safety record

Minor infraction

Renowned children’s author Zheng Yuanjie has accused fellow writer Cao Wenxuan, winner of the Hans Christian Andersen Award, for breaking Chinese law by peddling books at primary and secondary schools where he has been invited give lectures, thus driving up his sales numbers. Cao has declined to comment (but you can read TWOC’s previous interview with the author here)

No eggs-port

Italian police seized over 800 pine-patterned “century” eggs and salted duck eggs from a Chinese-run store, offending fans of these delicacies with the claim that they are “unsuitable for human consumption”

Distaste for Durex

Durex’s “4.19 for One Night” ad campaign on Weibo has flopped, after netizens found its eating-related innuendoes featuring milk tea brand Hey Tea and food-delivery app Ele.me to be “gross” rather than humorous

“Exhaust every drop tonight,” declared Durex’s ad, while Hey Tea commented below, “You’ve always got my cheese on your lips”

No mercy for Mercedes

Mercedes-Benz’s troubles continue, following a new video that shows a woman climbing on top of showroom vehicle to complain about her car’s faulty airbags, an apparent copycat of the unhappy customer from last week with whom the automaker has just reached a deal

Nintendo Switched on

Guangdong authorities have approved Tencent to distribute Nintendo’s Switch console in China, after years of tightening regulations in the domestic gaming market

Baby panda-monium

A college student who photographed herself surreptitiously petting a panda cub at Sichuan’s Wolong National Nature Reserve is being berated by netizens for endangering one of China’s national treasures

Game of Censorship 

Fans of HBO’s Game of Thrones were outraged by the nearly six minutes’ worth of content cut out of Season 8’s premiere on Tencent’s streaming platform, which allegedly included vital plot points besides the typically censored sex and gore

Cover Image by Pixabay from Pexels

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TWOC‘s editors are a bilingual, international team that is always on the lookout for original and human-centered stories to share with our readers. We are dedicated to accuracy, objectivity, and looking at each of China's stories through the eyes of its participants. Get in touch through our About Us page if you have a story to pitch!

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