Beijing Blacklists Two Artists Over Pop Song 'Fragile' Poking Fun At Chinese Nationalists

Yeah, that place out 'there'. Anything not really Cambodia related should go here.
User avatar
Clutch Cargo
Expatriate
Posts: 7745
Joined: Mon Mar 26, 2018 3:09 pm
Reputation: 6004
Cambodia

Beijing Blacklists Two Artists Over Pop Song 'Fragile' Poking Fun At Chinese Nationalists

Post by Clutch Cargo »

Malaysian rapper Namewee and Australian singer Kimberley Chen have been blacklisted by mainland China over their hit pop song titled Fragile. The song, which has been making rounds on the internet, include lyrics poking fun at Chinese nationalists and the Chinese Communist Party.
Image
According to a report from Agence France Presse (AFP), the two democratic Taiwan based artists have been blacklisted by Beijing over their latest Mandarin track Fragile which has now hit over 30 million views on Youtube. Released last month, the track has been rapidly climbing musical charts across various Asian countries despite being scrubbed by censors. Penned by the Malaysian rapper, the peppy song includes lyrics poking fun at Chinese nationalists.

Starting from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore to Malaysia, the song has also made waves internationally in places like Australia, Canada and the United States. However, Chinese mouthpieces accused the singers of insulting the country and within weeks of the release of the pop track, the singers' Chinese social media handles were taken down.


A breakdown of 'Fragile', the viral pop song poking China
Here are five ways the song mocks China.

Little Pink
To the uninitiated, "Fragile" sounds like any other saccharine ballad. But even before the music starts the politics are made clear with a warning: "Please be cautious if you are fragile pink."

The phrase is a reference to "little pinks" -- a term for China's online army of nationalist commenters, who go in to bat against any perceived slight.

The music video's set is awash with pink, including the clothes Namewee and Chen wear as well as a giant panda -- a clear reference to China -- dancing in pink camouflage overalls.

The catchy chorus meanwhile centres around apologising to someone who is fragile and cannot take criticism.

- NMSL -

At one point in the song, Namewee wrestles with the giant panda in an empty pink swimming pool while singing the line "You say NMSL to me when you get angry".

For anyone observing online tussles between China's nationalists and their latest target, the phrase NMSL is ubiquitous.

It stands for "ni ma si le" -- or in simple English "your mum is dead" -- and is often left in online comments.

Last year a flame war erupted between Chinese and Thai netizens over a Thai celebrity's comments about the coronavirus.

Thai internet users started to subvert the phrase, creating a host of viral memes that portrayed China's nationalists as automatons who instantly type "NMSL" whenever they spot something online they disagree with.

Winnie the Pooh
While the main target of the song is China's nationalist netizens, President Xi Jinping is not spared.

He has long been satirised as looking like the children's book character Winnie the Pooh -- China's censors often remove online references to the character.

Namewee sings how Winnie the Pooh might disappear people who breach China's internet restrictions, namechecks Xi's "common prosperity" drive and references forced labour camps for Muslim minorities in Xinjiang province.

Apples and pineapples
At one point Namewee raps how the subject of his song "swallows the apple, cuts off the pineapple."

The first is seen as a reference to Hong Kong's Apple Daily newspaper, a pro-democracy tabloid that collapsed after its assets were frozen and multiple executives detained under a national security law.

The second fruit refers to China's recent decision to ban imports of pineapples from Taiwan, the self-ruled island which Beijing claims and has vowed to one day seize.

Taipei said the surprise decision, just as the harvest loomed, was a pressure tactic by China -- although the ban backfired as Taiwanese and Japanese consumers snapped up the surplus fruits.

Bat soup
While the song mostly lampoons Beijing and its digital defenders, Namewee and Chen's lyrics also reference Chinese people's supposed "desiring for dogs, cats, bats and civets".

As that lyric is sung, the giant panda offers Namewee a steaming pot of soup with a cuddly bat stuffed toy inside, in clear reference to the idea -- widely debunked -- that bat soup started the coronavirus.

The origin of the coronavirus remains unclear and the World Health Organization says it has been harder to pin down because of China's official opacity.

But the "bat soup" trope has also often been weaponised against both mainland Chinese and many Asian communities living overseas during this pandemic amid a surge of racist attacks and insults.

Image

Full: https://www.republicworld.com/world-new ... lists.html
https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/2 ... king-china
ofparadise
Expatriate
Posts: 468
Joined: Sat Mar 24, 2018 4:18 am
Reputation: 140
Cambodia

Re: Beijing Blacklists Two Artists Over Pop Song 'Fragile' Poking Fun At Chinese Nationalists

Post by ofparadise »

Was just talking about this recently.... Wee does not care about the ban. In fact, he was hoping for it. He's a really smart guy in person and is extremely calculated. Not impulsive like his media persona implies.
User avatar
nemo
Expatriate
Posts: 2054
Joined: Sat Jan 23, 2016 6:34 pm
Reputation: 1395
Cambodia

Re: Beijing Blacklists Two Artists Over Pop Song 'Fragile' Poking Fun At Chinese Nationalists

Post by nemo »

The comments by little pinks on FB posts by the South China Morning Post are unrestrained and revealing.
Post Reply Previous topicNext topic
  • Similar Topics
    Replies
    Views
    Last post

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: Ahrefs [Bot], Majestic-12 [Bot] and 540 guests