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ChinaPeople & Culture

Cultural differences between Kiwi son-in-law and Chinese mother-in-law amuse thousands of viewers in China

  • Immigrant grandmother transforms son-in-law’s garden into a vegetable patch and asks if she can have fish in the swimming pool
  • But it’s all good fun, family says

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Videos of Li Jinshan interacting with her son-in-law Peter have become popular online. Photo: Kuaishou.com
Linda Lew

The cultural differences experienced by a New Zealand-Chinese family living in Sydney, Australia, have attracted hundreds of thousands of viewers in China, amused by the interactions between the Kiwi son-in-law and his Chinese mother-in-law.

Yang Yang, originally from Beijing, has been uploading videos to the streaming app Kuaishou since the middle of last year. They range from Yang learning about life in Australia to her husband Peter trying Chinese foods made by mother-in-law Li Jinshan.

“I didn’t expect them to be this popular. Maybe my family expresses traditional Chinese values better than others,” Yang said in an interview.

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“Many people relate to the daily experiences shown in the videos and think they are funny … the east-west cultural differences.”

Yang, 42, and Peter, 55, met in New Zealand 15 years ago when she was studying there and Peter was working. They moved to Sydney 10 years ago for Peter’s job. The couple have two children, four-year-old Ella and two-year-old Eric.

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