Advertisement
Trending in China
People & CultureChina Personalities

China KOL with 20 million fans accused of sending team to assault man over food claims

Controversial online influencer empties online shop clean as dispute explodes after ‘food mislabelling’ row turns violent

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
An online influencer in China with 20 million fans has been accused of sending a team to beat up a man for making mislabelled food claims against her. Photo: SCMP composite/Douyin
Fran Luin Beijing

An influencer in China known as the combative version of rural-life internet star Li Ziqi has triggered public backlash for selling mislabelled food and letting her team attack the men who exposed it online.

On September 23, two Douyin key opinion leaders (KOL) revealed that Sister Yu, whose account @dongbeiyujie had 22 million followers on the platform, sold tapioca noodles labelled as sweet potato noodles.

Sister Yu dispatched her team to beat them up when they visited her place to protest about their rights as consumers.

Advertisement

Three days later a tearful Sister Yu apologised during a live-stream, saying she had sent the noodles for quality check, and her team’s conflict with the two KOLs got physical because they secretly took videos of them, and demanded 300,000 yuan (US$42,000) in compensation.

Results came out on October 12 confirming the sweet potato noodles she sold on her live-stream had been mislabelled tapioca noodles, and her live-stream sales were “false advertising”.

Sister Yu’s viral videos set in rural settings have sparked several controversies. Photo: Baidu
Sister Yu’s viral videos set in rural settings have sparked several controversies. Photo: Baidu

The administration for market regulation at Benxi city in northeastern China’s Liaoning province fined her company 1.65 million yuan (US$232,000) and suspended its business.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x