China Sex Scandals 2.0

China Sex Scandals 2.0
Oct 09, 2009 By Fred Dintenfass , eChinacities.com

The internet keeps on growing, the technology allowing us to record ourselves in all matter of compromising positions keeps progressing and people certainly aren't going to stop having sex. Even China's internet censors can't seem to stop flesh from flooding the internets. It seems the only thing that can stop internet sex videos is surges of overeager netizens flooding the servers that host them. Given the facts, this roundup – a history of internet sex scandals from 2003 to the present – probably won't be our last.

China internet bar sex scandals

Mu Zimei
The first internet sex celebrity in China, Mu Zimei became famous way back in 2003 for her detailed blog posts detailing her trysts with various men. The tales, including a notorious one about an unfulfilling quickie outside a Guangzhou restaurant with a Chinese rock star, proved so popular that Mu's blog was soon offline. Not because of government pressure but because the demand from readers was so great that her blog's servers crashed. Before the servers melted Mu had the highest ranked website in China. Sina picked up Mu's blog and found it drew 10 million visitors per day, keep in mind this is China 2003, and there were only an estimated 68 million netizens in China at that time. Sohu reported Mu Zimei was the most searched name in China. Mu is still at it, despite subsequent troubles in China she's kept writing and has now moved on to podcasting – her most infamous podcast is an hour long audio recording of Mu having sex with a lover. It draws a mere 10,000 visits a day, perhaps because these days a wide variety of similar, and far more explicit, material is now available to Chinese netizens.

Zhang Yu
Starting in 2002, actress Zhang Yu began making noise about the "unspoken" or "hidden" rule that female actresses had to sleep with directors to get parts in movies but her accusations didn't gain much leverage in the press. Zhang claims all he roles were gotten by sleeping with men in charge of the movies or shows and now she's got the videos to prove it. Twenty graphic casting couch videos have been posted online and received millions of hits. Not surprisingly, Zhang Yu has a blog. On it she explains the rationale behind her actions, "Why should a woman suffer in silence and bear with all the unfair treatment? If you have to mix with beasts and snakes and you are not venomous, how shall you survive?"

Blood Sex Tape
Blood Sex Tape (流血的黄色录像) is a faux-documentary made in 2007. It's about a couple makes a sex tape, the tape finds its way online and a camera crew comes to interview the young lovers. The woman rushes out of the interview and leaps to her death. The filmmakers catch a shot of the woman's body on the ground outside their apartment and stay with her boyfriend as he searches out the people responsible for uploading the video. That the film was staged seems to have undeterred the millions of Chinese netizens who have viewed it and commented on it at youku, Sina and other video sharing sites.

Baobao and A Zi
These two teenaged twins became internet favorites after they exposed an underage prostitution ring. The two girls fell prey to a scam perpetuated by the Yuanyuan Movie and TV studio which recruited girls, got them to have sex with wealthy clients by suggesting these were the "unspoken rules" all actresses had to follow in order to develop careers, then secretly filmed the liaisons and used the tapes to keep the girls from escaping. The girls were also encouraged to record their sex acts so the ringleaders could blackmail the clients for having sex with underage girls. The ring involved dozens of girls. The Beijing Youth Daily reported on the story as did Shanghai Daily and after the girls wrote a letter to the Haidian Disctrict PSB the prostitution ring was investigated and the ringleaders was charged. A news report with an accompanying video that includes trial footage can be watched here (Chinese).

 

The girls became famous and videos of the pair appeared online. They've appeared in fashion shoots and their shared blog and soon took was the home to a serialized novel. There are many websites bearing their names and, not surprisingly perhaps, a virtual industry has grown up .around them. According to a Danwei article on the subject, the girls were brainwashed into staying, a process which "included watching pornography videos along with reading Nabokov's Lolita and Simone de Beauvoir's Second Sex." That sentence alone seems to cast considerable doubt on the veracity of the report and some netizens are starting to believe the girls' story has been hijacked by internet companies looking to cash in on the clicks the teenage female twin former prostitutes attract.

Edison Chen
The Edison Chen sex scandal has already been the subject of hundreds of reports. Like the Mu Zimei incident, the flood of eager netizens crashed servers across Hong Kong after explicit pictures of Chen and Chinese actresses were stolen off of his custom pink laptop, dubbed by Chen the "Cotton Candy Mac." In a decidedly old school move, Hong Kong underworld features reported offered a on either one of Chen's hands.

Kappa Girl
This 12 minute porno became known as Kappa girl after the name of the video "Kappa girl at Shanghai No 1 Department Store's east building." Proving once again that China's internet porn blocks don't really work, the video quickly became one of the most popular videos in China. Huang tried to cash in on her newfound popularity by offering interviews, at 30,000 RMB a pop, on her blog, and that's when the web police tracked her down. She was fired from the department store and detained by the Shanghai PSB.

Shanghai Internet Bargate
This video of a couple having sex at an internet café doesn't seem like it could really be real, but naturally this hasn't stopped millions from watching this security camera video of the couple going at it while the net bar cashier appears to be sleeping in the background.

The Most Famous Pervert in China
Any story, like this one on EastSouthWestNorth, which starts with the phrase "Let me introduced myself. I used to be the demon warrior ‘Xianzi Ke'er'," is going to be a weird one. A man found his wife was cheating online with another role player, a student with the WoW moniker Bronze Moustache (a handle which lends itself all too well to unfortunate moustache ride jokes). WoWed by the student's RPG skills, the wife, known on WoW as Dim Moon, carried on the affair with him even after the husband found out and tried to repair their relationship. When he found their dirty QQ chats a second time, the man, also known as Freezing Blade, posted a long article about his shame and frustration. Netizens sprung into action, posting Bronze Moustache's telephone numbers and address online until he was forced to barricade himself in his parent's house. Even calls from Freezing Blade to cease and desist couldn't convince the human flesh search engine to stop attacks on Mr. Moustache. "Let's use our keyboard and mouse in our hands as weapons," as one person wrote, "to chop out the heads of these adulterers, to pay for the sacrifice of the husband." Tianya, the blog on which the husband's post was hosted, experienced a 10% surge in daily traffic. At the time, 2006, Tianya was already getting 40 million page views a day. The WoW affair became so popular that the posts had to be taken offline to keep servers from going down. EastSouthWestNorth has another post on sleazy WoW incidents here.

That's the end of the roundup for now but people, but given the rate Chinese people are having sex and extramarital affairs, we'll be seeing more of these internet sex scandals soon.

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Related Links

Shanghai Internet Bargate: Couple Gets Nasty in Public
'Porn star' detained for posting sex film on Internet
Edison Chen calls sex photos youthful indiscretion

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