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  2. Li Ziqi (vlogger) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Li_Ziqi_(vlogger)

    Li Ziqi ([lì tsɹ̩̀.tɕʰí]; Chinese: 李子柒; pinyin: Lǐ Zǐqī; born 6 July 1990), is a Chinese video blogger, entrepreneur, and Internet celebrity. [3] She is known for creating food and handicraft preparation videos in her hometown of rural Pingwu County, Mianyang, north-central Sichuan province, southwest China, often from basic ingredients and tools using traditional Chinese ...

  3. Matthew Tye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Tye

    In July 2020, he uploaded a YouTube video about escaping from China and in one year, it attracted over 10,000 comments and over 1.25 million views. [3] According to the conservative Brazilian newspaper Gazeta do Povo , Tye had interviewed Chinese people without securing a required journalist's license, which was why he had to leave the country.

  4. Winston Sterzel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winston_Sterzel

    They reported this increased their fear for their own safety. As a result, Sterzel and Tye chose to leave China and moved to Los Angeles in 2019. [16] Following his departure from China, Sterzel's YouTube channel took a sharp turn into criticism of the Chinese government, using video titles such as "How China is slowly KILLING us all." [11]

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  7. Lee and Oli Barrett - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lee_and_Oli_Barrett

    The Barretts make content defending the Chinese government and its surveillance program, stating that the Xinjiang concentration camps do not exist, and that Western media are making unfair accusations against China. [3] [6] Ethan Paul of the South China Morning Post wrote that "Defending China" was "The key to their rapid audience expansion". [4]

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  9. Underoccupied developments in China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underoccupied_developments...

    Media outlets often label underoccupied development areas in China as "ghost cities" or "ghost towns". [9] [10] However, the two terms are technically misnomers since these terms describe places that previously had economic activity but have since become defunct and abandoned, while many underoccupied developments in China are new installations that have yet to receive residential occupation.