Tag Archives: WANG

Wang Leehom divorce spotlights China’s celebrity crackdown and role of women in marriage

HONG KONG — A Taiwanese American star known as the King of Chinese Pop is in career freefall amid a messy public divorce that is the talk of the Chinese-speaking world.

Wang Leehom, 45, was born in Rochester, New York, to Taiwanese parents and grew into a hugely popular singer-songwriter and actor in Asia. He had been held up as a role model for Chinese men by his fans, in part thanks to his longtime relationship with his former wife, Lee Jinglei, 33. The couple have three children.

But Wang is now taking a break from performing after offering a public apology in a scandal that has highlighted the fragile status of both celebrities and women in modern China. 

After Wang confirmed speculation that the couple had divorced, Lee posted a lengthy online missive last weekend accusing her former husband of infidelity, hiring prostitutes and emotional abuse.

Wang responded, setting off a social media war that undermined the clean-cut image he had cultivated as a husband and father.

The dayslong dispute drew interventions from his father and the Chinese Communist Party, with brands, including a luxury carmaker and a jewelry firm, dropping their deals with the star.

Wang apologized last Monday to his family and fans, many of whom had criticized him on the Chinese social media site Weibo, where the story was the top trending topic.

“After thinking it over, I should take all the responsibility as a man. I will no longer provide any explanations or defense. I didn’t manage the marriage properly, caused trouble for my family, and didn’t give the public the image that an idol should have. It was all my fault,”  he wrote on his Facebook page.

“I am going to quit work temporarily and set aside time to accompany my parents and children to make up for the damage caused by this turmoil.”

NBC News has reached out to Wang for comment.

Celebrities in China have access to an unrivaled base of fans, but are also no strangers to fierce public backlash or government scrutiny.Visual China Group via Getty Images file

Wang is far from the only major celebrity to face public backlash in China this year.

The ruling Communist Party under President Xi Jinping has also embarked upon a crackdown on celebrity and fandom culture, as part of an effort to exert greater control over both the lucrative entertainment market and the lives of the young audiences who may be influenced by their idols.

Last week, Huang Wei, a Chinese internet celebrity known as the “queen of livestreaming” who also goes by the name Viya, became the latest high-profile figure forced to pay a hefty fine for tax evasion. Popular actor Zheng Shuang was similarly fined by China in August after a probe that followed a surrogacy controversy in the United States. 

Wang’s divorce scandal came a few days after Xi, speaking at a major conference of artists and writers in Beijing, warned his audience to “treasure their social influence” and watch their behavior. A commentary published Dec. 19 by an anti-corruption body, titled “Morality Comes Before Artistic Work,” was widely interpreted as criticism of Wang even though it did not mention him directly. 

“This is part of a larger movement to strengthen the regulations on the economy,” Jing Vivian Zhan, an associate professor of politics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told NBC News, citing recent crackdowns on Chinese tech giants such as Alibaba and Tencent. 

“In general, the Chinese government wants to set up stricter rules for market activities,” she said.

The Chinese government and society’s high standards for stars send a clear signal about the kind of behavior that will be tolerated in the country. As Western brands and celebrities have also found, the fall from paragon to pariah can be swift. 

“Clearly, these public figures and celebrities are expected to be role models,” said Pan Wang, a senior lecturer at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, and author of the book “Love and Marriage in Globalizing China.” 

President Xi Jinping has eschewed growth-at-all-costs in favor of “common prosperity,” going after the superrich and promising greater income distribution.Li Xueren / Xinhua News Agency via Getty Images

Lee’s allegations certainly came as a shock to Wang’s fans like Michelle Yap, 38, a hotel manager in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, who met the star when he visited the country in 2005. 

“I was in disbelief when I first heard about the news, it was out of his character,” she said. “With so much information flooding in, I felt so confused.” 

The scandal surrounding the star has not only underscored the precarious status of celebrities in China, but also stirred discussion about why Chinese women stay in unhappy marriages.

“Whether it’s women in the past or in modern times, choosing to be a housewife is choosing a payless job,” Lee said in her first post outlining her fallout with Wang. Without a paycheck, she said, women risk losing the right to have their own savings and financial agency. 

With men as traditional family breadwinners, even close relationships can come with unequal power dynamics.

The state-affiliated Global Times newspaper ran an opinion piece noting the saga had highlighted the plight of “desperate housewives.”

Divorce still carries social stigma for many women in China.Getty Images file

Faced with rising divorce rates and falling birth rates, the Chinese government has sought to reinforce traditional family values, with a new law this year imposing a 30-day “cooling off” period before couples can divorce. 

It appears to have had the desired effect, according to data from state media, which shows that the divorce rate dropped by 70 percent in the first quarter of 2021. 

The controversial law was met with anger from women, but Beijing appears to be taking steps to assuage some of their concerns. The country’s top lawmaking body last week debated legislation that would give women new safeguards in the workplace and during pregnancy, according to Reuters.

“If women plan to have children that means they need to take care of them, and that will really shrink their personal space for career advancement, or for socialization, leisure activities,” said Wang, the lecturer and author.

“Some women do see divorce as a fresh start, a new chapter of life,”  she said. 

Lee certainly did. She posted on Instagram once again on Thursday, saying she hoped to “put an end to the continuing turmoil.”



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Wang Yaping becomes first Chinese woman to walk in space | Space News

Wang is one of three astronauts on a six-month mission to build the Tiangong space station.

Astronaut Wang Yaping has become the first Chinese woman to walk in space, authorities said Monday, as part of a six-month mission to the country’s space station.

Wang and fellow astronaut Zhai Zhigang left the main module of the Tiangong station for more than six hours to install equipment and carry out tests alongside the station’s robotic arm as part of its ongoing construction, according to the China Manned Space Agency (CMS).

The third member of the crew, Ye Guangfu, provided assistance from inside the station, CMS said on its website.

Tiangong, meaning “heavenly palace”, is a crucial part of China’s military-led drive to become a leading space power, after landing a rover on Mars and sending probes to the Moon.

Its core module entered orbit earlier this year, with the station expected to be operational by 2022.

Wang, 41, and Zhai, 55, have previously travelled to China’s now-retired experimental space stations, and Zhai conducted China’s first spacewalk 13 years ago.

Both waved to the camera while tethered to the outside of the station.

“This marks the first extravehicular activity of the Shenzhou-13 crew, and it is also the first in China’s space history involving the participation of a woman astronaut,” the CMS said in a statement early on Monday.

“The whole process was smooth and successful,” the agency added.

Tiangong is expected to operate for at least 10 years, and the three astronauts are the second group to stay there with Wang the first woman.

Their work involves setting up equipment and testing technology for future construction, with at least one more spacewalk planned.

The team is expected to spend six months at the station.

The Tianhe module of the station will be connected next year to two more sections named Mengtian and Wentian. The completed station will weigh about 66 tonnes, much smaller than the International Space Station, which launched its first module in 1998 and weighs about 450 tonnes.

Three spacewalks are planned to install equipment in preparation for the station’s expansion, while the crew will also assess living conditions in the Tianhe module and conduct experiments in space medicine and other fields.



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China, Vietnam should avoid magnifying S. China Sea disputes – China’s Wang Yi

HANOI/SHANGHAI, Sept 11 (Reuters) – China and Vietnam should refrain from unilateral actions regarding the South China Sea that could complicate the situation and magnify disputes, senior Chinese diplomat Wang Yi told a Vietnamese official, China’s foreign ministry said.

State Councillor Wang was speaking with Vietnamese Deputy Prime Minister Pham Binh Minh during a visit to Vietnam, the ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

Wang’s visit to Vietnam, part of his week-long Southeast Asian tour, came about two weeks after U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris’ trip to the region.

The Vietnamese prime minister said in a meeting with the Chinese ambassador just hours before Harris’ visit that Vietnam did not align itself with one country against any other. read more

China says it has historical sovereignty over most of the South China Sea, but its neighbours and the United States say that claim has no basis in international law, including the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), to which China is a signatory.

Beijing’s claim overlaps with Vietnam’s exclusive economic zone, or EEZ, as well as those of Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Taiwan. Trillions of dollars in trade flow every year through the waterway, which also contains rich fishing grounds and gas fields.

Wang said the two countries should cherish the hard-won peace and stability achieved in the South China Sea and be vigilant to resist the intervention of extraterritorial forces, the Chinese ministry’s statement said.

Vietnam’s Deputy Prime Minister Pham Binh Minh said in a government statement it was important that two countries respect each other’s legitimate rights and interests, in accordance with international law and UNCLOS.

The two sides agreed to continue to strictly adhere to high-level common perceptions, manage disagreements, avoid complicating situations or expanding disputes and jointly maintain peace and stability in the disputed waters, the Vietnamese government statement added.

Vietnam said China would donate 3 million more doses of COVID-19 vaccine to Vietnam this year, raising China’s total vaccine donations to the country to 5.7 million doses.

Alongside Wang’s visit, Vietnamese defence minister on Saturday met with his Japanese counterpart Nobuo Kishi on Kishi’s first trip overseas after assuming the post last year, Kyodo news agency reported.

Japan and Vietnam signed a deal enabling exports of Japanese-made defence equipment and technology to the Southeast Asian country to “boost cooperation amid China’s rising assertiveness in regional waters”, Kyodo said.

The deal was struck last year during Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga’s visit to Vietnam.

“Japan will speed up talks with Vietnam to sell Self-Defense Forces’ vessels,” Kyodo quoted Kishi as saying.

The two ministers also agreed on the importance of maintaining peace, security, freedom of navigation and overflight, Kyodo reported.

Reporting by Brenda Goh; Editing by William Mallard and Alex Richardson

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Megan Fox wears Alexander Wang to the grocery store: ‘GODDESS’

Megan Fox even makes running errands look good.

On Monday, the 35-year-old actress shared photos of the outfit she wore to get groceries — and it’s certainly not your typical errands running look. Rather, the mom of three rocked a neon green bodysuit with a cutout that showed off her torso. She paired the one-piece with jeans bleached with a pebble pattern and a matching jacket. 

“This is how I go to Erewhon now. Let’s talk about it,” she captioned the Instagram post. 

And talk about it they did. 

“SHE ATE THAT,” a fan wrote.

“I AM IN LOVE WITH EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS LOOK,” someone said.

“GODDESS,” another person added.

“How does it feel to be the hottest human on planet,” a commenter wondered.

Fox, who is dating Machine Gun Kelly, has been putting lots of bold looks on display lately. Working with stylist Maeve Reilly, the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles star has taken on some sartorial risks with cutouts, color and more. 

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Lulu Wang Short Film for Chinese New Year Shot on Apple iPhone 12 Pro

Apple tapped director Lulu Wang to showcase the cinematic features of the tech company’s latest iPhone.

Wang, who wrote and directed 2019 feature film “The Farewell,” directed a new short for Apple in celebration of Chinese New Year, “Nian,” which puts a fresh twist on a well-known Chinese folktale. (Watch above or at this link.) The 11-minute film was directed by Wang and her team from “The Farewell” and shot on an iPhone 12 Pro Max.

Apple, which just reported a blowout holiday 2020 quarter with a record $65.6 billion in iPhone sales, has touted the iPhone 12 Pro models as the best smartphone it’s ever made for filmmakers. They’re the first iPhones that can record HDR video in Dolby Vision, as well as provide the ability to edit 4K video at up to 60 frames per second directly on the phone. During the launch event last fall, Apple showed a 60-second film shot in HDR video with Dolby Vision on an iPhone 12 Pro by Oscar-winning cinematographer Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki (watch at this link.)

With the release of the iPhone 12, Apple sales in Greater China soared to an all-time high of $21.3 billion for December 2020 quarter — and with the promotional short “Nian,” Apple’s fourth annual Chinese New York film, the tech giant wants to keep the momentum going.

Wang and her crew worked on “Nian” remotely in the U.S. with a mirror crew on the ground in China because of COVID travel restrictions. The team used the iPhone 12 Pro Max’s Dolby Vision, low-light, ultra-wide lens, telephoto lens, stabilization and time-lapse features. The production featured hard-to-shoot night scenes and scenes set inside a cave, where space and lighting were limited.

“Nian” tells the story of a brave young girl’s determination to find — and confront — the widely feared Nian beast. When she comes face to face with him, she discovers that Nian is not at all terrifying and the two strike up a beautiful friendship based on acceptance.

“It’s really exciting that we have this opportunity to retell this ancient story, to capture these incredibly cinematic images with the iPhone, this very versatile device,” Wang said in a behind-the-scenes feature accompanying the film. She said the “Nian” team had “a lot of fun just trying to figure out where else can we stick the phone so we can get angles and perspectives that are just a little bit more unique.”

“We thought, ‘Oh, why don’t we just put the phone inside of the Nian’s mouth?’ I think the size of it allows us to get all kinds of cool, specialty shots that would be much harder to get with the traditional camera,” Wang said.

Wang, whose parents emigrated from China to the U.S. when she was 6, added, “As a child, my parents wanted me to go further than they have ever gone. And yet there’s also this fear that I was going into the unknown, and so I wanted to bring that theme into this film.”

“Nian” was produced by Iconoclast in association with Apple ad agency TBWAMedia Arts Lab (Shanghai). The film features an original score by Alex Weston.

Apple’s previous films marking the Chinese New Year are “Daughter” (2020), “The Bucket” (2019) and “Three Minutes” (2018).

Watch the behind-the-scenes clip of the making of Wang’s “Nian”:



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GOT7’s Jackson’s Label TEAM WANG Signs Business Agreement With Sublime Artist Agency

GOT7’s Jackson is confirmed to work with Sublime Artist Agency!

It was revealed earlier in the week that Sublime Artist Agency was discussing a business agreement with Jackson’s label TEAM WANG. It was previously also confirmed that fellow GOT7 member Youngjae signed an exclusive contract with the agency.

On January 22, Sublime Artist Agency officially announced, “We will work together on global business, including Korea and China, as a partner of TEAM WANG, the label personally established and run by Jackson.”

The agency continued, “As both are comprehensive entertainment companies that simultaneously work on entertainment management along with production, advertising agency business, developing new artists, and more, we anticipate collaboration in diverse fields.”

Following the news, Jackson took to social media to share his comments:

Looking forward to Jackson’s future activities!

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