"Why do Chinese people love instant noodles? We would not eat such food in Kenya because it is so long that we have to cut it with scissors." Ruth, a 22-year-old woman from Nairobi, Kenya, gave this comment in a food review video starring her. Her full name is not available.
Ruth, a 22-year-old woman from Nairobi, Kenya, who studies at Tianjin Normal University, tastes food and gives her comments on a food review video in Tianjin. [Photo/China Youth Daily] |
She needed to taste those "weird" foods she was offered in front of the camera and comment on them. Sometimes a tiny bite of spicy food would make her burst into tears. This is Ruth's second year in China. She is a junior student in Tianjin Normal University and her teacher named her "Ruoxi" in Chinese, the name of a character in a famous TV series, when she just arrived here.
In her free time, Ruth, or Ruoxi, was invited by a Chinese video platform startup to take part in recording online videos twice a week.
To become an internet celebrity, she even studied crosstalk and traditional Chinese opera. The internet celebrity economy, having developed a new business operation mode, is one of the highlights of China's internet development last year, according to a report released by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The scale of internet celebrity industry reached 52.8 billion yuan ($7.98 billion) last year and is expected to surpass 100 trillion yuan in 2018, with a compound annual growth rate of 59.4 percent from 2015 to 2018, according to a report by market research company Analysys.