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Part of a series on Xi Jinping. [View Related Entries]


About

Xi Jinping Winnie the Pooh Comparisons refer to memes comparing the Chinese President and the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China Xi Jinping to the Disney character Winnie the Pooh. Originally spread by Internet users in China to mock the president, the meme saw wider recognition among the Western users after Winnie the Pooh was blacklisted by the Chinese censorship authorities in July 2017, which produced the Streisand Effect.

Origin

On June 8th, 2013, the Chinese President Xi Jinping and the United States President Barack Obama met at The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands in Rancho Mirage, California, with a photograph of them walking together and smiling made by an unknown photographer (shown below, left).[1] Before June 10th, 2013, Chinese social network Weibo user badtuzizi made a meme in which the two presidents were compared to an image of the Disney characters Winnie the Pooh and Tigger walking in a similar fashion (shown below, right). The Winnie the Pooh and Tigger artwork was drawn specifically for the meme.[2]

@尼加拉瓜免子 weibo.com/badtuzizi

Spread

On June 10th, 2013, Twitter user @MissXQ tweeted the photo, writing that the image was very popular on Weibo in the previous 24 hours (shown below, left).[3] The tweet received over 900 retweets and 300 likes in six years. In the following hours, multiple Western media reported on the meme, including news posts by The Atlantic[4] and BuzzFeed News.[5] Additionally, another image comparing the presidents to Winnie the Pooh and Tigger was shared on June 10th, by @OffbeatChina Twitter account (shown below, right).[6]

XQ @MissXQ The most popular photo on Weibo in the past 24 hours. 5:32 PM 10 Jun 2013
@笑话大王彭彭 weibo.com/802207333

Winnie the Pooh Blacklisted in China

On July 14th, 2017, Twitter user @wuzuolai posted several screenshots from Chinese social media which indicated that memes comparing Xi Jinping to Winnie the Pooh were being scrubbed from the Chinese segment of the internet (tweet and images shown below).[7] The tweet received over 130 retweets and 200 likes in two years. On the same day, Twitter user @shawnwzhang tweeted that Winnie the Pooh was added to the list of sensitive words in China due to the meme.[8]

吴祚来 @wuzuolai 谣传吧。喜乐一下吧 o000 Ultra N5:0/ 81% 原因:主人公形象酷似国家领导人,内容有指涉 诋毁国家领导人嫌兼疑,特此通报。 Q 小熊维尼习近平 蘋果日報 習近平變維尼熊港人微博被刪|蘋 果日報| 兩岸國際| 20130614 iPhone 6 5:08 PM 14 Jul 2017 >
イ0 100% 中国移动 21:02 令 ●o●oo 〈动态 好友动态 + 无熵大雅:文化局通知: 《小熊维尼》系列全面下架 原因:主人公形象酷似国家领导人,,内容有指涉 诋毁国家领导人嫌疑,特此通报。 iPhone 6 2人转发 评论
下午5:07 oooo Ultra 81% Q 小熊维尼习近平 蘋果日報 習近平變維尼熊港人微博被刪| 蘋 果日報| 兩岸國際| 20130614 Images may be subject to copyright. Visit page Share Save Related imag VIEW ALL
Shawn Zhang @shawnwzhang Winnie the Pooh is a sensitive word in China because people think Winnie looks like Xi Jinping 试-下 小熊维尼! @领衔主演一南凡 小熊维尼不能出现在微博评论里是我听讨最好 ODisney (20021)content is illegal! 已下架 小熊维尼友情系列 下载最新迪士尼微信表情,让我们一踏入小熊维尼的 友情世界,感受最暖心的简单快乐。 11:17 PM - 14 Jul 2017

In the following days, multiple news outlets reported on the news, with Financial Times reporting that mentions of Winnie the Pooh were censored on Weibo and that a collection of animated Winnie the Pooh GIFs was removed from WeChat.[9]

Christopher Robin Film Ban

On August 3rd, 2018, the Disney film Christopher Robin, a live-action adaptation of the Winnie the Pooh franchise, was banned in China. According to the Hollywood Reporter,[10] "A source pins the blame on the country’s crusade against images of the Winnie the Pooh character, which has become a symbol of the resistance with foes of the ruling Communist Party, namely Chinese leader Xi Jinping."

NBA Apology, Blizzard Boycott, South Park Ban October 2019 Resurgence

In October 2019, following several controversies involving the influence of Chinese censorship on the United States media, including the Blizzard Boycott and China scrubbing all mentions and episodes of South Park television series, memes comparing Xi Jinping to Winnie the Pooh gained significant popularity among the Western users on Reddit, Twitter and other online platforms.

Various Examples

Liberate Hong Kong, the revolution of our times VÁEC CENSORED aros TINIMOZba0 Bros TIMMIMU 03 YbnY KEM-C ET HEMhniEY CENSORED CENSORED Our CENSORED

We should all make this our profile picture so we can piss of the chinese government even more Honey
china then china now -build the great wall -invented gunpowder -is scared of winnie the pooh -trained martial arts

Search Interest

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Xi Jinping Winnie the Pooh Comparisons

Xi Jinping Winnie the Pooh Comparisons

Part of a series on Xi Jinping. [View Related Entries]

PROTIP: Press 'i' to view the image gallery, 'v' to view the video gallery, or 'r' to view a random entry.

About

Xi Jinping Winnie the Pooh Comparisons refer to memes comparing the Chinese President and the General Secretary of the Communist Party of China Xi Jinping to the Disney character Winnie the Pooh. Originally spread by Internet users in China to mock the president, the meme saw wider recognition among the Western users after Winnie the Pooh was blacklisted by the Chinese censorship authorities in July 2017, which produced the Streisand Effect.

Origin

On June 8th, 2013, the Chinese President Xi Jinping and the United States President Barack Obama met at The Annenberg Retreat at Sunnylands in Rancho Mirage, California, with a photograph of them walking together and smiling made by an unknown photographer (shown below, left).[1] Before June 10th, 2013, Chinese social network Weibo user badtuzizi made a meme in which the two presidents were compared to an image of the Disney characters Winnie the Pooh and Tigger walking in a similar fashion (shown below, right). The Winnie the Pooh and Tigger artwork was drawn specifically for the meme.[2]


@尼加拉瓜免子 weibo.com/badtuzizi

Spread

On June 10th, 2013, Twitter user @MissXQ tweeted the photo, writing that the image was very popular on Weibo in the previous 24 hours (shown below, left).[3] The tweet received over 900 retweets and 300 likes in six years. In the following hours, multiple Western media reported on the meme, including news posts by The Atlantic[4] and BuzzFeed News.[5] Additionally, another image comparing the presidents to Winnie the Pooh and Tigger was shared on June 10th, by @OffbeatChina Twitter account (shown below, right).[6]


XQ @MissXQ The most popular photo on Weibo in the past 24 hours. 5:32 PM 10 Jun 2013 @笑话大王彭彭 weibo.com/802207333

Winnie the Pooh Blacklisted in China

On July 14th, 2017, Twitter user @wuzuolai posted several screenshots from Chinese social media which indicated that memes comparing Xi Jinping to Winnie the Pooh were being scrubbed from the Chinese segment of the internet (tweet and images shown below).[7] The tweet received over 130 retweets and 200 likes in two years. On the same day, Twitter user @shawnwzhang tweeted that Winnie the Pooh was added to the list of sensitive words in China due to the meme.[8]


吴祚来 @wuzuolai 谣传吧。喜乐一下吧 o000 Ultra N5:0/ 81% 原因:主人公形象酷似国家领导人,内容有指涉 诋毁国家领导人嫌兼疑,特此通报。 Q 小熊维尼习近平 蘋果日報 習近平變維尼熊港人微博被刪|蘋 果日報| 兩岸國際| 20130614 iPhone 6 5:08 PM 14 Jul 2017 > イ0 100% 中国移动 21:02 令 ●o●oo 〈动态 好友动态 + 无熵大雅:文化局通知: 《小熊维尼》系列全面下架 原因:主人公形象酷似国家领导人,,内容有指涉 诋毁国家领导人嫌疑,特此通报。 iPhone 6 2人转发 评论 下午5:07 oooo Ultra 81% Q 小熊维尼习近平 蘋果日報 習近平變維尼熊港人微博被刪| 蘋 果日報| 兩岸國際| 20130614 Images may be subject to copyright. Visit page Share Save Related imag VIEW ALL Shawn Zhang @shawnwzhang Winnie the Pooh is a sensitive word in China because people think Winnie looks like Xi Jinping 试-下 小熊维尼! @领衔主演一南凡 小熊维尼不能出现在微博评论里是我听讨最好 ODisney (20021)content is illegal! 已下架 小熊维尼友情系列 下载最新迪士尼微信表情,让我们一踏入小熊维尼的 友情世界,感受最暖心的简单快乐。 11:17 PM - 14 Jul 2017

In the following days, multiple news outlets reported on the news, with Financial Times reporting that mentions of Winnie the Pooh were censored on Weibo and that a collection of animated Winnie the Pooh GIFs was removed from WeChat.[9]

Christopher Robin Film Ban

On August 3rd, 2018, the Disney film Christopher Robin, a live-action adaptation of the Winnie the Pooh franchise, was banned in China. According to the Hollywood Reporter,[10] "A source pins the blame on the country’s crusade against images of the Winnie the Pooh character, which has become a symbol of the resistance with foes of the ruling Communist Party, namely Chinese leader Xi Jinping."

NBA Apology, Blizzard Boycott, South Park Ban October 2019 Resurgence

In October 2019, following several controversies involving the influence of Chinese censorship on the United States media, including the Blizzard Boycott and China scrubbing all mentions and episodes of South Park television series, memes comparing Xi Jinping to Winnie the Pooh gained significant popularity among the Western users on Reddit, Twitter and other online platforms.

Various Examples


Liberate Hong Kong, the revolution of our times VÁEC CENSORED aros TINIMOZba0 Bros TIMMIMU 03 YbnY KEM-C ET HEMhniEY CENSORED CENSORED Our CENSORED
We should all make this our profile picture so we can piss of the chinese government even more Honey china then china now -build the great wall -invented gunpowder -is scared of winnie the pooh -trained martial arts

Search Interest

External References

Recent Videos 1 total

Recent Images 40 total


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