
Joking about her abusive husband launched this Chinese comedian to stardom. The authorities aren't laughing
Asia
China
Social mediaFacebookTweetLink
Follow
With her short hair and unshowy clothing, Fan Chunli looks every bit the middle-aged woman from rural China. Among a crowd of youngsters vying to become the next breakout star in one of China's most popular stand-up comedy contests, she stands out.
But when the 50-year-old takes the mic, she beams with life and drips sarcasm, unloading jokes about her abusive ex-husband that bring the audience into a mix of laughter and tears.
Hailing from a place where simply knowing how to use the internet 'makes me the Elon Musk of my village,' Fan is the latest sensation in China's booming scene for stand-up comedy, an artform that offers an outlet for pent-up grievances in a country that often stifles open discussion of politics or society.
But Fan's acerbic takes on patriarchy and domestic abuse have alarmed some officials in China, where women's rights remain a sensitive issue. Trying to boost birth rates and thwart a looming demographic crisis, the ruling Communist Party is urging women to embrace traditional gender roles. It has cracked down hard on the country's nascent feminist movement, which it deems a malicious Western influence.
During the performance that shot her to fame earlier this month, Fan laid bare the absurdity facing many victims of domestic violence in the country.
She said she was beaten by her ex-husband. But when she told her parents she wanted a divorce, her father warned her not to bring disgrace to the family.
'When men are involved in domestic violence, it's not shameful. When women demand a divorce, it's shameful,' she said, drawing cheers during her performance at The King of Stand-up Comedy, a popular contest streamed by online platform iQiyi.
Fan's performance appears to have chagrined at least one local government.
As footage of her routine went viral last week, officials in the eastern province of Zhejiang issued a warning saying such jokes are 'catalysts that provoke' gender conflict.
The statement didn't directly name Fan, or the show in question, alluding only to a newcomer dubbed an 'industry gem' – the nickname given to her by the show's judges.
'The content of some talk shows is gradually deviating from its nature of humor, simplifying gender issues and repeatedly making a fuss about the 'opposition between men and women,'' the local government's publicity department wrote on Chinese social media platform WeChat. The province has no specific link to Fan or the TV show, but the department occasionally posts commentaries on recent trends.
Any discussion of gender issues, it said, should be 'rational.'
China's government has cracked down on feminist activism over the past decade. Most notably, a group of women who became known as the 'Feminist Five' were arrested after planning protests on public transport against sexual harassment in 2015.
Authorities have, however, allowed some mild-mannered discussion on social media, while movies featuring feminist themes continue to screen without a problem – as long as they do not amount to a call for action, experts say.
But Fan's background – provincial, not well off or highly educated – may be contributing to official disquiet over her popularity, adding an extra layer of scrutiny.
'She's a middle-aged woman who comes from a rural background, not one of those typical urban liberal elite feminists,' said Meng Bingchun, a communications professor who researches feminism at the London School of Economics (LSE).
'And this seems to indicate that this kind of discontent and grievance related to gender issues and the traditional Confucian, patriarchal values is probably more widespread than they (the authorities) are willing to acknowledge,' she told CNN.
Traditional social codes can sometimes prove as strict as any government diktat. Late last year, Chinese e-commerce giant JD faced a boycott by customers infuriated by its casting of trailblazing woman comedian Yang Li in a promotional live stream.
Those leading the action were apparently still stung by Yang's signature quip from five years ago, chiding mediocre men: 'How come he looks so average, yet still so confident?'
Bowing to the online backlash, the company apologized and severed ties with Yang.
Fan has never openly identified herself as a feminist. But in a post on the online platform Weibo, she wrote that she believes leaving behind the social constraints of rural life can lead to 'the awakening of women.'
'For example, when I say I want a divorce in my village, I'm seen as an unpardonable villain,' she wrote.
'But when I talk about my divorce outside, the audience applauds.'
Growing up away from China's major cities, she didn't receive any formal education until the age of 8, she told Chinese state-owned Sanlian Lifeweek in an interview. But that soon ended after junior high.
Raised in an era when opportunities mostly went to men, she recalled picking up a job in a city before getting married, and her mother handing all the money she sent home to her brother.
'Girls growing up in rural villages have no rights to inherit anything. Not the house. Not the land,' she told Sanlian. 'At the time… I just wanted to get married.'
But after getting married, she found out 'family and marriage trapped women, making it impossible for them to make money.'
For Fan, life before stand-up was a cleaning job at an obscure village in her home province of Shandong, in China's northeast.
Her path to stardom started with an unlikely twist.
In 2023, struggling to make ends meet, she recalled selling her jewelry to see a performance by her idol, a comedian named Li Bo, state-run media reported.
At the show, she was supposed to be roasted during an improv segment, but Fan's quick-witted responses impressed the performer, who decided to introduce Fan to the trade, she said.
Fan has plenty of experience to draw on when it comes to divorce, having contemplated her own for more than two decades.
'I was already thinking about getting a divorce when my eldest daughter was born,' she told Sanlian.
The mother of two described her ex-husband as a gambler, whose absence left her to look after her sick father-in-law alone. She also poked fun at his uncouth manners, saying he ate congee – a popular Chinese rice porridge – directly from the ladle.
One time her ex-husband and his father beat her up so badly that her face was covered in bruises, she alleged. She ran home to tell her parents that she wanted a divorce, only to be deterred by her mother, who told her to break up the relationship only if he was having an affair.
The last straw was a year or two ago when she caught her husband once again going ladle-to-mouth with the congee. 'This time,' she recalled thinking, 'I'm leaving without looking back.'
By then, Fan had already got a grounding in comedy performance, with slots at local comedy clubs. After leaving her husband – conceding both of their two houses to him, to get him to agree to a divorce – she decided to give stand-up a real shot, she said.
During her viral performance, she moved from innocent self-mockery to full-throttled roasting of her ex-husband, who she calls a 'corgi' because of his diminutive stature.
'How tough is it for a rural auntie to come to the city for work for the first time?' she asks.
Then she considered her current, dire situation.
'I glanced at my husband beside me and thought, 'I'm not scared of this challenge.''
Apart from her marriage, she also opened up about other taboo topics for Chinese women, such as oft-marginalized biological realities.
Noting her newfound late-life stardom, she said that – unlike many women who retire when their periods stop – 'my menopause will come with my debut.'
Fans who CNN spoke to are rooting for the rising female comedy scene in China, pushing back against Zhejiang officials' warning against 'gender opposition.'
Zhang Yuanqi said she watched Fan's show with her mother, who similarly left an abusive home, a decade ago.
She said comedians like Fan are 'not trying to stir up 'gender opposition'; they're just turning their life experiences into jokes.'
'What we want to hear is our own lives,' she said.
'I started to wonder if my mom had similar worries that she kept to herself, thinking she had to handle them alone,' Huang Xueyao, a 21-year-old university student, said.
Fan touched on issues women encounter daily, she said, adding that she couldn't understand the local government's warnings. 'They tell us to stop. What's really behind the officials' thinking?' added Huang, who said she hopes to take her mother to see Fan perform in person.
Meng, from LSE, said the Chinese government is grappling to understand this newly emerging form of entertainment, which may explain the cautious approach, though the warning from the Zhejiang authorities is unlikely to have further consequences on Fan.
As of Sunday, Fan's Weibo account remains active (a deactivation would be one of the first signs a performer has fallen afoul of China's censorship apparatus) – though some posts railing against the veiled official warning have been removed.
For the rising performer, comedy is more than just a newfound career, but also a way of getting catharsis.
'The biggest change in me since I've started doing stand-up comedy is that I no longer get angry at my ex-husband's every move,' Fan told Sanlian.
'There is a feeling of reconciliation.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Two Chinese nationals in California accused of illegally shipping Nvidia AI chips to China
By Karen Freifeld (Reuters) -Two Chinese nationals were arrested in California and charged with illegally shipping tens of millions of dollars' worth of AI chips to China, including Nvidia H100s, the U.S. Justice Department said Tuesday. Chuan Geng, 28, of Pasadena, and Shiwei Yang, 28, of El Monte, exported the advanced Nvidia chips and other technology to China from October 2022 through July 2025 without obtaining the required licenses from the U.S. Commerce Department, a criminal complaint says. According to the complaint, Geng and Yang's El Monte-based company, ALX Solutions Inc, was founded in 2022, shortly after the U.S. imposed sweeping export controls on technology to China and began to require licenses for the chips. A spokesperson for Nvidia declined comment. Over 20 shipments from ALX solutions went to shipping and freight forwarding companies in Singapore and Malaysia, which are often used as transshipment points for illegal goods to China. ALX received a $1 million payment from a China-based company in January 2024 and other payments from companies in Hong Kong and China, not the freight forwarding companies. Nvidia H100s are advanced chips that can be used to train large language models and for other applications, such as developing self-driving cars and medical diagnosis systems. Records show that from at least August 2023 to July 2024, ALX Solutions bought over 200 Nvidia H100 chips from San Jose, Calif-based server maker Super Micro Computer, declaring that the end users were in Singapore and Japan. Super Micro did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In addition to Nvidia's H100s, the pair are accused of illegally shipping Nvidia video graphics cards known as PNY GE Force RTX 4090, which also require a license for export to China. Geng and Yang appeared in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles late Monday, according to the Justice Department. Geng, a permanent resident, was released on $250,000 bond. Yang, who overstayed her visa, has a detention hearing on August 12. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


CNN
4 minutes ago
- CNN
Japanese firework festival ends with barges on fire
Japanese firework festival ends with barges on fire A firework festival in Japan's Yokohama went awry on Monday when fireworks landed on the barges they were being launched from, setting two of the barges on fire. The event organizer told police a fireworks launch system went out of control, Reuters reported citing local media. 00:27 - Source: CNN Vertical World News 16 videos Japanese firework festival ends with barges on fire A firework festival in Japan's Yokohama went awry on Monday when fireworks landed on the barges they were being launched from, setting two of the barges on fire. The event organizer told police a fireworks launch system went out of control, Reuters reported citing local media. 00:27 - Source: CNN Tornado hits Inner Mongolia Footage shows a tornado hitting Inner Mongolia on Monday. No casualties were reported from the incident, according to a state media report. 00:29 - Source: CNN Why Asia is one of the fastest-warming places in the world CNN's Hanako Montgomery reports from Tokyo and explains why Asia is warming faster than the global average, as Japan endures its hottest day ever recorded 01:03 - Source: CNN Satellite images show damage to Russian submarine base after tsunami Satellite images captured after the 8.8 magnitude quake show damage to a floating pier at Russia's submarine base in Rybachiy and raise questions about fleet readiness. 01:18 - Source: CNN 'I thought, do or die': How a Ukrainian soldier cycled to safety after Russian assault After a Russian assault left all three of his fellow soldiers dead and himself wounded, Andriy, stationed near Siversk, Ukraine, thought his life was over. But back at his command bunker, they hatched a plan. Armed with determination, a will to live - and a bike - he was able to escape. CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reports. 01:12 - Source: CNN Moscow residents on Trump-Putin relationship As the relationship between President Trump and President Putin continues to deteriorate, with Trump threatening harsher sanctions on Russia if a ceasefire agreement with Ukraine is not reached, CNN's Frederik Pleitgen talks to Moscow residents about their thoughts on the tensions between the two countries. 02:02 - Source: CNN Desperation grows in Gaza as aid is airdropped CNN footage on Monday captured the desperation of hundreds of Palestinians in central Gaza as people rushed towards aid boxes that many rely on, as the hunger crisis continues. Six countries were involved in dropping 120 aid packages in total, according to the Israel Defense Forces. 00:34 - Source: CNN Hear from Israeli hostages' families after meeting with Witkoff Steve Witkoff, the United States' Special Envoy to the Middle East, held a nearly three-hour meeting with the families of those still being held in the Gaza Strip on Saturday, telling them that the US' 'first priority' is getting the hostages back to Israel, the forum said. Fifty hostages remain in Gaza, at least 20 of whom are believed to be alive. CNN has reached out to Witkoff's team to confirm that he made these comments. 01:16 - Source: CNN Young Catholics flock to Rome for Youth Jubilee Pope Leo XIV received a rock star's welcome and led a prayer vigil with young people participating in the Jubilee of the Youth in Rome. CNN's Christopher Lamb reports. 01:23 - Source: CNN Witkoff visits controversial Gaza aid site US Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff spent over five hours in Gaza, and visited the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation aid site. He said the purpose of the visit was to give Trump 'a clear understanding of the humanitarian situation and help craft a plan to deliver food and medical aid to the people of Gaza.' CNN's Jeremy Diamond reports. 01:53 - Source: CNN United Nations' Relief Chief: If anyone can shift Israeli Government, 'It's of course, the Americans' UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Tom Fletcher tells CNN's Christiane Amanpour that if anyone can shift the Israeli government, it's the US, and addresses reports of how food aid is being intercepted. 02:09 - Source: CNN Amusement park ride splits in half in Saudi Arabia At least 23 people were injured, three of them critically, when a fairground ride buckled in Saudi Arabia, sending passengers crashing to the ground, according to state media. 00:33 - Source: CNN Soldiers in Ukraine battle Russian drones CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reports from the frontlines of Ukraine, where soldiers rush to bring in the wounded as drones constantly look for a target. 01:38 - Source: CNN US diminished a key weapons stockpile fighting Iran The US used about a quarter of its supply of high-end missile interceptors during the Israel-Iran war, exposing a gap in supplies, and raising concerns about US global security posture. CNN's Tamara Qiblawi reports. 01:35 - Source: CNN Carney says Canada will recognize Palestinian state Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has joined France and Britain in announcing plans to recognize a Palestinian state in September at the United Nations, as international pressure builds on Israel over the ongoing war and starvation crisis in Gaza. President Donald Trump reacted to the announcement by threatening to derail trade talks with Canada. 00:30 - Source: CNN
Yahoo
31 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Why TSMC Stock Is Falling Today
Aug 5 - Taiwan's top chipmaker, TSMC (NYSE:TSM), shares dipped nearly 3% on Tuesday after the company found itself in the middle of a serious investigation. The company's internal monitoring caught unusual activity, and now authorities have detained three people, two still with the company and one former employee, for allegedly leaking trade secrets. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 4 Warning Signs with JOBY. The former staffer, reportedly named Chen, and others could face charges under Taiwan's national security laws. TSMC didn't waste time. It launched legal action and took swift disciplinary steps against those involved. The stolen material may be tied to the company's next-gen 2-nanometer chips, some of the most advanced tech in the world. That's a big deal, considering TSMC supplies powerhouses like Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), and Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM). Meanwhile, Japan's Tokyo Electron has also come under scrutiny, though it's unclear how it's connected. Prosecutors haven't shared many details yet. TSMC says it won't tolerate this kind of behavior, and it's doing everything to protect its IP. With global demand for cutting-edge chips higher than ever, safeguarding technology is more critical than ever. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data