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Namewee and Kimberley Chen Fang-yu: Glass Heart
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Little Pink (simplified Chinese: 小粉红; traditional Chinese: 小粉紅; pinyin: xiǎo fěnhóng)[1] is a term used to describe young jingoistic Chinese nationalists and socialists on the internet.[2]
The term Little Pink originated on the website Jinjiang Literature City [zh] (晋江文学城), when a group of users kept strongly criticizing people who published posts containing negative news about China.[3][4] Within Jinjiang Literature City, this group became known as the “Jinjiang Girl Group Concerned for the Country”, or the Little Pink, which is the main color of the website’s front page.[5][6]
The Little Pink are different from members of the 50 Cent Party, as the Little Pink are not paid. In terms of demographics, according to Zhuang Pinghui of South China Morning Post, 83% of the Little Pink are female, with most of them between 18 and 24 years old. More than half of the Little Pink are from third- and fourth-tier cities in China.[5]
They are primarily active on social media sites banned in China such as Twitter and Instagram.[6] Many of the Little Pink are Chinese students studying abroad in countries which do not block access to those sites. They have been compared to the Red Guard of the cultural revolution.[7]
Responses
The Chinese Communist Party‘s official newspaper People’s Daily and its daily tabloid Global Times have both lavished praise on the Little Pink as has the Communist Youth League of China.[5]
In October 2021, Link Pink were the subject of criticism by the song “Fragile” by Malaysian singer Namewee and Australian singer Kimberley Chen.[8]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Pink
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The rise of the Little Pink: China’s angry young digital warriors
Who are these angry Chinese dominating the internet with their jingoistic rage, where are they from and how did they emerge? We tell you

Zhuang Pinghui + FOLLOW
Published: 7:00am, 26 May, 2017
Updated: 7:42pm, 13 Jun, 2017
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