Xiaxue
Xiaxue | |||||||||
Chinese | 下雪 | ||||||||
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Literal meaning | Falling snow | ||||||||
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Cheng Yan-yan | |||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 鄭彥彥 | ||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 郑彦彦 | ||||||||
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Wendy Cheng (Chinese: 郑彦彦, born 28 April 1984), better known by her pseudonym Xiaxue (下雪) is a Singaporean blogger who writes about her life, fashion and local issues in a provocative style. Her main blog, which attracts about 50,000 readers daily, has won prestigious blog awards and earned her sponsorship deals, as well as stints as a columnist and TV show host, but some of her posts have sparked national controversies. She is married to American engineer Mike Sayre and they have one child.
Personal life
Born in Singapore on 28 April 1984,[1] Xiaxue studied at River Valley High School and graduated from Singapore Polytechnic with a diploma in mass media,[2] then briefly worked as a project coordinator.[3] Her father, an antique dealer,[3] and her mother, a property agent,[3] are divorced;[1] she also has a younger brother.[3] For a year, she maintained a paper diary, which her ex-boyfriend's new girlfriend threw away during a Chinese New Year spring cleaning. Wanting to air her thoughts in a space that nobody could throw away,[3][4] she started blogging in April 2003.[5] She underwent plastic surgery, sponsored by MediaCorp TV, to "correct her bulbous nose" in 2006.[6] In 2010, she married American engineer Mike Sayre, whom she met online and had dated for three years, and in March 2013, she gave birth to a boy named Dashiel.[7]
Blogging
Xiaxue has ten blogs, including her untitled main blog (usually known as xiaxue.blogspot.com), a geeky blog, her media centre and several private blogs. Although she writes in the English language, she selected her pseudonym, which means "snowing" in Mandarin Chinese, because it "had that tinge of mysterious, beautiful girl thing about it".[4] On her main blog, which attracts about 50,000 readers daily,[8][9] she provides updates about her personal life, posts photographs, writes about topics such as fashion, discusses local issues such as "nasty taxi drivers", and posts paid advertorials.[3][4] She often uses profanity in her posts and her success has been attributed to her provocative writing style.[3][5] According to a survey she conducted, which attracted 6000 responses, her readers are mainly Singaporean, female, young adults interested in fashion and "looking for an alternative voice".[4] Awards that her main blog has won include the 2004 and 2005 Wizbang Weblog Awards Best Asian Blog and the 2005 Bloggies Best Asian Weblog.[5][10] In July 2005, a hacker defaced the blog, but she managed to restore its contents.[11] Her main blog, the first from Singapore to enter the Technorati Global Top 100 Blogs List,[7][10] was selected for the National Library Board archive in 2008.[5]
Other media
Due to the popularity of her main blog, Xiaxue has earned jobs in mainstream media, notably as a columnist for national newspapers TODAY and The New Paper, Maxim magazine and Snag magazine.[5] In addition, she has served as an editor for blog aggregator Tomorrow.sg,[8] a Star Blogger for the STOMP portal and a presenter at the 2005 Singapore Writer's Festival.[10] She has struck sponsorship deals with many companies, including online eyewear store HoneyColor, childcare merchandise retailer Mothercare,[7] T-shirt maker LocalBrand, hair salon Kimage and nail studio Voxy.[2] In 2006, she and DJ Rosalyn Lee co-hosted Girls Out Loud, a reality TV series on MediaCorp Channel 5, where they engage in "outrageous antics and no-holds-barred banter".[6] She has a fortnightly series, called Xiaxue's Guide to Life, on the web television channel clicknetwork.tv;[5] its highest-rated episode had more than a million views.[12] The Health Promotion Board selected her as an ambassador for their Get Fresh campaign to discourage women from smoking and help female smokers quit.[10]
Controversy
In October 2005, Xiaxue wrote an entry condemning a disabled man, who scolded a non-disabled man for using the toilet for the disabled, leading to an online backlash that prompted two sponsors to cancel their deals.[2] Two months later, she suggested that foreign workers be banned from Orchard Road, as they were molesting Singaporean girls; many netizens condemned her posts as "racist rants" and signed an online petition to ban her from Orchard Road. She was accused of impersonating another blogger and abusing her position as a Tomorrow.sg editor to remove comments critical of her in January 2006.[8] In July 2007, she made a post about the "seven most disgusting bloggers" in Singapore, sparking flame wars that were extensively covered by local media.[13] In April 2008, she made a video about the iPhone, which she insists "was meant to be funny", but was dubbed "the worst iPhone review" by American technology writer Daniel Lyons and ridiculed on other technology websites, including Gizmodo.[14] Xiaxue also has a heated rivalry with blogger Dawn Yang, who threatened to sue her for an allegedly defamatory post in June 2008.[9]
References
- 1 2 "FAQs", xiaxue.blogspot.com, Retrieved 9 July 2012.
- 1 2 3 Serene Luo, "Hard-hitting blogger flushed with success", The Straits Times, 31 December 2005.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Wong Kim Hoh, "Who says I have a foul mouth?", The Sunday Times, 15 August 2004.
- 1 2 3 4 "The life of Wendy", Go Digital, August–September 2005
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jack Schofield, "Blogger Xiaxue brings Girl Power to strait-laced Singapore", The Guardian, 21 July 2008.
- 1 2 Grace Yap, "Smells like team spirit", TODAY, 23 December 2006.
- 1 2 3 Cheow Sue Ann, "People even curse me with miscarriage", The New Paper, 31 March 2013.
- 1 2 3 "157 seek Orchard Road ban for Xiaxue", TODAY, 18 January 2006.
- 1 2 Debbie Yong, "Xiaxue won't say sorry to Dawn", The Straits Times, 23 July 2008.
- 1 2 3 4 "Wendy Cheng", Munky Superstar Pictures. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
- ↑ Chua Hian Hou, "Blocked out of their own blogs", The Straits Times, 22 July 2005.
- ↑ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1aBEwiHdGl4 Having a Baby (Part 3) - Xiaxue's Guide To Life: EP137
- ↑ Lim Yee Hung, "Xiaxue's hate list", Digital Life, 24 July 2007.
- ↑ Liew Hanqing, "Worst iPhone review so far", The New Paper, 12 April 2008.