Li Ziqi
Li Ziqi was born in Mianyang, Sichuan, China on July 6th, 1990 and is the YouTube Star. At the age of 33, Li Ziqi biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Li Ziqi (pinyin: Li Ziqi) was born on July 6, 1990) is a Chinese food and country-life blogger and internet celebrity.
She is best known for making food and craft preparation videos in her hometown of rural Pingwu, Sichuan, often using simple Chinese techniques.
As of 2019, she has over 7 million followers on YouTube, 19 million followers on Sina Weibo, and has inspired many bloggers to share similar content.
"Without a word lauding China, Li promotes Chinese culture in a positive way and tells a good China tale," CCTV praised her.
Early life
Li was born in Sichuan, China, on July 6, 1990, and on the other hand, "Li Jiajia" was born (Chinese: pinyin: L Jiji). She was orphanage at a young age. Li described in a Goldthread interview that she and her grandmother immigrated with her grandparents after her stepmother mistreated her.
Personal life
Li lives in Mianyang, Southwest China's Sichuan, with her grandmother, who appears on televisions occasionally. Her grandfather died when Li was in fifth grade. As a result, her grandmother was unable to pay for her education, and Li dropped out of school at the age of 14 to work in the city. She worked in various capacities, including as a waitress (2016–2017), a disc jockey (2007–2013), and a singer (2006–2007). She returned to care for her grandmother, who was unwell at the time.
Li began selling agricultural products on Taobao as a way to make a living before moving to be a blogger.
Li did all photographing and editing by herself at first. She made her videos with the support of a personal assistant and a videographer as she gained fame and expertise.
Career
In 2015, Li began releasing her Meipai videos. Li started making her videos by herself, but her video editing skills at the time didn't yet capture the creativity" she wanted to express. Peach Wine, one of Li's videos, attracted the attention of a video-making platform CEO who featured the video on the platform's front page, which soon gained more followers for Li's channel. "Making a dress out of grape skins" was her first video to YouTube in 2017. Sina Weibo, with over 26.3 million followers on Facebook, has inspired many bloggers to post similar content as of June 2020.
Urban millennials make up her mainland audience. Li's renown can be attributed to fugu (also retro-nostalgia), a growing appreciation of traditional Chinese culture. Li said in an interview with Goldthread in September 2019, "I simply want people in the city to know where their food comes from."
The overwhelming majority of Li's films are devoted to traditional foods and antiques. Other Li's famous videos include makeup and dresses dyed with grape skins. Li rarely speaks in her videos, and the sounds of nature, baking, and calm music are all typical. "The only narration is friendly banter between Li and her grandmother," Hemisphere magazine said, "the crackle of frost underfoot, the thwack of a cleaver, the sizzle of frying garlic, and the thwack of a cleaver bring you into an ASMR trance, so you don't even know how many videos you've binge."
She began a food brand under her own name in 2018 and began selling prepackaged food online.
In September 2019, she was named People's Choice Award by the Chinese Communist Party's official People's Daily newspaper. Li was nominated as a member of the All-China Youth Federation in August 2020. Li, as well as Ms Yeah and Dianxi Xiaoge, are the only Chinese internet stars to have earned international renown.
Li has put her vlogger career on hold due to a court dispute with her business associates since her last video in July 2021. Li formally sued Hangzhou Weinian on October 27, 2021. Despite the fact that the controversy has not been announced, several publications have speculated that it has something to do with commercialization of the Li Ziqi brand. Li said "she does not want to see her intellectual property over-commercialized" in a week before, in an interview with state-run China Central Television (CCTV). Weinian has used the Li Ziqi brand to sell food. Weinian holds a 70% interest in Guangxi Xingliu Food, a food chain that sells Li Ziqi branding, but Li Li she does not own any interest in the company.