China Naming Network - Eight-character Q&A - Why is Stephen Chow being provoked in Japan? What did that little Japanese guy say?

Why is Stephen Chow being provoked in Japan? What did that little Japanese guy say?

That was a long time ago, so it can only be said that they are ruining their own situation. Actors have seen this happen a lot. When they humiliate Stephen Chow, they humiliate themselves at the same time. Such actions by the organizers will only cause film and television stars around the world to have opinions about Japan. Didn't Li Bingbing of Resident Evil 5 refuse at the press conference in Japan? Have you appeared? If this continues, Japan will only turn itself into a forbidden area for international film and television.

Stephen Chow not only seeks provocation in Japan, but also in the United States:

Another time he was interviewed by a reporter. A reporter asked: "I want to know how Chinese people read cookies. , you know their English is so poor."

Stephen Chow scolded me directly, "What's your problem? Who can speak English and you are a good person?"

You may not understand what’s going on here, let me explain:

There is a kind of cookie in the United States, and its origin is a bit twisted: Chinese mooncakes come from the Ming Dynasty. Legend has it that the common people in the late Yuan Dynasty revolted. They added notes to the mooncakes, so they decided to rebel on August 15th.

Americans heard this story and made cookies with notes on them a hundred years ago. The notes were all about "good weather and good mood" and were not nutritious. Later, their cookies became very popular and became an American tradition.

So Americans have always been proud to replace Chinese mooncakes with their cookie tradition, because Chinese mooncakes no longer have paper strips in them. Americans often say to outsiders, "Nowadays, all the notes in cookies around the world are in English."

Americans often asked this question to Chinese movie stars who had just arrived in the United States from Hong Kong. questions to show off their American arrogance and English status, but most Chinese movie stars don't understand what they are asking.

Later, Hong Kong’s entertainment industry understood the meaning of this, so every star was informed of this question during their training, so Americans rarely asked this question.

If you ask this question, there is only one meaning. He is instigating the Chinese people. It is obvious that the reporter is so angry that Zhou Xingchi is angry.

I have seen that video. After the reporter asked the question, he laughed very cheaply, and Stephen Chow cursed loudly.

The photographer is an American, and he also knows the meaning of this question. At the end of the video, the photographer directly pulled the reporter and told him seriously, "Your joke is not funny at all.