The ancient meaning of Shanzhai
Pinyin of Shanzhai: shān zhài
Shanzhai is also called "shanzhai".
1. A villa with defensive fortifications such as fences. Li Xinzhuan of the Song Dynasty "Miscellaneous Notes on the Government and the Country since Jianyan·Longzhou Fanbu Kou Bian": "Wang Yue also asked to build a mountain stronghold in Shuidao in front of him as a garrison, and the court followed it." "History of the Song Dynasty·Yue Fei Biography": "Fei Fei The painting is very large, and when the order has arrived in Yiluo, there must be a response in the mountain villages in Taihang. ""Yuan Shi Zu Ji 7": "Sent the Mongolian and Han Army Marshal Zhang Hongfan to attack Zhangzhou, and captured 150 villages and 1 million households."
2. Generally refers to mountain villages. "People's Daily" November 3, 1968: "The good news spread to the vast rural areas, mountain villages and fishing towns of the motherland, and hundreds of millions of poor and lower-middle peasants rejoiced."
3. The mountain camp occupied by the old green forest heroes. Chapter 51 of "Water Margin": "Wu Xuexiu said: 'The leaders in the village have paid their respects. This time, Wu Yong and Lei Dutout came to invite them to go up the mountain and gather together for the great cause.'" "History of the Ming Dynasty·Biography of Xiang Zhong": "There are millions of refugees attached to thieves... thieves lurk in the village, waiting for disaster."
4. Refers to a poor place, a poor village, a place where the poor live. For example, the Pig Cage City copycat in Stephen Chow's "Kung Fu". The opposite is a mansion, which refers to a place where wealthy people live. The famous poet and scholar Shen Baofeng has a poem.
If you have money, you will live in a big house, but if you don’t have money, you will live in a cottage.
There are few real talents in the big house, but all the talents are in the cottage.
[Edit this paragraph] Shanzhai New Meaning
1. Refers to manufacturers that have counterfeit or counterfeit third-party products. The literal meaning of "shanzhai" is: to escape from government management in a mountain village. The word "shanzhai" comes from the Cantonese language, which means those territories that dominate the mountains and are not under official jurisdiction.
2. In layman’s terms, it refers to piracy, cloning, imitation, etc., an industrial phenomenon initiated by private IT forces. Its main characteristics are mainly counterfeiting, rapidity and civilianization. The main form is starting from small workshops and quickly imitating famous brands, involving different fields such as mobile phones and game consoles. The terms derived from this include copycat phones, copycat stars, copycat Bird's Nest, etc. Another aspect of this culture is that it is good at skirting the edges and often walking on the edge of industry policies, causing controversy.
3. In other industries, "shanzhai factories" mostly refer to informal workshops that supply upstream accessories from regular factories, or rough manufacturers that produce products with low cost and unstable quality. "There is a jargon saying, 'This kind of product can even be made by copycat factories,' which often means that the design, technology, and production threshold of this product are already very low." A vice president of a lighting company told reporters. Now, even movies have copycat versions of "Painted Skin" and "Sword Butterfly". The word copycat has gradually appeared in some applied writing articles.
4. Time spanned to the end of 2008, and the copycat phenomenon caused by copycat phones spread to the entire Internet. Counterfeit celebrities, copycat Dream of Red Mansions, copycat Baijia Forum, etc. all made no secret of their challenges to elite culture. Subsequently, The Shanzhai phenomenon was unexpectedly featured on CCTV News Network. This was the first time that the official expressed its opinions on the folk phenomenon, and it officially entered the era of the whole people.
Shanzhai is an emerging civil society in China
In the Internet world in 2008, a nostalgic, novel and highly criticized term spread like wildfire, that is, "shanzhai" and its the culture represented.
"Copycat version" of mobile phones, "copycat version" of Jay Chou, and "copycat version" of Baijia Forum. The phenomenon of "copycat versions" seems to be emerging one after another, and everything in the "copycat versions" seems to be more popular among the general public.
Some people say that "copycat" is synonymous with piracy, poor imitation, harassment of the established order, or even a kind of copyright infringement.
It should be pointed out that not all "copycat versions" are keen on "piracy". The "copycat version" of Jay Chou and the "copycat version" of Baijia Forum at least have no basis for breaking the law and do not infringe on the "intellectual property rights" of the "genuine" ones. But "copycat versions" are indeed keen on "imitation". Without "imitation", there would be no "copycat". But "imitation" is not illegal or immoral.
Perhaps the most outraged are the “imitators”. "Imitation" causes the "imitated" to lose profits, ruin the scenery, or lose legitimacy. Therefore, "copycat versions" disrupt the existing order.
But "imitation" is just "imitation", it doesn't really want to replace anything. A "copycat" mobile phone can never replace the real Nokia, and the "copycat" version of Jay Chou can never be more like Jay Chou than the "genuine" version. "Imitation" is just to tell those who are successful, those "routines" that have been formed: you are not the only one, it is not an "authority", let alone an "order", Another is possible!
Genuine Nokia is not "authoritative", nor is the protection of intellectual property rights paramount. The common people cannot afford to collect famous paintings handed down from ancient times, but they have the right to appreciate these human cultural treasures; AIDS patients in Africa cannot afford those high-priced "medicines" that have been protected for 50 years of intellectual property rights, but they have the right to live. Protecting intellectual property rights is by no means protecting high monopoly profits, and consumers have the freedom to choose the products they like.
"Genuine" Jay Chou cannot monopolize people's love for him. The "copycat version" should tell him where your achievements today come from. Jay Chou may be everywhere among the grassroots.
"Copycat" is not a traditional Chinese bad habit, nor is it China's "collective hooligan unconsciousness." In Seattle, USA, in 1999, faced with the opaque ministerial “summit” of the WTO, people protesting against free trade held a “people’s summit” opposite the official venue. From then on, whenever the 8-nation “summit”, the 20-nation “summit”, or the World Bank “summit” is held, there will definitely be a “copycat” version opposite it.
From this point of view, the purpose of "copycat" is not to "imitate", but to use "imitation" to ridicule those who consider themselves to be mainstream authorities, and to use "imitation" to declare their existence and different. It embodies the voice of the most ordinary and grassroots little people, who declare in this unique way of display: I don’t accept it! We do not accept the value norms of the elite, the price monopoly logic of the market, and the "authoritative" status of famous figures, whether this authority comes from the law, the market, or the people. What the "copycat version" Jay Chou tells the "genuine" ones is exactly this: I am different from you!
"Shanzhai", China's emerging civil society. It expresses itself in unexpected ways.
[Edit this paragraph] On "shanzhai" culture
In the past year, although our country's economic development has slowed down a lot, another craze has emerged. : "Copycat" craze. Starting from copycat mobile phones, now even the Spring Festival Gala has so-called copycat versions. It can be said that they are endless and people are overwhelmed. Fueled by the mass media and the Internet, a new kind of popular culture has quickly become the best among many popular cultures in mainland China and has penetrated into all aspects of social life.
In fact, rather than saying that this "copycat" culture is new or innovative, it is better to say that it is a pseudo-innovation. The Chinese have been manufacturing fake goods on a large scale for decades. Although the "copycat" goods are not fakes, but just imitations, technically speaking, they are not innovative at all, and the essence of counterfeiting is not Change. Not to mention all kinds of industrial products, things like the "Counterfeit Spring Festival Gala" would already be a bit sensationalistic if they weren't meant to satirize the genuine Spring Festival Gala. There is no innovation in content and form. It is nonsense to say that copycats are innovations. They are just some "imitation shows". "Copycat" culture is just a continuation of counterfeiting, an excuse for the collective lack of real creativity but unwillingness to admit it. However, some truly down-to-earth researchers have never been able to enter the elegant hall because they were labeled as "copycats". Amid the noisy cheers of the people, they gradually lost their confidence in exploring problems and creating inventions. Instead, there are more so-called "copycat" innovations that are suspected of being a spoof. Occasionally, it can be ridiculed and played, but such pseudo-innovation has now become a trend. It is indeed worthy of everyone's vigilance and more worthy of deep thought.
But then again, the emergence of "shanzhai" culture is not just the offspring of the long-term random combination of the trend of counterfeiting and pranks. It is the result of the socio-economic and cultural development to this day. A phenomenon that occurs accidentally but inevitably. To say it is accidental means that it appears in the form of a "cottage"; to say it is inevitable is because the social conditions for its emergence are mature. The first reason is the economic reason, which is also the essential reason.
After decades of rapid economic development in our country, some economic bubbles will appear in the process of its own development; and foreign capital, by monopolizing brands and technologies, is charging extremely high prices for many electronic and technology products, which has also caused many problems. A very big economic bubble. Such bubbles are the breeding ground for fakes and imitations. Just imagine if the price of a brand-name phone and a "cottage phone" are the same, who would be willing to use a "cottage phone"? It is precisely because the prices of many brands no longer reflect the value, and the price is far higher than the value, that it provides space for "copycat" machines. The space is these various economic bubbles, which are the basis of the "copycat" culture. Appearance provides the initial impetus. On the other hand, the increasing vulgarity and simplification of mass entertainment, under the condition that mass media has transformed from initially "entertaining the masses" into a tool for "delighting the masses", has created the prerequisite for the expression of "shanzhai" culture , the public’s blind obedience and lack of critical thinking skills provide a rapid avenue for its spread.
In general, the emergence of "shanzhai" culture cannot simply be said to be a good thing or a bad thing. Its appearance reminds those who create bubbles that under economic aggression and oppression, consumers will have their own methods and will respond instead of letting others prey on others. It reminds those capitalists who clamor for anti-counterfeiting to look back and examine their own evil deeds. Should there be some restraint on making huge profits? But on the other hand, from the perspective of the nation's innovative and critical abilities, the emergence of "shanzhai" culture is not a positive signal. The popularity of "shanzhai" culture is actually a new, more psychological bubble. To deal with the existing economic bubble, using violence to fight violence is not a solution to the problem, nor is it a method that we should advocate and cheer for. A more rational vision, a spirit of seeking truth from facts, coupled with innovative thinking skills, are the beacons that lead us out of difficulties and confusion. "
[Edit this paragraph] The Chinese-style rise of Shanzhai culture
The word "shanzhai" comes from Cantonese, which means "small, small-scale" and even a bit "underground factory" Meaning, its main characteristics are counterfeiting, rapidity, and popularization. Nowadays, there are copycat versions of all kinds of things on the Internet, including copycat versions of celebrities, copycat versions of "Shenqi", copycat versions of "Bird's Nest", and copycat versions. "Dream of Red Mansions" is even more popular than the new version of "Dream of Red Mansions". Shanzhai culture is deeply imprinted with grassroots innovation and the wisdom of the masses.
The rise of Shanzhai culture in China's IT industry is like any traditional Chinese martial arts novel. The story goes like this: first wandering on the fringes of the mainstream circle with unconventional methods, then gradually becoming bigger, and finally challenging the orthodox forces and even replacing them.
Shanzhai culture imitates the mainstream at a very low cost. A phenomenon in which the appearance or function of a branded product is innovated and eventually surpasses this product in terms of appearance, function, price, etc. Its derivatives will break the shackles of mobile phones and expand to digital cameras, mice, keyboards, etc. In other aspects, its by-products can also cause structural shocks in related industries. This is the artillery of learning from foreigners to master their skills. This is the rifle of learning and catching up. The copycat culture is running wildly on the path of plagiarism and transcendence. , especially after breaking away from the shackles of licenses and seizing the benefits of low cost and high returns, its devastating power and infectious power of viral marketing have completely subverted the traditional hidden rules of the industry and established value based on copycat culture. Sequence. Moreover, Shanzhai culture is deeply imprinted with grassroots innovation and crowd wisdom, and is a well-deserved Chinese-style Shanzhai.
Shanzhai is also a kind of culture, which is a trump card for profit-making industries and plays a role in balancing industrial development. The role of Guan Jian.
[Edit this paragraph] The difference between copycat and spoof
Difference 1: Who is more independent and wise in spirit? For example, Stephen Chow's "Westward Journey". It is not a "copycat film", but a master of the spirit of spoof, because although it is born out of a classic, it appears in an original manner of deconstruction and parody. Although the creator also borrowed a lot of popular elements, the chassis is solid and there is a sense of continuity from beginning to end.
Difference 2: There is a more vivid way of saying it, a spoof is to scratch your heart, and a copycat is to scratch your armpit.
Difference 3: A spoof is to scratch your heart. It is just a change in form, and Shanzhai is a symbol of culture.
[Edit this paragraph] Copycat products do not equal copycat culture
In addition to resisting copycat products, we also need to understand that the self-creation spirit of many netizens is actually copycat culture. It is not a copycat product that should be spurned. Such as self-written, self-acted, DIY and other behaviors. In this regard, Shanzhaiba website experts believe that "shanzhai culture" also has a positive meaning. But one thing worth warning is that once "copycat culture" is used by "copycat products" and becomes an excuse to absolve them of culpability, "copycat culture" will soon be worthless and become another victim of the Internet's fast-decaying culture. .
[Edit this paragraph] Two slaps to counterfeit products
(1) "Competition between counterfeit manufacturers and genuine manufacturers is good for industrial development."
Although copycat products may have a certain degree of novelty and originality in their superficial functions, the core of their operations is low-cost operation, tax evasion, and fast in and out.
(2) "Copycat manufacturers can also change their appearance and start a new life after completing the accumulation of original capital."
Maybe one person in a hundred can do this, but it requires super concentration and self-discipline. For 99% of copycat manufacturers, their only future is to be eliminated. The real danger does not lie there. An even more worrying thing is that they may drag down the regular army who are taking the right path.
[Edit this paragraph] CCTV pays attention to the "copycat phenomenon"
On December 3, 2008, "Xinwen Lianbo" reported on the copycat culture. This was the first time that a national TV station paid attention to this phenomenon. This cultural phenomenon summarized in language and words from the grassroots also brought the Shanzhai phenomenon to official attention for the first time.
In this report, the reporter started from the mobile phone where the "shanzhai phenomenon" originated. Experts interviewed by this reporter also believe that the main problem with counterfeit mobile phones is that their appearance may infringe. The name of the copycat phone was actually given by a large manufacturer to the assembled mobile phone manufacturer. Nowadays, there are many imitative "copycat cameras", "copycat movies", "copycat stars" and even "copycat version of the Spring Festival Gala" that are very popular nowadays. The copycat phenomenon” was also mentioned.
[Edit this paragraph] The "cottage" trend caused by copycat phones
The term "shanzhai" caused by copycat phones has become synonymous with grassroots, and the reason why it is called "Copycat" also has the feeling of being the king of the mountain and competing with the regular brands. Although the momentum of copycat phones has weakened, the word "shanzhai" has become popular on the Internet, mainly among young people. From copycat phones to copycat celebrities, the word "copycat" is not only gradually becoming popular, but its meaning is also expanding. It has gradually expanded from the original scope of commercial products to many aspects, including slight coincidences, similarities, deliberate imitations, as long as the content has a certain Entertainment elements will be put online and labeled as "copycat", and netizens' replies are mostly "too copycat", "very shocking" and other distinctive online adjectives.
The rise of copycat machines in China’s IT industry has given rise to copycat culture, which is just like the story told in any traditional Chinese martial arts novel: first using unconventional methods to wander on the fringes of the mainstream circle, and then gradually becoming more prominent. , eventually challenging the orthodox forces and even replacing them.
Olympic copycat phones Copycat culture is a phenomenon that imitates the appearance or functions of mainstream brand products at a very low cost, and then innovates, and ultimately surpasses this product in terms of appearance, function, price, etc. Its derivatives will break the shackles of mobile phones and expand to digital cameras, mice, keyboards, etc. Its by-products can also cause structural shocks in related industries. This is the artillery of learning from foreigners to master their skills, this is the rifle of learning from others to catch up and surpass them. The copycat culture is running all the way on the narrow path of plagiarism and transcendence, especially breaking away from the shackles of license plates and grasping the low cost and high returns. After its blessing, its devastating power and infectious power of viral marketing completely subverted the traditional hidden rules of the industry and established a value sequence based on copycat culture. Moreover, Shanzhai culture is deeply imprinted with grassroots innovation and the wisdom of the masses, and is a well-deserved Chinese-style Shanzhai.
Other analysts believe that copycat culture has seriously hindered China's socialist modernization drive, and has also brought new challenges to related copyright legal issues, which is not conducive to the development of the socialist market economy.
[Edit this paragraph] The two sides of copycat culture
This copycat is not that copycat. Although copycat mobile phones have received mixed reviews, the copycat Spring Festival Gala has become popular all the way. According to Lao Meng, the organizer of the Shanzhai Spring Festival Gala, the Shanzhai Spring Festival Gala is not only broadcast live online, but a TV station has already taken the initiative to discuss rebroadcasting. This is still a cottage, but it is quite like Cheng Yaojin in Nawa Gang Village, who became an important minister of the imperial court in a blink of an eye. It is also quite like the Dazhai Village in Shanxi Province, which achieved good fortune and became a model for the whole country to follow. Could it be that the blood of copycats has always been flowing in our culture?
The popularity of copycats is beyond people’s imagination. In just a few months, from mobile phone infection to celebrities to the Spring Festival Gala, of course, now everything seems to be copycat. Thank God, we are lucky enough to live in a copycat China. Unlike Internet buzzwords such as "the best in history" and "ridiculous", copycats have become a culture, and the characteristics of culture are its strong ability to generalize and the ability to retroactively define similar events in the past. The copycat White House, the copycat Tiananmen Square, the copycat harem, and other such things have been repainted with copycat paint and made their debut. Sorry, the world is now dominated by copycats. The culture of copycats seems to be staged a public carnival where people drink wine from large bowls, eat large pieces of meat, and divide gold and silver on large scales.
However, the current popularity of copycat culture cannot conceal its profound irrational genes. The rise of copycat culture, on the one hand, is in line with the current rise of popular culture and has the civilian characteristics of anti-authority, anti-monopoly, and anti-elite. On the other hand, it also has strong subversion and destructiveness to the existing social order. The copycat mobile phone industry is based on the infringement of the intellectual property rights of large companies. This can be said to be a very serious violation of law and infringement. The damage caused is indistinguishable between friend and foe. If you condone the infringement of copycat mobile phones because you support the spirit of copycats, it is just like Li Kui wielding two axes and cutting off the head at the first sight, whether it is his own family or an enemy, he will do it first. Therefore, there must be a clear legal bottom line for copycat culture and copycat spirit. As long as it does not break the law, copycats are allowed to do anything. Everyone has the freedom of expression, but they do not enjoy the freedom to break the law without being held accountable. If we regard the copycat spirit as legitimate and also regard various copycat real-life activities as legitimate, this actually confuses the laws between spirit and reality. Therefore, we need to make a distinction between the spirit of copycats and the behavior of copycats.
On the other hand, the actors of copycat culture must also be distinguished. There are also two distinctions between the identities of the actors, one is private individuals, and the other is public power or representatives of public power. If copycat culture is just the behavior of private individuals, then no matter what the claims are, as long as it does not involve any illegality, it is a legitimate right. The copycat behavior of public power and its representatives is actually the most dangerous. Copycat White Houses, copycat harems, and even various copycat versions of bailouts all fall into this category. The essence of the copycatization of public power is to make power barbaric and gangster. It is a retreat from the coordinates of civilization to the jungle, and a return to the traditional political power model. This is actually the darkest side of copycat culture.
In view of the current understanding of the quality of some local officials, and the fact that the Super Girl audition experience was quickly learned and put into use by the officialdom, it is indeed necessary to remain vigilant against the tendency of public power to copycat. Because the copycat public power only infringes on one target, and that is the general public.
[Edit this paragraph] The future of copycat culture
As the continuation of grassroots culture, copycat culture will have to go back to where it came from in the future! There has always been controversy over copycat phones, and as the copycat culture derived from copycat phones, copycat culture is also controversial. However, our society should continue to promote the grassroots copycat culture that is anti-authority, anti-monopoly, and anti-elite. Relevant departments should also actively guide and remove the dross of copycat culture and retain the essence. Only then can copycat culture have a better future. Rather than going astray.
[Edit this paragraph] Copycats and Copycat Goods
As an emerging culture, there are never fewer followers. People who are proud of copycats and engage in copycat behaviors, They began to gather together and call themselves Shanzhai people, and the knockoff products produced by Shanzhai people were naturally called Shanzhai goods. Nowadays, counterfeit goods have begun to refer to those strange and weird small commodities, and Yiwu, Zhejiang is a small commodity distribution center. If Shenzhen is the distribution center for knockoff mobile phones, then Yiwu is the distribution center for knockoff goods.
[Edit this paragraph] Thoughts on copycat culture
In the collective carnival of the "shanzhai gang", there is chaos in the market order, and once copycat becomes a "culture" Finally, it also confuses the values ????of the Chinese people, and the boundaries between good and bad, true and false become blurred.
In 2008, copycat mobile phones first appeared, followed by copycat clothing, copycat Spring Festival Gala, and all kinds of copycat products emerged in endlessly. Recently, someone said in a blog, "The proliferation of copycat culture is not so much a demonstration of the spirit of grassroots innovation, but rather a satire of China's serious lack of intellectual property awareness." In response to this, there were immediate objections from the "shanzhai gang", "How come copycat culture has become so widespread? How can it be so embarrassing?"
After adding the suffix "culture" to Shanzhai, the "shanzhai gang" has the confidence to speak. I just want to ask, why don't you see "copycat gangs" pursuing milk powder containing melamine? Why don’t you buy copycat drugs? Why don’t you eat the fake eggs? Because after using these fake products, it will not do any good to the body. However, the counterfeit clothes are cheap and the counterfeit mobile phones are more fancy than the real ones. These are not harmful to you. It can be seen that the "shanzhai gang"'s pursuit of copycat culture depends on whether it is beneficial to them. If it is beneficial, it becomes a fashion trend and becomes culture.
What kind of culture is copycat culture? In fact, it is a culture of piracy and infringement. It steals other people's intellectual property rights and enters the market after assembling, patchwork, and branding. Once it is labeled as culture, piracy and infringement become even more flagrant.
Nowadays, in electronic product markets in many places, copycat mobile phones are sold like carrots and cabbage. The reason why it is so cheap is because it does not have to pay the 17% value-added tax and sales tax, and it does not need to spend a lot of money to develop products, because it steals other people's intellectual property rights and reshapes other people's products. According to reports, in 2007, the output of counterfeit mobile phones was at least 150 million units, almost equal to the total sales of mobile phones in the domestic market, which was a fatal blow to domestic mobile phone brands. Nowadays, some large domestic brand mobile phone companies are experiencing losses, and some have even withdrawn from the market.
Some people may say, haven’t Americans also created a copycat version of the New York Times? However, the copycat version of the New York Times is distributed free of charge, and the producer declares that it is a counterfeit and apologizes to the public. Americans’ imitation of the New York Times is actually a way for citizens to express their opinions, and its satirical humor is vivid on the page. But China's copycat culture has no humor and irony, only profit-seeking. More importantly, in the collective carnival of the "shanzhai gang", there is chaos in the market order. Once Shanzhai becomes a "culture", it also confuses the values ????of the Chinese people, and the boundaries between good and bad, true and false change. Got to be blurry.
What is fake is fake, and what is pirated is pirated. It cannot be dressed up to become "culture" openly. Therefore, stop talking about copycat culture. It really embarrasses the Chinese people.
[Edit this paragraph] Attachment: A little humor about copycat brands
I bought a bottle of shampoo yesterday when I was on a business trip. I used it to wash my hair and found that my scalp was itchy. I took a closer look:
It’s Laorou! !
I remember eating Dabai milk-free candy when I was a kid! !
Sweat!
Have you ever smoked Zhongcui cigarettes?
Have you ever eaten Kangshuaibo instant noodles?
Have you read Jin Kang’s novels? Have you read Gu Long’s novels? What about Jingyao’s?
SQNY, ADIDOS, FUMA, PAMA, HIKE, TOCHIFA~~haha
Sha Yi, not Xuan
I now use 1BM notebooks for MOP
Everyone knows about Qiaqia melon seeds. Last time I bought a pack of melon seeds and found out after eating them that they were Zhizhi brand melon seeds
Once I bought Master Tang’s instant noodles at the station...
I’ve read Quan Yong’s novels, drank Bixue, and used Xia Silian
Everyone loves Diao Pai I know, I bought a bag once, and when I was almost finished, I accidentally took a closer look and discovered that it was "Zhoujia brand"! ! The characters "zhoujia" and "zhoujia" are very close to each other. They are almost invisible in the font of Diaopai. . . I fainted
I asked why I didn’t get foam no matter how much I washed...
Have you ever drank Rebi Fonda?
I finally found a soulmate. Once I bought a bottle of "Pulse" drink at a train station square shop in a certain city in Shandong. After getting on the bus and drinking it, I realized that the taste was wrong. I looked carefully for a long time, but I didn't find anything strange about the packaging. Then I looked more carefully, and damn, it actually tasted wrong. It's "tribulation"! ! Originally, the pulsating font had sharp edges and corners, so the extra vertical part of the word "Jie" was replaced with a short triangular tip, which was too difficult to distinguish.
I once bought Jie Tubang’s TT...
My family also bought Chouliangye
I drink it Passing Fenyuan.
Have you ever tried Yu Ting?
I read a novel by Jin Yong, and later I found out that the author is Jin Yongxin!
My classmate played football and went to buy a pair of Double Planet shoes. When I came back, I saw that the trademark was Double Planet!
Have you ever drank Sikosile?
The traditional Chinese version of Quanxing Daqu Quanyu Daquxing is basically indistinguishable from the public opinion
I have read Golden Boy’s novels before
Drinking The water of Wawaha??
It is said that Guizhou’s Maohe liquor is also quite famous
I also tried Jinsangzi throat treasure
Coke, it says Coke, I bought it at Hangzhou Railway Station
Have you drank the ice dew? What about the water tyrant?
Sanliangye... I deliberately wrote the three to look like a five, but it is not as powerful as the "Ugly Liangye"
Keri Cola
Have you ever eaten good potato chips?
I almost bought a normal Coca-Cola when it was dark
Have you ever drank the mineral water of Haha?
Haha, you have drunk the water of Yabaishi!
Bad luck~ I bought a bottle (black tea) after looking at the same packaging. After taking a sip, I felt something was wrong. After taking a look, I realized that it was Yunyi brand.
I bought it when I was a child. Ji Long's book
derux....
I bought Tongjia brand washing powder and saw LIHING sportswear
I remember there used to be a drink called Is it "Rising Sun"? Once I drank it and noticed something was wrong with the packaging. I took a closer look at "Nine Days Open" When I opened it, it smelled of alcohol, but when I looked carefully, it was Sayi Wo Khan....
I have seen microseft mice, and they are everywhere now
Adidos
Haha, I have used "Haiyi Silk"
It seems that I bought Pingmaijin last time
We have one here----Hua Zhen Supermarket
Have you ever eaten beef ramen? There’s no meat, it’s not beef noodles, it’s beef noodles~~~~~~~
It is said that in a town in Zhejiang, there are 27 stores that only make crocodile brand clothing! ~And every trademark is similar but different. Some have an open mouth, some have a closed mouth, some have the head on the left, some have the head on the right, some have the tail up, and some have the tail down. . . . . . . So people in Zhejiang are having an outbreak! ~
My classmate bought a big-mouthed handsome man with the same packaging as the grimace and Dudu
He also bought peanut oil, golden dragon oil (fake)-- golden arowana oil (real)< /p>
What I am wearing now is a T-shirt with "like" printed on it
There are also Wangzi milk and Jianliba
You can wear Huijiu sneakers Have you passed? I saw it at Walmart in Shenzhen Overseas Chinese Town
I remember buying a Qiao Qiaozi ice cream, which looked exactly like Qiaolazi
I accidentally bought a panasonic mp3 player
Only after eating it did I realize that Oliver is not Oreo. The packaging is the same, but much cheaper
I have used Teacher Kang’s iced tea toothpaste. Note, it is toothpaste~~ my sister bought it
p>