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Former hottest influencer in China Li Ziqi’s controversial comeback after 2-year hiatus sparks online firestorm over change in appearance

  • More than 29,000 fans on social media comment on her return but many curious about her face saying, ‘her eyes and chin are different from before’
  • Li’s thriving career was suddenly cut off in 2021 over dispute with her agent which saw both parties suing and counter-suing each other

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Many fans are excited about Li’s return but some are curious about her new looks. Photo: SCMP composite/Douyin/CCTV
Liya Suin Shanghai

The comeback of Li Ziqi – once China’s hottest influencer – after a two-year hiatus has sparked heated discussion on mainland social media about her changed appearance.

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Li declared her official return on September 15 in a video published on social media platforms that went viral after it was picked up by local news outlets. She had not yet shared any new content at the time of this article’s publication.

In a clip shared by China Financial and Economic News, Li is seen with long black hair and wearing a white T-shirt. Standing in an orchard, she greets the public and gives a brief introduction about her plans to deliver new lifestyle content.

“In the future, I will insist on producing more quality content on my ways to tell Chinese farming culture and rural stories,” she said in the video.

Li, who was born in 1990 in the southwestern province of Sichuan, began posting videos of herself cooking, doing handicrafts, and living a peaceful lifestyle in 2015, attracting fans both within and outside China.

Chinese internet culinary sensation Li Ziqi has set a record for having the “most subscribers for a Chinese-language channel on YouTube”. Photo: CCTV
Chinese internet culinary sensation Li Ziqi has set a record for having the “most subscribers for a Chinese-language channel on YouTube”. Photo: CCTV

Li’s personal Douyin account, which she stopped uploading videos to in April 2022, had nearly 49 million followers. She also set a Guinness World Record in 2020 for having the “most subscribers for a Chinese-language channel on YouTube” with more than 14 million followers at the time before rising further to 17.7 million.

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