Why China’s farmers rocketed to fame as live-streaming video stars
- Taobao Marketplace and Kuaishou are changing lives in rural China through live streams
It was on top of a hill, in the orange orchards on the outskirts of Zhangjiajie, a city in northwestern China’s Hunan province, where Zhong Haihui took a big leap from being a fruit farmer to become a live-streaming video star.
Neighbours in his farming community were initially bewildered in 2017 at the sight of Zhong, wearing a cowboy hat and standing on a big rock, talking passionately for hours in front of his smartphone about the fruits grown in his hometown.
Two years later, the 40-year-old Zhong has found more farmers across the country jumping on the live-streaming video bandwagon to promote and sell their produce to millions of consumers in the world’s second largest economy.
“Everything felt awkward when we first started,” said Zhong in an interview. “But [now] we see that everybody else is doing it.”
Zhong was one of the first farmers in Hunan to start selling his fruits via live streams, reaching consumers across the country via short video-sharing platform Kuaishou and the e-commerce app from Alibaba Group Holding’s Taobao Marketplace. New York-listed Alibaba is the parent company of the South China Morning Post, while Abacus is a unit of the Post.