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Jia Junpeng
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| Jia Junpeng | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional Chinese | 賈君鵬 | ||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 贾君鹏 | ||||||
| |||||||
Jia Junpeng was an internet meme and catchphrase that became popular on the Internet in China in 2009.[1]
The meme originated from a post on the Baidu forum for World of Warcraft: "Jia Junpeng, your mother is calling you home for dinner" (Chinese: 贾君鹏你妈妈喊你回家吃饭; pinyin: Jiǎ Jūnpéng nǐ mā mā hǎn nǐ huí jiā chī fàn). Almost immediately, the thread became viral, and in a few days, it received hundreds of thousands of replies.
Interpretations of the phenomenon include an outpouring of childhood nostalgia; an expression of the guilt of neglecting one's families due to video game addiction; a veiled reference to the outage World of Warcraft's host, NetEase, was experiencing; and "a demonstration of collective boredom."
Origins
[edit]At 10:59 am on 16 July 2009, a post in Chinese titled "Jia Junpeng, your mother is calling you home for dinner" (贾君鹏你妈妈喊你回家吃饭) appeared on the Chinese portal Baidu in the forum for the game World of Warcraft. The body of the thread consisted of only 2 letters, "RT" (Chinese: 如题; pinyin: Rú Tí), an abbreviation that means "as the title (suggests)".[2] The poster's identity and motivation are unknown. Soon, a post authored by "Jia Junpeng", replied, "I'm not going home for dinner, I'm having dinner at the Internet café. Please tell my mom that." This user registered three minutes after the initial post.
After six hours, it received more than 17,000 replies and 400,000 views, most of whom were young people.[1] Some forum users who replied changed their usernames to "Jia Junpeng's dad", "Jia Junpeng's grandpa", "Jia Junpeng's sister", "Jia Junpeng's dog", and more, forming a huge Jia family. Follow-up posts grew exponentially, and became more ridiculous and meaningless.[2] Users doctored photos, started online hunts, and the rate of replies reached several thousand per second. The page received 243,000 replies and 6 million views by 9 pm the next day.[3] The thread stopped when it became saturated at 1:38 pm on 20 July – the 315,649 comments received translated into 10,421 pages.[2] The Los Angeles Times said in September that "the catchphrase has gone viral in recent weeks."[4]
Interpretation, reception and aftermath
[edit]According to ChinaHush, World of Warcraft had been inaccessible with the host, NetEase, claiming it was suffering outages due to a competitor's attack. Five million Chinese WoW players were frustrated and impatient, so "Jia Junpeng, your mother is calling you home for dinner" has been interpreted by WoW players as "NetEase, hurry up and start the World of Warcraft service".[3]
Some people attribute the popularity of the meme to childhood nostalgia. Others are of the opinion that such a deep analysis is unwarranted, since they consider the Jia Junpeng phenomenon to be merely kuso culture.[5] A China Daily editorial called it "a demonstration of collective boredom."[4]
According to one analyst, the newly popular internet phenomenon reflects some characteristics of popular culture such as anti-intellectualism, unwillingness to care about something's original value, confusion, willingness to follow the crowd, decadence, and immaturity.[1][5] Hu Jiqing, associate professor from the College of Journalism and Communications at Nanjing University, said the unprecedented popularity of the post may be easily explained because the common saying "your mother is calling you home for dinner," resonates – as young people addicted to Internet games often feel guilty about their families – and causes them to reflect.[2]
The meme sparked various Photoshop contests throughout internet forums, where the catchphrase is often photoshopped into various places, such as banners, signs in public places, or as a caption to a humorous image. The catchphrase was used on T-shirts, blogs and in songs. The expression was also used by human rights activists to demand the release of a jailed legal scholar.[4] Businesses have sought to capitalise by using the meme: a car dealer in Sichuan created a banner that read "Jia Junpeng, your mom is calling you to drive home a Roewe 550." One restaurant sign was spotted with the slogan "Jia Junpeng, your mom is calling you to eat Yanjing Hotpot!"[4]
See also
[edit]- List of internet phenomena
- Internet in the People's Republic of China
- Very erotic very violent
- Baidu 10 Mythical Creatures
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Xu, Zhang (21 July 2009). "Jia Junpeng -- A China Internet Phenomenon". english.cri.cn. Archived from the original on 23 July 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2026.
- ^ a b c d "China's internet phenomenon: the sudden popularity of 'Jia Junpeng'". People's Daily. 22 July 2009. Archived from the original on 31 July 2009. Retrieved 20 January 2026.
- ^ a b "Key" (18 July 2009). "China Internet Phenomenon, "Jia Junpeng (贾君鹏), your mom tells you to go home to eat"". ChinaHush. Archived from the original on 2 February 2023. Retrieved 20 January 2026.
- ^ a b c d Pierson, David (5 September 2009). "Chinese unite in Internet silliness". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 20 January 2026.
- ^ a b "Fauna". "Jia Junpeng, Your Mom Wants You To Go Home To Eat!". chinaSMACK. Archived from the original on 6 January 2010. Retrieved 20 January 2026.