The distinctive humor and worldview of people born after 1990 have been shaped by their easy relationship with social media and China's economic rise, as Peng Yining reports.
When Liu Xiyang was given an assignment to make a public information program
The 21-year-old law junior, who works as a reporter at Tsinghua University's in-house TV station, was told the program should be logical, educational, and helpful to people involved in legal disputes, but rather than playing by the book, Liu had other ideas.
Instead of making a worthy-but-dull educational piece, Liu and his schoolmates produced a 10-minute program that parodied China Central Television's Xinwen Lianbo, or News Simulcast, which airs at 7 pm every day and is one of China's most serious news broadcasts.
Liu used the opening animation sequence of Xinwen Lianbo, but changed the name of the program to Zuowen Lianbo (Mean News Simulcast) and used special effects so he could play the male and female anchors at the same time. Also, rather than using straight reporting techniques in an item
The video quickly garnered more than 13,000 hits on the Internet, mostly from Tsinghua students who found it hilarious.
However, Liu quickly realized that he and his adoring audience have a sense of humor specific to their age group.
"I played my video at a presentation, and the audience, people in their 30s and 40s, were like, 'What's the point?' but people my age burst out laughing," said Liu. "It's just my generation's sense of humor. We like to make things fun."
The Post-'90s, as they are known, differ greatly from people born in the '80s and earlier. While their elders have a generally serious attitude to life - jobs, marriage, social responsibility - the Post-'90s tend to be more playful and embrace the spirit of fun. The potential for fun has become a key consideration when teens and 20-somethings make decisions
What really distinguishes this generation, though, is its easy relationship with social media. The Internet is not so much a medium of choice as something they were born into. Unlike previous generations, many of whom grew up witnessing the development of the Web, the Post-'90s were born when the Internet was fully functional. They have never known anything else and have an innate sense of how it functions. Forums, games, memes, video mashups and apps such as Songify, which turns spoken words into songs, are simply a fact of life. The generation's distinctive humor is generated by and transmitted through the Internet, which they access via mobile devices, not traditional PCs.
According to a 2012 report by China Internet Watch, the Post-'90s accounted for 11.7 percent of the Chinese population; that's
While they mostly chatted online,