凤姐:Men ask me out all the time (转载)# Joke - 肚皮舞运动
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【 以下文字转载自 WaterWorld 讨论区 】
发信人: SFJ0913 (SFJ0913), 信区: WaterWorld
标 题: 凤姐:Men ask me out all the time
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Fri Sep 30 17:01:32 2011, 美东)
http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20532218,00.html
ZT from People
She's China's answer to Bachelor Pad villain Vienna Girardi.
But in New York, where she's started a new life, Feng Luoyu, 26, can go
about her life as a manicurist without raising a single eyebrow.
Not so back home. Luoyu rose to infamy in her native China in 2009 after
handing out fliers in Shanghai in an attempt to snare a husband. But her
list of demands was extreme – and offended many in her country, where women
are a minority and competition for wives is fierce.
"He must be a post-graduate of economics from Tsinghua or Beijing University
, with a height of 5 feet 9 to 6 feet," she wrote, according to The New York
Post. "He must have never been a father, and any ex-girlfriends must not
have had abortions. He has to be a native of eastern coastal China. He
should not be an employee of state companies, but it’s OK if he works for
PetroChina, Sinopec or top banks."
She didn't stop with the fliers. She later appeared on billboards and then
snagged a reality show with two actors posing as her boyfriend. And she has
1.4 million followers on Weibo, China's version of Twitter.
"I was hated in China and don’t wanted to be hated by people here," Feng
told The Post in Chinese.
Back home, people heckled her on the streets of Shanghai with shouts of, "
Feng Jie!" or "Big Sister Feng," as she's called there, as well as, "300
years!" in reference to her assertion that in intelligence, "no one can
compare to me in 300 years before and after."
She's also been mocked for blurting odd statements such as, "Einstein is for
sure not smarter than me. He invented light, right?"
But now, with her new life in America, she can live anonymously – but
refuses to lower her high standards.
She says she's after a "real American" man with an Ivy League education.
"Men ask me out all the time," she says. "But none of them are suitable."
发信人: SFJ0913 (SFJ0913), 信区: WaterWorld
标 题: 凤姐:Men ask me out all the time
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Fri Sep 30 17:01:32 2011, 美东)
http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20532218,00.html
ZT from People
She's China's answer to Bachelor Pad villain Vienna Girardi.
But in New York, where she's started a new life, Feng Luoyu, 26, can go
about her life as a manicurist without raising a single eyebrow.
Not so back home. Luoyu rose to infamy in her native China in 2009 after
handing out fliers in Shanghai in an attempt to snare a husband. But her
list of demands was extreme – and offended many in her country, where women
are a minority and competition for wives is fierce.
"He must be a post-graduate of economics from Tsinghua or Beijing University
, with a height of 5 feet 9 to 6 feet," she wrote, according to The New York
Post. "He must have never been a father, and any ex-girlfriends must not
have had abortions. He has to be a native of eastern coastal China. He
should not be an employee of state companies, but it’s OK if he works for
PetroChina, Sinopec or top banks."
She didn't stop with the fliers. She later appeared on billboards and then
snagged a reality show with two actors posing as her boyfriend. And she has
1.4 million followers on Weibo, China's version of Twitter.
"I was hated in China and don’t wanted to be hated by people here," Feng
told The Post in Chinese.
Back home, people heckled her on the streets of Shanghai with shouts of, "
Feng Jie!" or "Big Sister Feng," as she's called there, as well as, "300
years!" in reference to her assertion that in intelligence, "no one can
compare to me in 300 years before and after."
She's also been mocked for blurting odd statements such as, "Einstein is for
sure not smarter than me. He invented light, right?"
But now, with her new life in America, she can live anonymously – but
refuses to lower her high standards.
She says she's after a "real American" man with an Ivy League education.
"Men ask me out all the time," she says. "But none of them are suitable."