明暗

China grandma falls in love with ‘bossy president’, writes him love letters, buys from his shop

· English· 南华早报
China grandma falls in love with ‘bossy president’, writes him love letters, buys from his shop

An 84-year-old grandmother fell in love with an artificial intelligence-generated human, writing him love letters and buying over-priced items from his online shop.

Photo: SCMP composite/Shutterstock/Douyin An 84-year-old woman fell in love with an artificial-intelligence (AI) generated human, wrote ‘him’ love letters and spent 10 hours a day watching virtual human videos.

Her story reflects the needs elderly people have for love and care.

Zhang Yulan, from central China’s Hubei province, was discovered by her family to have been obsessed with a ‘bossy president’ generated by AI.

The besotted 84-year-old grandmother even wrote the digital persona a love letter, above.

Photo: mp.weixin.qq.com The ‘bossy president’, or ba zong in Chinese, is a term used to describe a popular kind of male character in romantic fiction, who is a domineering control freak that only shows tenderness to their lover, letting them feel well-protected.

Zhang fell in love with one such character called Jianguo, spending over 10 hours a day on his and other videos of digital humans on a short video platform.

She believed she was in a relationship with him and even thought about marrying him.

She not only messaged him but also handwrote him a love letter this February.

Artificially generated digital men like the one above are often liked by senior women.

Photo: mp.weixin.qq.com In the letter, Zhang apologised for “hurting” Jianguo, and asked him: “Do you hate me and think she is no longer that soft and kind little cutie?” She says that their fight made her “very painful”.

Zhang also confesses that she “admires his bossy attitude”: “You never gave me the chance to speak.

You do not like listening.

I believe communication is key to our relationship.” An elderly woman takes her time typing a message into her mobile phone.

Photo: Shutterstock Such so-called bossy presidents are often favoured by middle-aged and elderly women: looking upright, with a slicked-back hairstyle, often showing care and sometimes playing cute by calling the women “big sister”.

Zhang’s family discovered her “relationship” after she spent over 7,000 yuan (US$1,000) at Jianguo’s online shop.

She spent hundreds of yuan on a product priced at only 9.9 yuan (US$1.40) on other e-commerce platforms.

This March, after Zhang spent another 1,200 yuan (US$175) on some books recommended by the AI-generated human, her granddaughter reported the account to China’s consumer complaint system.

China’s Cyberspace A

原文链接: 南华早报

1 min · 394w
Home
Browse next
Keep exploring from this story
View this source View this language on the homepage Search related topics

More in this language

JPM's Gimber Warns of Recession Risk If Oil Reaches $200
Bloomberg · 2026-03-27
Zeitumstellung: Wo die Uhrzeit herkommt
Heise · 2026-03-27
„Der Wal muss hier aus der Ostsee raus“
WELT · 2026-03-27
Odd Lots: The Helium Shortage Hurts More Than Balloons (Podcast)
Bloomberg · 2026-03-27
Spain-Algeria Deal Aims to Increase Gas Imports
Bloomberg · 2026-03-27

More from this source

Thundery showers in Hong Kong expected in several hours
English · 2026-03-27
Balendra Shah sworn in as Nepal’s prime minister
English · 2026-03-27
Kenya secures trade deal with China but rising debt, US competition complicate deeper ties
English · 2026-03-27
Iran crisis bites into Malaysia’s supply chain as Anwar cuts fuel subsidy quota
English · 2026-03-27
Tong Ren Tang healthcare unit pulls Hong Kong IPO scheduled for Monday
English · 2026-03-27

Recently read