CN Chinamaxxing Megathread

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The Wall Street Journal: The everyday Americans going all in on the Chinese lifestyle (MSN link - archive)

It’s not just Labubus. People are going crazy for congee, tai chi and boiled apples, leaving many Chinese Americans confused.​


Hannah Miao
Feb. 23, 2026

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Noë Bryant spent 41 years identifying as African American. This year, she became Chinese.

Inspired by viral videos on social media, Bryant dragged her husband and two children to their local Asian grocery store in Austin, Texas. She asked ChatGPT which Chinese pantry staples she should buy and spent around $200 stocking up on soy sauce, goji berries and other ingredients.

“I told ChatGPT, ‘I want to become a Chinese baddie,’” said Bryant, a stay-at-home mom.

These days, she starts her mornings with warm herbal tea. Congee is her go-to meal. She wears slippers around the house, and wants to try acupuncture next.

Across the U.S. and Western world, non-Chinese people are embracing Chinese lifestyles. In Gen Z parlance, they’re “Chinamaxxing”—becoming the most Chinese they can be.

Drink hot water, never cold beverages. Don’t walk around the house barefoot. Do longevity exercises. The newly converted Chinamaxxers are obsessing over daily habits that are as second-nature to many Chinese people as brushing their teeth.

For decades, China lacked cultural cachet on the world stage, even as it became an economic superpower. Now, the country is enjoying a soft-power boost, just as the U.S. is losing some of its global appeal.



The seeds were planted a year ago, when an impending TikTok ban in the U.S. pushed a flood of Americans onto the Chinese social-media platform Xiaohongshu, also known as RedNote. There, Chinese users and the self-declared TikTok refugees taught each other Mandarin and English, exchanged recipes and swapped notes on daily life in their respective countries.

Popular American streamers Darren Watkins Jr., known as IShowSpeed, and Hasan Piker both toured China last year, bringing visions of the country’s futuristic skylines to millions of viewers. Labubu dolls made by Chinese toy maker Pop Mart became a global craze.

Chinamaxxing memes began peppering the internet. “You met me at a very Chinese time in my life,” social-media users would say, riffing on a line from “Fight Club.”

Wellness influencers and regular people alike started adopting traditional Chinese medicinal practices.

Sherry Zhu, 23, helped popularize habits like drinking hot water, eating boiled apples and wearing slippers around the house. She wanted to share parts of her personal life growing up Chinese American in New Jersey. In TikTok videos that have racked up millions of views, Zhu tells people they are turning Chinese.

“I thought that it would just be funny,” said Zhu. “Now people are more exposed to Chinese culture, and they want to learn more.”



Crissa Jewel says Zhu’s videos got her back on track to becoming Chinese.

The 31-year-old therapist in North Carolina was among the TikTok refugees on RedNote last year, but eventually stopped checking the app or learning Mandarin on Duolingo. Now, she’s drinking hot beverages—and even has her dogs lapping up warm water, which she said has cured her dog Coco’s stomach issues. Drinking tea with goji berries and red dates has helped ease her period symptoms.

Friends and family are surprised by the sudden shift to hot drinks. “They think that I’m strange,” said Jewel.

For many, the interest has more to do with wellness than politics. The videos blew up around the new year, when people were looking for ways to improve their health.

Alexia Torres, 24, started drinking hot water and eating boiled apples at the start of the year. Inspired by qigong, a Chinese movement practice, she has been hopping up and down every morning, which she says helps drain her lymphatic system. She’s considering taking up tai chi. Living in Los Angeles, she often sees elderly people who look fit for their age practicing the slow movements in the park.

“They may be onto something,” she said.

China’s state media is thrilled, amplifying Chinamaxxing as a sign of the country’s growing global influence.



Many Chinese Americans, on the other hand, are confused. Those who were bullied as kids for being different, or faced anti-Chinese harassment during Covid, have mixed feelings about people now wanting to become Chinese.

At first, Karen Lin was excited to see people embracing Chinese culture. “All of a sudden, being Chinese is cool,” said Lin, 32, who was born and raised in New York’s Chinatown.

Then things started getting weird. It felt like people were turning her culture into a costume.

“If I eat Mexican food, I’m not going to say I’m Mexican now,” she said.

Chinamaxxing has been a hot topic in Armond Dai’s group chats with Asian American friends. “Everyone was like, ‘What is happening?’” said the 28-year-old in California.

He grew up drinking hot water and boiling fruit for soups to combat colds. To see these practices now going viral feels surreal.

Dai’s hope is that people embracing Chinese lifestyle habits will also respect Chinese people.

“You are at a Chinese time in your life,” said Dai. “I will be Chinese forever.”






ABC Radio National: Your Call: 'Chinamaxxing', dancing AI robots, and China's rising cultural popularity (archive)
 
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Is there any actual merit to traditional Chinese medicine? The stuff that isn't snorting rhino horns for boners and eating dogs to cool the body, that is.
It'll be case by case, but 'traditional' medicines that do actually work are just a plant that has the active ingredient for what the west would consider to be a real drug. A western example is Willow Bark Tea, the bark has an component that's similar in effect to Aspirin, acting as a mild painkiller and anti inflammatory. Where herbal solutions tend to falter is concentration, they're usually weak and don't have much of the active ingredient, and may have other ingredients that are dangerous if consumed in too high a quantity. Processing them to filter it out and concentrate the desireable bit is just called making drugs.

A lot of it is just cope that you couldn’t trust a glass of water unless it was boiling hot, because it would make you shit your brains out.
There's mild benefits to circulation and comfort when you have a hot drink instead of cold, doesn't leech heat out of your core. That said, real tea is so cheap as to be functionally limitless for most people, so there's very little reason to not make a hot beverage beyond preference. The japanese do the warm/hot water thing too,

MMA and HEMA pretty much destroyed any notion of far east Asian martial supremacy. They are more akin to dancing than legit self defence.
I'll still defend Judo, at least in so far as its grapple and throw game. Getting someone onto the ground is a good way to beat the shit out of them with more traditional means, but in "get sued for defending yourself against someone" lands of most of the world, being able to get the other guy on the ground so you can run the fuck away is even more useful. Doesn't need to be a fancy throw, if someone tries to grab you a good foot/leg sweep can get you out of a spot. If the other guy knows how to fight, less so, but most people don't.

LMAO they love this stupid train going through the building. They keep talking about it like it's evidence China lives in the future :story:
I think they're all just jealous of how cheap the rent in the units immediately below it must be.
 
China spending all this money on propaganda not realzing leftists will immediately side with the poor underdog and right wingers will side against the institutions owned by the CCP since god knows how long.

At least I hope, anyway.
 
I'll still defend Judo, at least in so far as its grapple and throw game. Getting someone onto the ground is a good way to beat the shit out of them with more traditional means, but in "get sued for defending yourself against someone" lands of most of the world, being able to get the other guy on the ground so you can run the fuck away is even more useful. Doesn't need to be a fancy throw, if someone tries to grab you a good foot/leg sweep can get you out of a spot. If the other guy knows how to fight, less so, but most people don't.
yes judo is legit, as is jiu jitsu. muay thai too, also lethwei (basically burmese muay thai except they go super hard and use headbutts, it's super brutal)
also sambo is serious business

the big loss of respect for asian martial arts has mostly hit stuff like tai chi, taekwondo, aikido, karate
 
Chinese restaurants/groceries customers are mostly Chinese. Is autosinophobia a SARS2 symptom?
>eat balls, headache goes away
>turns out he headache was a symptom of some rare weird micronutrient deficiency which the monkey balls happened to fix
Chinese snake oil is a good example of this, it's super rich in Omega-3
Tbh I would love a Chinese style regime
If you asked when China still had collective leadership instead of a one man dictatorship, I'd agree with you
Even freedom of speech is a meme for anybody who’s not American.
Chinese are forced to deny basic geography. (台灣萬歲)
Westerners are forced to deny basic biology.
I'll still defend Judo, at least in so far as its grapple and throw game
It's also safer to teach than striking arts
 
imo china has a chance at being really successful in filling the soft-power vacuum that'll exist once westerners get anime and k-pop fatigue, just by running the 90's japan playbook of "meme some silly inoffensive cultural practices and spam cute characters until something sticks"

people are getting sick of anime and the community is basically fucked, full of either pedophiles, trannies, or "hood weebs" - likewise japan-related discourse online has massively devolved into zoomers and foids shouting "diddy ahh bluds" or the most annoying frog-twitter account going "well they might all be pedophiles but at least there's no niggers!"

and korea basically oneshotted themselves by creating their version of weebs by attracting AIDSHogs with shiny plastic men.
 
Over the past decade or two I've noticed theres been a severe IQ drop where people no longer seem to understand how deeply authoritarian the system is over there compared to even the most dysfunctional of other countries. Despite the PRC being as aggressive as ever and doing things like unleashing a global pandemic on the world.

The average moron in the west really has no appreciation the extent that their life would change if they actually lived in a China style regime. They all think that they would be able to carry on the same type of shit talking, video game playing, consumerist lifestyle they enjoy in western countries with just the flag switching out for some reason.
It’s a lefty knee jerk response to the modern administration, these people have made their entire identity hating the US and nothing else.
 
imo china has a chance at being really successful in filling the soft-power vacuum that'll exist once westerners get anime and k-pop fatigue, just by running the 90's japan playbook of "meme some silly inoffensive cultural practices and spam cute characters until something sticks"
I'm not so sure. You're right that the west will eventually get exhausted of anime and kpop, but I don't think it'll be a pivot towards cute on the way out. People are getting so tired of marvelisms in their writing, superheros and unreasonably powerful characters and have vs have-not systems of character power where someones just born better/magical/whatever. Anime will probably add contrived power systems and tonal inconsistency to the list in general. Chinese media culture is like Korean powerscaling media on crack cocaine, incredibly contrived social and physical power systems with it just being a given that if you're 'powerful', you get shit. Don't think it'll kick off as any major successor. Just look at any 'cultivation' story both modern and classic and its the same shit.

My expectation is more of a pivot back towards 80's style action with a lean towards grimdark and doomerist elements. Simple, clear, violence solves the problem narratives with an edge of dread. Think early game of thrones TV show, applied to Diehard style media, alongside the original LOTR films, first Matrix etc. No multiverses, no constant character clashes with no consequences, no constant action for the sake of action (maybe matrix isn't the best example there lol) and a general grounding of the world where everything is taking it seriously, rather than trying to quip each other to death. Those worlds maybe have grand ideas but presented in simple ways and straightforward conflicts, with a more clear good vs bad. I don't think 'chosen one' tropes will go away, but we'll see the end of "everyone in the cast is a chosen one in their own way" writing where everyone has the one thing they're super fucking amazing at that just so happens to be exactly what we needed. As a whole, the culture is a lot more doomerist about the future, and is growing tired of complicated solutions that don't solve anything, so I expect to see doomerist narratives where problems are more simple to solve as escapes.
 
People are getting so tired of marvelisms in their writing, superheros and unreasonably powerful characters and have vs have-not systems of character power where someones just born better/magical/whatever. Anime will probably add contrived power systems and tonal inconsistency to the list in general. Chinese media culture is like Korean powerscaling media on crack cocaine, incredibly contrived social and physical power systems with it just being a given that if you're 'powerful', you get shit. Don't think it'll kick off as any major successor. Just look at any 'cultivation' story both modern and classic and its the same shit.

My expectation is more of a pivot back towards 80's style action with a lean towards grimdark and doomerist elements. Simple, clear, violence solves the problem narratives with an edge of dread. Think early game of thrones TV show, applied to Diehard style media, alongside the original LOTR films, first Matrix etc. No multiverses, no constant character clashes with no consequences, no constant action for the sake of action
I don't believe over the top power-scaling action is any problem in a vacuum. Watching vigorous warriors do extraordinary things is what makes entertainment whimsical. If anything Marvel does the opposite, where fantastical elements from the comics get sanded into oblivion for no reason. But the chaotic combo with tonal inconsistency and lack of consequences is 100% of the issue. Nobody of relevance ever dies, characters swap allegiance when the plot needs it, the "heroes" comically brutalize each other like psychopaths, and status quo shifts having any effect on the world are an afterthought. If the story does not care about itself, then neither will the audience. That may be a deeper philosophical issue with post-modernism than just lazy anime writing.
 
Chinese media culture is like Korean powerscaling media on crack cocaine, incredibly contrived social and physical power systems with it just being a given that if you're 'powerful', you get shit. Don't think it'll kick off as any major successor. Just look at any 'cultivation' story both modern and classic and its the same shit.
Traditional media sure, but we're in the age where abstract media and the surrounding universes hold just as much if not more weight than their traditional counterparts. By 90s japan playbook I mean pumping out shit like sanrio but coded for the brainrot algorithm-consumers, which china is currently excelling at. They're eventually gonna hit on something that's like Labubus on crack and it's gonna oneshot a generation of western kids just like Hello Kitty did.

We basically agree with the direction that traditional media will head, and I think shit like 28 years later and bugonia are examples of it. Self-contained, edgy, and largely apolitical(at least not to the degree it's preachy like "HERE'S A NIGGER IN A STORMTROOPER COSTUME")
 
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