One Sentence in Yu Menglong’s Alleged Messages Has Unleashed Nationwide Fury in China
When the screenshots first appeared on Weibo late last week, most users thought it was another fabricated celebrity scandal. Within hours, the phrase “我真的受够了这种人设” (“I’m really sick of maintaining this persona”) — allegedly sent by actor Yu Menglong in a private chat — had been screenshotted, reposted, and dissected millions of times. By morning, the topic #YuMenglongChatLeaks had surged past 1.2 billion views, and the backlash was no longer containable.

The sentence itself is short, almost mundane. But in the context of modern Chinese celebrity culture — where idols are expected to maintain flawless, aspirational “personas” 24/7 — it landed like a grenade. For many young people who grew up watching Yu Menglong play gentle, filial, morally upright characters in hit dramas, the words felt like betrayal. “He built his entire career on being the ‘perfect boyfriend’ type,” one 23-year-old university student commented under a state media post. “Now he admits it was all fake? That hurts more than any scandal.”
What makes this incident particularly explosive is the timing. China’s entertainment industry has been under intense regulatory pressure since 2021: fan culture crackdowns, “effeminate idol” bans, mandatory “positive energy” guidelines. Yu Menglong, long marketed as a safe, traditional masculine role model, suddenly appeared to be mocking the very system that made him wealthy. State-affiliated commentators quickly labeled the messages “a serious violation of socialist core values,” while some official outlets urged the public to “wait for verification” — a phrasing that only fueled conspiracy theories that authorities were protecting him.
By day three, several major brands had quietly removed Yu Menglong from endorsement campaigns. His upcoming historical drama — already in post-production — faces uncertain broadcast prospects. On Douyin and Xiaohongshu, fan-edited videos juxtaposing his gentle on-screen smiles with the leaked text have garnered tens of millions of views, often accompanied by the caption: “This is who he really is when the cameras stop rolling.”
Yet not everyone is convinced the messages are authentic. Digital forensics enthusiasts have pointed out inconsistencies in timestamps and font rendering, while Yu Menglong’s agency issued a brief statement calling the leaks “maliciously edited” and promising legal action. The Ministry of Public Security’s cybercrime unit reportedly began investigating the origin of the screenshots late Monday — a move some interpret as damage control rather than truth-seeking.
Regardless of authenticity, the emotional damage is already done. For a generation that pours disposable income and emotional energy into idol worship, the possibility that their favorite star privately despises the “persona” they fell in love with feels existential. One viral Weibo thread summed it up: “We bought albums, voted on variety shows, defended him from haters — and he was just tired of pretending to be the person we loved.”
As the story continues to dominate Chinese social media, the real question is no longer whether the messages are real — it’s whether the public will ever forgive Yu Menglong even if they are proven fake.
Full timeline, key screenshots, and reactions from industry insiders are available below.
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