Skip to main content

“Sasaeng Fans” (私生饭)

| Dalia Parete |

The term “sasaeng fans,” or sī shēng fàn, originated in South Korea and refers to obsessive fans who engage in stalking behavior, invading celebrities’ privacy through harassment, illegal photography, and relentless pursuit. The phenomenon has spread across the entertainment sector in East Asia, and media in China now widely use the translated term. These fans develop intense parasocial relationships that escalate into dangerous stalking behaviors, disrupting idols’ personal lives and safety. “Just How Terrifying is Sasaeng?” asked one headline last week on Sohu.

Hong Kong actress Cecilia Yip (葉童) is pulled from her vehicle by a “saesang fan.”

More Stories from this Region

As China pushes a national reading initiative and AI reshapes information, one Shanghai shop offering 1,000 publications represents a vanishing era of relative editorial…
A daily check-in app sparks debate over sensitivities around death in China while grappling with the country’s growing crisis of solo-living and related safety concerns.
The closure of dozens more newspapers signals the final fizzling of China’s once-vibrant metropolitan print media sector at the outset in 2026.
As international communication centers proliferate across China down to the county level, Xi Jinping’s grand vision for global “discourse power” meets absurd local reali…
“There’s Still Tomorrow,” about domestic abuse and women’s emancipation, wins Best Foreign Film after a strong performance at the Chinese box office.
Beijing’s film celebrating the 1683 conquest of Taiwan backfires,prompting authorities to censor criticism.