Skip to main content

Who Knows Taiwan?

| LS Staff |

Taiwanese YouTuber Chung Ming-hsuan (鍾明軒) sparked controversy in late March 2025 after suggesting on a podcast that “nobody knows Taiwan” abroad and that he therefore must resort to explaining himself through “Chinese culture” (中華文化) to allow foreigners to relate. Given the social, political — and often highly personal — debates in Taiwan about identity vis-à-vis a China that aggressively asserts its sovereignty over the island, Chung’s comments naturally reverberated. Fellow content creator Ray Du (阿滴) countered on Threads that 80 percent of foreigners he met when traveling overseas recognized Taiwan and understood when he identified himself as Taiwanese. This led to accusations that Du was “bullying” Chung, who claimed his words were taken out of context. With the usual appetite for drama, Taiwanese media waded in, unpacking the raucous back and forth.

Ceylon (錫蘭), a Belgian-Chinese YouTuber popular in Taiwan, initially criticized Du but later apologized after speaking with him directly about the misunderstanding. Those who can stomach rapid-fire influencer commentary can try out the related video below from another YouTuber, History Bro (歷史哥).


More Stories from this Region

Beijing’s film celebrating the 1683 conquest of Taiwan backfires,prompting authorities to censor criticism.
Beijing’s official news agency pushes “one country, two systems” talks for Taiwan.
KMT chair’s Russia remarks spark debate, but the interviewer’s confrontational style draws criticism from veteran Taiwan journalists.
Oversimplified social media posts— even if the reporting behind them is sound — can land professional media in the muck.
AI-generated protest videos on TikTok blur reality, showing how disinformation cuts in many directions.
A Japanese political scientist accuses a paper in Taiwan of fabricating quotes in its coverage of Taiwan’s KMT leadership election.