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This is the list of the top 50 most-viewed Chinese music videos on the American video-sharing website YouTube. "A Little Happiness" by Hebe Tien is first Chinese music video to reach 100 million views on August 20, 2016 [1] while "Goodbye Princess" by Tia Lee is the fastest Chinese music video to reach 100 million views in 20 days. [2]
YouTube announced that cumulative views of videos related to Minecraft, some of which had been on the platform as early as 2009, exceeded 1 trillion views on December 14, 2021, and was the most-watched video game content on the site.
The song was released on July 28, 2016, accompanied with a dance music video. It spread to the Chinese video website Bilibili and quickly became viral in China, leading to various spoofs and mimicking dances. [144] [145] As of 27 June 2020, the video received 63 million views on YouTube.
Li Ziqi ([lì tsɹ̩̀.tɕʰí]; Chinese: 李子柒; pinyin: Lǐ Zǐqī; born 6 July 1990), is a Chinese video blogger, entrepreneur, and Internet celebrity. [3] She is known for creating food and handicraft preparation videos in her hometown of rural Pingwu County, Mianyang, north-central Sichuan province, southwest China, often from basic ingredients and tools using traditional Chinese ...
Arieh Smith, better known as Xiaomanyc or simply Xiaoma (Chinese: 小马在纽约; pinyin: xiǎo mǎ zài niǔ yuē; lit. 'Little pony in New York'), is an American YouTuber, best known for his videos where he speaks various languages with people from different cultures. [3]
It is the Chinese theme song for the American sci-fi film Passengers. [1] The music video captures scenes from the film Passengers, and features G.E.M. singing in the Avalon. The video became the first by a Hong Kong artist to reach 100 million views on YouTube, and has since garnered over 280 million views on the platform.
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As of January 2010, Youku.com was ranked #1 in the Chinese Internet video sector according to Internet metrics provider CR-Nielsen [14] (keeping in mind that YouTube is banned in China). In 2008, Youku partnered with Myspace in China. [15] Later that year, Youku became the sole online video provider embedded in the China Edition of Mozilla ...