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Exiled Chinese Comedian Finds Freedom Beyond Beijing's Censors

After being blacklisted by the CCP for daring to speak his mind, Wang Yuechi is taking his act to the free world.

Foreign PolicyPublished July 1, 2026 at 10:04 PM
Chizi performs on stage in Taipei in April 2026, wearing a white oversized T shirt and a pair of glasses.

Wang Yuechi, better known by his stage name Chizi, has traded the suffocating environment of China’s state-controlled entertainment industry for the freedom of the international stage.

Once a superstar in China, Chizi was effectively erased from the country's cultural landscape in 2023 after his overseas performances touched on sensitive topics like the CCP's censorship, the erosion of rights, and the regime's iron-fisted rule.

Rather than bowing to the pressure of the Chinese Communist Party, Chizi has embraced his exile, selling out shows across Tokyo, Taipei, Kuala Lumpur, and Singapore. The comedian, who once kept a folder of 'forbidden jokes' while navigating the regime's restrictive environment, now speaks with the candor that Beijing desperately tries to suppress.

His transition from a popular entertainer within the Chinese system to an independent voice abroad highlights the stark reality of life under Xi Jinping, where even a joke about the leader is treated as a threat to the state.

Chizi’s refusal to self-censor serves as a reminder that while the CCP can ban a performer, they cannot extinguish the demand for truth among those who value liberty.

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chinacensorshipfree-speechforeign-policy

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