Four popular online words and their meanings.
One of the network buzzwords: "Don't be too CNN". In the March 14 incident of smashing, smashing, looting and burning in Lhasa, the news report of CNN in the United States cut a photo reflecting that a number of thugs attacked passing military vehicles on the streets of Lhasa into a partial close-up, deliberately downplaying the violence and group color of the attackers, triggering the signature of Chinese people around the world and demanding an apology from CNN. At the same time, Cafferty, the anchor of CNN, insulted China during the torch relay in the United States, calling China people "a group of bookworms and thugs who will remain unchanged for 50 years". As a result, netizens launched a popular mantra "Don't be too CNN". "Don't be too CNN" was popular on the Internet for a while, and even was compiled into a rap-style ballad by netizens. The second online buzzword: the word "naked official" should be originated by users of Xinhuanet. Take the fall of Pang Jiayu, the former vice chairman of the Shaanxi Provincial Political Consultative Conference, as an example. A corrupt official who secretly circles money for his wife and children abroad is called a "naked official" who is independent at home. This kind of corrupt officials adopt the "step-by-step escape method": first, they take their wives and children out of the country in various "reasonable" names, then sneak into their places and illegally transfer huge amounts of state-owned assets out of the country, while the corrupt officials themselves temporarily stay at home to hide their eyes and ears. At the first sign of trouble, they will flee quickly. The third buzzword on the Internet: the source of the word "muscles akimbo" is meaningless: after Xie Yalong, president of the Football Association, found that a large number of girls had no fighting spirit and skills at the women's football summary meeting, he thought that the most important thing for women's football body muscles to be trained was "muscles akimbo", but the girls didn't know where this muscle part he was talking about was. However, "akimbo" became an instant hit and became popular on the Internet, which made a mockery of the disappointing football in China and its managers. Xie Yalong also won the imitation Nobel Prize in Medicine for inventing "psoas muscle". The fourth online buzzword: "Jiong" In 2008, an ancient and unfamiliar Chinese character was reborn because of the Internet. This word is Jiong. I vaguely remember that this word originated from the name of the new CCTV building. After "big underpants" was considered indecent by most people, "Zhichuang" was spoofed by netizens because of its homonym with "hemorrhoids", while "Jiong Lou" was a relatively vivid but good name, so the word "Jiong" was circulated on the Internet. Almost as popular on the internet as the word "Jiong", there is also "Ji" (homophonic with "Mei"). It means that two words "stay" together is more stupid than staying. The fifth online buzzword: the word "shanzhai" is said to originate from Guangdong dialect. Generally speaking, piracy, imitation, etc. At first, it entered our field of vision in the name of "shanzhai mobile phone". Later, derivatives such as shanzhai home appliances, shanzhai stars and shanzhai buildings emerged one after another. Recently, "shanzhai Spring Festival Evening" has been the hottest topic. This program is called "China Rural TV Spring Festival Evening" and is produced by China Rural TV Station (CCSTV for short, it should be a virtual TV station). Obviously, it is against CCTV Spring Festival Evening. We will wait and see how effective it is. The seventh online buzzword: "Fan Paopao" "At this moment of life and death choice, I can only consider sacrificing myself for my daughter, and others, even my mother, will not care in this case." After the Wenchuan earthquake, Fan Meizhong, a private middle school teacher in Sichuan, caused an uproar after the earthquake, and was ridiculed by netizens as "Fan Paopao", which triggered a discussion on "teachers' morality". Guo Songmin, a well-known commentator standing on the moral high ground, cursed Fan Meizhong for being shameless, and even used words such as "beast" and "bastard", which showed a lack of basic self-restraint in many places and was called "national rule" by netizens. The eighth online buzzword: "Soy sauce" originally used "all children can soy sauce" to show that they are not young, but the word "soy sauce" was heated in 2008 but it has nothing to do with age. After the "Yanzhaomen" incident in Edison Chen, the reporter interviewed a Guangzhou citizen. The citizen inadvertently said "it's none of my business, I'm here to make soy sauce" and immediately became a hot word on the Internet. Later, when people want to express that they don't know something, don't want to talk about something, or have nothing to do with something, they all use "soy sauce" instead, which is simple and clear. The ninth online buzzword: "I am from Beijing" originated from the "molester" incident in Shenzhen at the end of 10. Lin Jiaxiang, the party secretary, deputy director and head of the discipline inspection team of Shenzhen Maritime Safety Administration, created such plots as "I am sent by Beijing Ministry of Communications", "What are you" and "See how I punish you" in the case of allegedly molesting girls. Then this video was exposed on the Internet, and "I was sent by Beijing" also became popular overnight on the Internet, becoming synonymous with the arrogance of ugly officials. As a netizen said: "Although this matter is not over yet, it gives people the enlightenment that the conscience of netizens is far beyond my imagination, and the power of the network is far beyond my imagination. The tenth network catchword: very yellow and very violent comes from CCTV's "News Network", a news about purifying network audio-visual. /kloc-Zhang Shufan, a 0/3-year-old girl, said in an interview: "Last time I looked up information on the Internet, a webpage suddenly popped up, which was very yellow and violent. I quickly closed it. " The "whirlwind" set off by this sentence is probably unexpected by CCTV. At the same time, the sentence "very x very XX" was interpreted to the extreme. Some commentators pointed out that when the "BT culture" of the Internet develops to bully a girl who is only 13 years old, it is undoubtedly worth pondering. When the evil fire of "cyber violence" breaks through the moral bottom line and imposes "civil sanctions" on real life, it may really be necessary to carry out legal norms.