Not just Scott Morrison: 6 overseas celebrity WeChat accounts

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison is not the only overseas politician or celebrity to set up an official WeChat account from outside China.

Like Morrison, it appears that a few of our Top 6 overseas users of the Chinese messaging service are not verified by WeChat.

Official WeChat accounts - ones permitted to push alerts to followers - must be registered to a Chinese national in China. To get around this, many overseas users go through third parties in the country.

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This can make them vulnerable to losing control of their account, as happened to Morrison.

America's National Basketball Association (NBA) has an official WeChat account, registered and verified by a Beijing-based NBA sports culture company.

The account has a wealth of content and services and operates like an online shop. There is official schedule information and an introduction to the All-Star line-up, as well as merchandise.

Its latest post - with nearly 60,000 hits - is a Lunar New Year message, in which the NBA offers its WeChat followers best wishes for the Year of the Tiger.

The wildly popular K-pop stars do not have their own WeChat account. Instead, their Chinese fan club operates a verified official account called btsfans.

It has published more than 700 articles, on everything from concert information and high-quality pictures, to behind-the-scenes rehearsal highlights. Each one receives thousands of hits.

Billionaire Bill Gates, whose private charitable foundation has a branch in China, had his official account registered by a Beijing-based consulting firm in February 2017.

Bill Gates, the former Microsoft CEO, has an official verified WeChat account which regularly receives thousands of views. Photo: AP alt=Bill Gates, the former Microsoft CEO, has an official verified WeChat account which regularly receives thousands of views. Photo: AP>

"This is my personal blog, where I share about the people I meet, the books I'm reading, and what I'm learning," Gates said bilingually in a welcome video.

According to the About page, content includes global health, energy innovation, education reform, and reading notes. Each article regularly generates thousands of hits.

The account is owned by Bridge, founded in 2016 as a joint venture between a Beijing-based consulting firm and the New York-based Global Health Strategies (GHS). The Gates Foundation is a major client.

The Gates account is verified by WeChat.

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4. Stephon Marbury

The first star player to leave the NBA for the Chinese Basketball Association has two WeChat official accounts, both claiming to be certified by Marbury himself.

One, named House of Marbury, is a collaboration between the coach and now-retired player and the Beijing Post service. It has posted just once, to introduce Marbury's clothing brand.

Another account, RealMarbury, was created by Beijing Yutian Sports Culture, a company set up by Marbury's Chinese agent. It published around 30 articles giving a first-person account of his China tour. The last one, in March 2017, attracted more than 5,000 reads but the account has not been updated since.

A WeChat account was publicising US pop singer Selena Gomez's work until 2019. Photo: GC Images alt=A WeChat account was publicising US pop singer Selena Gomez's work until 2019. Photo: GC Images>

5. Selena Gomez

A WeChat account named after the 29-year-old American pop singer stopped pushing alerts in October 2019. Before that, it was used to share her new album releases, favourite shoes, and street photos, with each post receiving a few hundred hits. It does not appear to be verified.

The Tesla founder has a dozen public accounts named after him on WeChat, all sharing his anecdotes and updates on his work. They seem to have been built by fans, with no personal connection to Musk.

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP's Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2022 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Copyright (c) 2022. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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