The New York Post published a story about an unnamed Chinese livestreamer whose beauty filter allegedly failed during a broadcast, revealing her “real” face.
According to the report, she lost 140,000 followers.
The article contains elements designed to assure the reader it is not fiction. There are photographs. There is a precise number — 140,000. There is a reference to a 2019 case involving a streamer known as “Your Highness Qiao Biluo,” whose filter malfunction was documented.

The “before” image — the supposed glitch — shows a woman with a warm complexion and an expressive face. The filtered version presents a pale, symmetrical mask.

It is an excellent story. It touches on artificial beauty standards, digital deception, and the cruelty of online audiences. It invites outrage and sympathy.
Try to find the woman. Search Chinese social media, Threads, TikTok, X. There is no name. No identifiable account. No platform. No record of 140,000 followers departing from anywhere.
The article states: “Allegedly lost thousands of followers.” “Per social media posts going viral.” “Has yet to be independently verified.” “Social media reports claim.” “It’s yet unclear whether the woman’s facial fiasco is real.”
Every assertion is attributed to anonymous posts. The closest to a source is a quotation from “one fan.”
Was any attempt at verification made? Was the streamer contacted? Was her platform identified? Was the loss of 140,000 followers confirmed? The story is prominent in the news.
Is this how unverified content passes into news?
Readers may experience a momentary indignation, amusement, pity and perhaps share the link. Few attempt to locate the unnamed subject. It is unlikely they could for there is no way to find her.
In an earlier age, the editor’s function was to act as a filter between rumor and news publication.
The story is shaped to pretend it is news but geared entirely for circulation.
A beauty filter that glitches may be amusing. An editorial filter that fails, as in this story, may also be amusing and perhaps a lot more common than a streamer’s beauty filter fail.
Frank Parlato is an investigative journalist, media strategist, publisher, and legal consultant.





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This story illuminates the state of the news.
The news is a business.
The news is a product.
News papers and tv news are losing money.
Regurgitating news stories saves money.
The “product” has always been about giving the people what they want.
The people want bullshit and the
New York gave it to them.
When I was younger and drank a lot, I never went to bed with a four, but I ended up waking up with a few.
Snorelax-
How do you think they felt when the roofies wore off—
and you’re ugly ass was laying next to them?
You may want to look into danesh co conspirator tizzyent aka Randal Michael mcwhorter is being investigated by the feds
https://twitter.com/TizzyEnt/status/2026008650909655248