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| Fan Chengcheng’s Staff Expose Sasaeng Cars, Promise Legal Action for Future Offenders |
Things are heating up behind the scenes for Chinese actor-singer Adam Fan/Fan Chengcheng, and not in a good way. His management has officially lost their patience after a wild incident involving sasaeng fans that went way beyond just “overenthusiastic”.
Earlier this week, Fan Chengcheng's manager Zhang Xiaowei (also the CEO of Jiayi Entertainment) took to Weibo with a lengthy post and a video, publicly blasting the actions of sasaeng fans who tailed the star from Beijing airport all the way to his work location. We're talking four full cars of sasaengs following dangerously close, attempting to block and circle the artist’s vehicle, snapping photos and even pretending to be staff to sneak into the event area.
Yeah, not okay.
“This behaviour isn’t just disruptive—it’s dangerous,” the manager stressed in the now-deleted post. “It’s a threat to both Fan Chengcheng and public safety.”
According to Zhang Xiaowei, these vehicles repeatedly tried to get parallel to Fan's car, stuck cameras up against the windows, and completely disregarded traffic safety. He warned that the company won’t tolerate it anymore—no more “polite reminders” or behind-the-scenes handling. If this continues, they're prepared to call the police on the spot.
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🛑 The Seven Big No-Gos from Fan Chengcheng’s Management:
Following the incident, management issued a formal set of seven strict bans—and it’s clear they’re drawing a line in the sand. Here's what fans are now officially forbidden to do:
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No following flights, trains, or cars – airports, stations, and train compartments are off-limits.
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No chasing or surrounding vehicles – defined clearly as a violation of public safety.
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No sneaking into restricted zones – including waiting areas, jet bridges, and backstage work sites.
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No invading privacy – hotels, filming sets, or anywhere with unpublished schedules are now “danger zones”.
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No flash photos or aggressive contact – don’t push, shove, or blind the star mid-move.
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No discussion of private schedules – if it’s not been publicly announced, don’t share it.
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No illegal data digging – buying or obtaining travel info without consent is absolutely banned.
And the biggest kicker: any serious violation will be exposed publicly. In other words, if you’re caught being a sasaeng, expect your face or licence plate number to go viral, courtesy of the agency.
📣 “Next Time, We're Calling the Police”
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Zhang Xiaowei was clear—this is the final warning. The team isn’t giving second chances anymore. “If this happens again, we will take direct legal action. No more negotiation.”
Interestingly, the original Weibo post detailing all of this was deleted shortly after, likely due to public attention or internal PR strategy. But the message remains loud and clear.
Watch the video:
https://t.co/SyxTh1un6v pic.twitter.com/iFJuucGDAn
— Atlantis (@nazenaise) July 19, 2025
🧠 What Fans Are Saying Online
The incident has left netizens pretty divided. While most fans are siding with the artist's safety, some are raising eyebrows about the sudden deletion of the Weibo post.
“Honestly, being a fan doesn't mean owning your idol. Let the man breathe,” one Weibo user wrote.
Another said, “It’s good the studio is drawing the line. These sasaengs are getting out of control.”
There’s also chatter about whether more Chinese celebs should start naming and shaming sasaengs to finally curb the obsessive behaviour.
Being a celeb ain't easy, but no job is worth putting up with car chases, privacy breaches, and fake staff sneaking into work sites. Fan Chengcheng’s management is taking a bold step by going public and setting clear legal boundaries—and honestly, it’s about time.
Here’s hoping everyone gets the memo. No more sasaeng drama, please.


