Tian Xin Denies Criticising Dad Jia Nailiang Amid Social Media Storm

Tian Xin Clarifies She Wasn’t Throwing Shade at Jia Nailiang
Tian Xin Says Chill Out – She’s Not Calling Her Dad a Bad Father

Jia Nailiang and Li Xiaolu’s daughter, Tian Xin, has stepped in to shut down the noise after netizens started speculating she was calling out her dad online.

The buzz kicked off when Tian Xin posted a photo of her mum Li Xiaolu on social media, captioning it with, “What comes before rumours is my mother’s love.” 

Cue the internet losing its mind. Some folks took that as shade towards her father, Jia Nailiang, especially considering the messy history between her parents – namely the infamous 2017 cheating scandal involving Li Xiaolu and rapper PG One.

Tian Xin Speaks Up: “My Parents Deserve Peace, Not Online Drama”

Tian Xin wasn’t having any of it though. She clapped back at netizens still dragging her mum over the past, saying she’s not here to be swayed by gossip and that she alone knows what her mother is really like.

But things got even spicier when eagle-eyed fans noticed she’d liked a comment saying Jia Nailiang “wasn’t a good father.” 

That one like sent the rumour mill into overdrive, with people digging up old interviews where Li Xiaolu said Jia was too caught up with work during her pregnancy and Tian Xin’s early childhood.

So what’s the truth then?

Not Taking Sides – Jia Nailiang’s Daughter Clears the Air on Viral Comment

Tian Xin has now addressed the drama directly, saying people are totally overinterpreting her actions. She explained that the “like” didn’t mean anything special – it just meant she saw the comment. “My dad is a responsible father,” she said firmly, adding that people shouldn’t read too much into one social media move.

She also got a bit vulnerable, admitting that as a teenager she can be influenced by what she sees online, but that at the end of the day, she just wants peace for both her mum and dad. “I’m not trying to start a fight or take sides,” she said, “I hope everyone can stop making this bigger than it is.”

Fair play to her. Drama aside, Tian Xin’s message is pretty clear: social media likes don’t equal personal attacks – and maybe, just maybe, it’s time the internet gave both her parents (and her!) a bit of breathing room.

Photo: Sina

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