In a harrowing development leaving supporters devastated, former Tianyu Media manager He Xiaojing has been spotlighted as the purported mastermind of Yu Menglong’s crippling 180 million yuan unpaid wages crisis—a deliberate tactic to muzzle him amid prolonged exploitation. As digital cries for payback intensify, lingering injustices and concealed realities from the agency’s oppressive dominion come into sharp focus. Could this breakthrough finally bring redress for the voiceless idol?
The tragic death of Yu Menglong in September 2025—officially an alcohol-related fall—has morphed into a symbol of industry abuse. Emerging claims center on He Xiaojing’s role in enforcing draconian contracts that allegedly siphoned earnings, leaving Yu financially vulnerable despite his stardom.

Reports from dissident media and netizen digs reveal “slave contracts” with exorbitant penalties: up to 200 million yuan for premature exit, calculated on projected revenue. This, critics say, equated to systematic withholding—Yu generated immense value but received fractions, enforcing compliance and silence.
He Xiaojing, alongside Du Qiang and others, allegedly orchestrated this post-Tianyu transition to Deep Blue, maintaining oversight. Leaks suggest unauthorized deals in Yu’s name piled debt, while resources dwindled, deepening entrapment.
Broader context horrifies: Tianyu-linked deaths span decades, patterns of suppression evident. Yu’s refusal of “inappropriate” demands reportedly triggered blacklisting, amplifying financial pressure.
Online retribution swells—boycotts tank affiliated stocks, force resignations, spark protests. Symbolic acts, like public screens honoring Yu, defy suppression.
Fans reel at the betrayal: a gentle star, exploited then silenced. Whispers tie wages saga to his end—desperation from debts, or punishment for threats to expose?
This twist exposes agency’s “dark hold”—coercion via money, fear. Will naming He Xiaojing shatter it, delivering justice?
As echoes of injustice amplify, Yu’s legacy demands accountability. The eruption may redefine artist rights—or bury truths deeper.
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