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In his 2020 livestream Yu Menglong laughed and said “They’ll kill me if I don’t do it” — what everyone dismissed as a joke now chills viewers because the plain white wall, echo, and missing chair-backs match the underground footage discovered years later. TH

January 24, 2026 by tranpt271 Leave a Comment

Yu Menglong’s 2020 “Joke” Now Haunts Viewers: “They’ll Kill Me If I Don’t Do It” — and the Room Matches the Basement Footage Exactly

On October 6, 2020, during a casual livestream with actress Xing Fei in Beijing, China, Yu Menglong let slip a line that drew laughter from the audience: “They said they’d kill me if I didn’t do this ‘Q process.’” He chuckled, shook his head, and played it off as friendly banter. Yet after his death, millions re-watched the clip and stopped laughing. The blank white wall behind him, the odd echo in his voice, and — most disturbingly — the complete absence of chair backs match with eerie precision the fragments of underground footage fans later unearthed.

That single offhand remark is now widely regarded as a plea disguised as humor. The mysterious “Q process” — never explained — has become ground zero for speculation: was it a ritual, a coerced contract, or some covert assignment he was forced to complete? The spatial match between the 2020 livestream setting and the later basement clips strongly implies Yu Menglong may have already been confined by that date, with any subsequent public appearances carefully staged.

Online communities are sharply divided: one camp insists the similarities are coincidental and the narrative has been overblown; the other camp calls the footage “living proof” that he lived under constant threat for years before his final exit. Despite authorities quickly labeling such discussions “rumors,” the old livestream has been replayed tens of millions of times, signaling that few still accept the official “accident” explanation at face value.

What began as a throwaway joke in a relaxed Beijing broadcast has morphed into a symbol of silenced fear and concealed suffering. Every fresh share of the clip prompts the same agonizing question: had anyone taken his words seriously back then, could the tragedy have been prevented? The answer remains locked in shadow — but that very silence is fueling an ever-growing demand for truth, from Beijing residents to the global diaspora.

 

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