The son of China Star Group Chairman Charles Heung, Jacky Heung, was shocked by reports in July that he was sued by a Macau casino to recover HKD 1.4 million (about MYR 750,000). Later, MGM China Holdings, which operates the casino, clarified that Jacky Heung was actually the guarantor, and all debts had already been settled, and the legal proceedings had ended. However, some netizens saw Charles Heung's wife Tiffany Chen (Madam Heung) starting live-stream sales, selling online courses, as well as Jacky Heung dressing in women's clothes for attention, as signs of financial difficulties. On the 28th, “Is the Xiang Family Bankrupt” topped the Weibo trending search list. Madam Heung immediately responded with a livestream, laughing, “People just want to ride my traffic,” and implicitly warned, “If there was actual content, I’d sue.” Jacky Heung responded seriously, “There should be a baseline in what people say.”
Madam Heung launched the “Madam Heung’s Upward Besties Circle” course priced at 399 yuan (about MYR 235), attracting fans to join. Through sharing her life stories and experiences, she teaches fans to network upwards and connect to high-quality circles. As of mid-September, more than 7,500 sets had been sold, with sales totaling about 3 million yuan (about MYR 1.77 million).
On the 28th, Madam Heung appeared lavishly dressed and confronted the bankruptcy rumors head-on, stating that she still employs more than 1,000 staff, and her jewelry and mansions are still there. She said those spreading rumors just put out bait to attract attention without specific content, “If they had content, I’d probably sue them. The comments also say it's nonsense, how could there be (bankruptcy), just trying to use my name for traffic.” Her son Jacky Heung responded helplessly on Weibo: “No matter how well you do, someone will always have something to say, but please have a baseline when you speak.”
News source: Apple News Network