Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Luo Yonghao

Luo Yonghao
Born (1972-07-09) 9 July 1972 (age 52)
Alma materBeishan Primary School
Occupation(s)entrepreneur
internet celebrity
former teacher at New Oriental in Beijing (2001-2006)
TitleFounder and CEO of Smartisan
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese羅永浩
Simplified Chinese罗永浩
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinLuó Yǒnghào

Luo Yonghao (Chinese: 罗永浩, b. 9 July 1972[1]) is a Chinese entrepreneur and internet celebrity. He is the chief executive officer and founder of Chinese technology company Smartisan[2] and founder of now defunct blogging website Bullog.cn.[3]

On August 20, 2018,[4] Luo's company Smartisan launched the messaging service Bullet Message, which gained 7 million users in its first three weeks.[5]

Early life

Luo was born to a Korean Chinese family in Helong, Jilin, China. His father is the party secretary of Helong county Luo Changzhen (Chinese: 罗昌珍). At age 12, his family moved to Yanji and he transferred to Beishan Primary School. In his second year of high school, Luo dropped out.[6] Luo pursued various business endeavors, including selling second-hand books and reselling smuggled cars. However, after economic pressure he decided to study English and pursue a career teaching English.

Career

In 2001, Luo became a teacher at New Oriental in Beijing. From 2001 to 2006, Yonghao prepared students for the GRE test. Because of his humorous teaching style and often off-topic tangents, a few of his students filmed him and uploaded some of his lectures online. The videos, titled "Lao Luo Quotations", became popular with young people. Luo, nicknamed Lao Luo by his students, became an internet phenomenon[7] and was featured in Baidu's annual top-searches between 2005 and 2006. In June 2006, Luo Yonghao resigned from New Oriental.

Bullog.cn

On July 31, 2006, Luo launched Bullog.cn, citing dissatisfaction with the censorship of the major blog portals such as sina.com and sohu.com.[8] The site was considered to be one of the most liberal[9] blog portals in Chinese cyberspace.

Luo opened his portal in 2006. His words and recordings aimed to inspire independent thinking and sticking to life mottoes. Some excerpts that satirized or criticized unreasonable situations and misdemeanors aroused sympathy among netizens, and spread rapidly over the Internet. This became a topic of the year on the Chinese Internet.

References