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The Real Crazy Rich Asians: We Take A Look At Asia’s Affluent Elite

We’ve got pictures to back up just how rich these people are.

Crazy Rich Asians is having a crazy run at the box office. We’re not just talking about box offices in the United States, where the movie’s Hollywood studios is located, but many countries all over the world. Not surprisingly, the movie is also a hit in Singapore. It’s not every day a major Hollywood movie chooses to film in our sunny island, as the home of the majority of the characters.

We can’t think of a better movie to put Singapore on global screens, as Crazy Rich Asians demonstrates that a contemporary film featuring a predominantly Asian-American cast can sell like hell. But besides making cinema history, the movie, as well as the novel it’s based on, is shining the spotlight on the wealthy inequality in Asia and Singapore. Apparently, according to the movie and novel, a close look at Asia’s socio-economic order reveals a complex racial hierarchy. Kevin Kwan, the Singaporean author of the novel, went so far as to rank people of Asian descent by their importance in Rich People Problems, the novel that concludes the Crazy Rich Asians series. The ranking has no less than 16 different racial categories, most of which are East Asian.

Excerpt from Kwan's novel "Rich People Problems," as quoted by the South China Morning Post

Instead of a ranking, our own list introduces five wealthy Asians that we follow and love, wishing (quite hopelessly) that we could travel all over the world every day like they do. Are these public figures crazy rich like Nick Young’s family? Let’s find out!

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5. Wang Si Cong

No list of Asia’s rich and famous should miss out Wang Sicong. His money can’t buy love from the people, though. It seems like Wang talks trash about anyone he dislikes on social media without fear of retribution. But unsurprisingly, his controversial and misogynistic comments have angered plenty of celebrities, their fans, and reporters. So it is rather on brand for Wang that his own music management company, Banana Culture, was muddled up in rumours that he bought K-pop girl group T-ara over with loads of cash and fancy cars. Sure, it’s nice to have one of China’s richest men (Wang Jianlin, chairman of property and entertainment giant Dalian Wanda Group) as your father, but we’d really rethink our ways if we were called “vulgar” by the Chinese state-run Xinhua news agency.

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