All corrections
Wikipedia April 22, 2026 at 09:33 AM

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tenzing_Tsondu

2 corrections found

1
Claim
a 7-second TikTok video clip
Correction

The viral clip was posted on Douyin, not TikTok. Contemporary reports say photographer Hu Bo (“Boge”) uploaded the 7-second video to his Douyin account.

Full reasoning

This is inaccurate because the widely reported viral video was posted on Douyin (抖音), ByteDance’s mainland-China app, rather than on TikTok, its separate international platform.

Contemporaneous coverage from China Daily says Ding Zhen "took the internet by storm after a photographer posted a video of him on Douyin, a domestic version of the TikTok short video platform." A detailed 2020 report republished by The Paper is even more specific: it says photographer Hu Bo posted "a roughly 7-second short video" on his Douyin account on November 11, 2020, and that the clip first spread on Douyin before expanding to Weibo.

So the article’s wording is wrong on the platform: it was a Douyin clip, not a TikTok clip.

2 sources
2
Claim
his first album 1376 All Wishes Come True (1376心想事成)
Correction

1376心想事成 is the song title, not the album title. Music listings for Ding Zhen show the February 2021 release as the 7-track album/EP 《丁真的歌 来自理塘》, with “1376心想事成” as one of its songs.

Full reasoning

This mixes up a track title with the album/EP title.

A music profile for Ding Zhen on iHeart lists 《丁真的歌 来自理塘》 as his February 2021 release, while separately listing “1376心想事成” among his top songs. In other words, the February 2021 record is the 7-song release 《丁真的歌 来自理塘》, and “1376心想事成” is a song on it, not the title of the album itself.

A contemporaneous February 4, 2021 report republished by The Paper also describes 《1376心想事成》 as Ding Zhen’s new song, and says the complete EP 《丁真的歌·来自理塘》 would be released separately. That directly contradicts the article’s claim that the album itself was titled 1376心想事成.

2 sources
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