What happened A new manifestation meme has swept Chinese social media — and its unlikely spiritual icon is Kris Jenner. Across platforms like Xiaohongshu (also known as RedNote) and Weibo, hundreds of thousands of users have swapped their profile pictures for Jenner’s image, turning the Kardashian matriarch into a digital “fortune talisman.” Xiaohongshu posts featuring her likeness (#KrisJenner) have surpassed 50 million views, with users pairing her image with captions such as “maintain nine-figure wealth” or “effortlessly land offers.” From profile pictures to full-scale digital rituals The trend has quickly evolved beyond static avatars. Users are remixing Jenner into aspirational roles — “lawyer Kris,” “doctor Kris,” “engineer Kris” — while others embed her across every personal device wallpaper, from iPads to Apple Watches, in a full-spectrum ritual of manifestation. One viral Xiaohongshu creator (@boss) even documented a “Keep Up with Kris Jenner” tour across China, staging the mogul in hyper-local scenes from eating tanghulu (sugar coated hawthorn fruits on a bamboo skewer) in Beijing to riding motorbikes in Chongqing. Crucially, user anecdotes are amplifying the meme’s virality. Xiaohongshu user @keep rich joked that he “won the lottery immediately” after switching his profile picture to Jenner, while @weather clear claimed she received over 1,000 RMB ($145) in red packets the same evening she made the change. The tone is tongue-in-cheek — but the repetition of such “success stories” is what sustains the belief loop. Humor, aspiration, and the search for financial certainty The logic is both ironic and sincere. As the architect behind a billion-dollar family empire, Jenner has been recast by Chinese netizens as the “ultimate wealth generator.” In a time of economic uncertainty, her image functions as a humorous yet symbolic shortcut to prosperity. The Jing Take This is not an isolated meme. It is the latest expression of a broader resurgence in metaphysical thinking among China’s Gen Z. From temple visits to God of Wealth (财神) wallpapers, young consumers are increasingly blending traditional superstition with digital culture — a coping mechanism in a slower-growth economy where conventional paths to success feel less certain. The viral spread of Jenner as a “manifestation icon” mirrors earlier phenomena such as Yang Chaoyue’s “koi luck” status, once widely used by students hoping to pass exams. Today, Jenner extends that logic into wealth accumulation and career success. Global capitalist archetypes reinterpreted through local belief systems What makes this iteration distinct is its globalized symbolism. Unlike traditional deities or local celebrities, Jenner represents a hyper-capitalist archetype: discipline, media savvy, and monetization at scale. Her appeal lies less in mysticism itself than in what she embodies — control over outcomes in an unpredictable world. Crucially, the trend operates at the intersection of irony and belief. Users openly joke about its absurdity — yet continue to participate en masse, reinforcing a shared digital ritual. The viral anecdotes — lottery wins, red packets, job offers — function less as facts and more as collective storytelling, sustaining hope. When global symbols are rewritten into local cultural currency The phenomenon echoes how Van Cleef & Arpels Alhambra evolved into a “good luck” emblem among Chinese consumers, transcending its original design narrative to become a widely recognized signifier of fortune and status. Jenner’s transformation into a digital luck charm follows the same logic. She is no longer simply a Western celebrity or media mogul, but a culturally re-coded symbol of wealth, control, and upward mobility — one that users actively deploy in their daily digital rituals. For global brands, this underscores a critical shift: success in China is not just about storytelling, but about surrendering a degree of narrative control. Once a symbol enters the ecosystem of Chinese social media, its meaning can be reshaped at scale — often in ways that are more powerful, participatory, and commercially relevant than the original intent. The Jing Take reports on a piece of the leading news and presents our editorial team’s analysis of the key implications for the luxury industry. In the recurring column, we analyze everything from product drops and mergers to heated debate sprouting on Chinese social media.