laitimes

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

author:Orange heart talks about life

"Why should I think about employees?"

"I haven't complained bitterly, what right do employees have to complain?"

Today, some bloggers reported that Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, who has recently caused all kinds of controversy, once beat the South China Morning Post in public for painting the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain.

Loading...

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

纸片傀儡小人上写着scmp,即南华早报的英文名缩写,South China Morning Post。

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

According to insiders, the reason why Xuan Jing beat the villain of the South China Morning Post at that time was because the newspaper maliciously smeared Baidu's stock price, which caused Baidu's stock price to plummet by 11.53%. Xuan Jing whipped the villain to vent her anger.

The vigorous and astonishing vice president of public relations of Baidu openly put the villain in the office and whipped it in public, and the people around her also echoed her laughter.

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting
Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

Such confusing behavior has also made many netizens full of question marks, and some netizens even bluntly said: It's too in line with Baidu's temperament!

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting
Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

Netizen: I originally thought that the company's executives were like this, but now it seems that there is not much difference from the people around me.

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting
Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

The private video of beating the villain in public was leaked, and many people were also curious about who released the video?

Such a superstitious act of venting anger will definitely damage the image of Baidu Guan, netizens: It seems to offend people.

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

Judging from this superstitious act of whipping the villain, it seems that Jingjing's work style is completely immersed in his own world and centered on his own needs.

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

In response to the upsurge of Internet controversy caused by Baidu's vice president of public relations Xuan Jing due to shocking remarks, there are several things that are completely unexpected-

Originally, I wanted to establish the image of a strong woman, but I didn't expect it to overturn, and even caused Baidu's stock price to plummet.

Speaking of which, the position is also the vice president of public relations of Baidu, but I didn't expect to wipe my ass by myself in the end.

Robin Li may not have thought that the talents he promoted could make Baidu lose so much.

Netizens may not have expected that Baidu, a company as large, has its top management driving its employees as cattle and horses, which is completely inhumane.

Thriller! Xuan Jing, Baidu's vice president of public relations, once painted the South China Morning Post as a puppet villain for her reporting

Whether an enterprise can be evergreen or not lies not only in economic benefits, but also in the humanistic temperature, and an enterprise that has lost its humanity is destined to not go far!

What do you think about this?