The Two Sessions have been trending on Chinese social media all week, and some topics garnered more attention than others.
A hashtag related to Xi Jinping's third term received over 1.2 billion views on Weibo.
The student who grabbed Chen's mic shouted: "We study for the Great Rejuvenation of the Chinese nation - not to breed with Americans!"
A small and practical social security topic goes trending when major hashtags about welfare protests are censored.
Why was a ChatGPT-like platform not first launched in China? As ChatGPT is all the talk, so is the discussion about China catching up.
While many commenters support Chinese authorities for providing data on Covid-related deaths, some questioning the accuracy were censored.
Zhang Zhehan's latest song is his first success after he suffered scrutiny in China, but his song wasn't released in the mainland.
As people in Beijing, Shanghai, and other places take to the streets holding up white papers, some have dubbed this the "A4 Revolution."
Anger, distrust in Lanzhou after community staff discovered that those coming to test residents had not had a recent Covid test themselves.
In Shanghai, people paid tribute to the victims of the Ulumqi fire by lighting candles, and also found other ways to vent their frustrations.
"Tonight is the night when students are flooding the internet," some on Weibo said during a dark night filled with students' bright lights.
As people mourned the victims of the Urumqi fire, they also expressed anger over how the last 100 days of their lives were spent in lockdown.
Fed up with Foxconn, employees vented their frustrations and started a riot at the Zhengzhou factory campus.
"Unless you shut down the entire internet in Lanzhou, there is no way for you to cover this up."
A Weibo post by the Embassy of Germany in China focuses on what happened in both countries in 1989, but the China part is blacked-out.
An empty chair could be seen after Hu Jintao left the stage during the closing session of the 20th Party Congress.
The Ruzhou girl developed a high fever on October 14, but wasn't taken to hospital until the night of October 17.
These sentences from Xi's speech were turned into hashtags shortly after the opening of the 20th Party Congress.
"What's wrong with looking at beautiful women and men on the Internet?"
“Ah, is this what they mean with ‘dynamic zero’?” The online discussions about controlling the epidemic spread are also heavily controlled.