Off beat

Taiwan pleads with citizens not to change name to 'Salmon'

Under the two day promotion, any customer whose ID card contained 'Gui Yu' – the Chinese characters for salmon – would be entitled to an all-you-can-eat sushi meal along with five friends

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 18 Mar 2021 4:30PM

Taiwan pleads with citizens not to change name to 'Salmon'
The cause of this sudden enthusiasm was a chain of sushi restaurants. – AFP pic, March 18, 2021

TAIPEI – A top Taiwanese official issued a plea on Thursday for people to stop changing their name to "salmon" after dozens made the unusual move to take advantage of a restaurant promotion.

In a phenomenon that has been dubbed "Salmon Chaos" by local media, around 150 mostly young people flocked to government offices in recent days to officially register a change in their name.

The cause of this sudden enthusiasm was a chain of sushi restaurants.

Under the two day promotion which ended Thursday, any customer whose ID card contained 'Gui Yu' – the Chinese characters for salmon – would be entitled to an all-you-can-eat sushi meal along with five friends.

Taiwan allows people to officially change their name up to three times.

But Taiwanese officials were not amused.

"This kind of name-change not only wastes time but causes unnecessary paperwork," deputy interior minister Chen Tsung-yen told reporters as he urged the public to "cherish administrative resources".

"I hope everyone can be more rational about it," he added.

Local media ran interviews with people who took advantage of the promotion. 

"I just changed my name this morning to add the characters 'Bao Cheng Gui Yu' and we already ate more than Tw$7,000 (RM965.50)," a college student surnamed Ma told TVBS news channel in southern Kaohsiung city.

Roughly translated, Ma's new moniker means: "Explosive Good Looking Salmon". 

"I've changed my first name to salmon and two of my friends also did," a woman surnamed Tung told SET TV. "We'll just change our names back afterwards."

Other salmon-themed names reported in local media included "Salmon Prince," "Meteor Salmon King" and "Salmon Fried Rice"

The United Daily News reported that one resident decided to add a record 36 new characters to his name, most of them seafood themed, including the characters for "abalone", "crab" and "lobster". – AFP, March 18, 2021

Related News

Events / 4d

Penang proposes partnership with Medan in the food industry and farming sectors

Places / 3w

Hungary looks towards greater collaboration with Penang

Opinion / 1mth

The Islamic business revolution in Southern Thailand

Off beat / 1mth

AirAsia pilot executes dramatic landing amid intense Taiwan crosswinds (video)

Health / 2mth

Mesut Ozil plans to ‘tackle’ Penang food during visit to the state

Business / 3mth

Advantech seeks more strategic expansions to cope with market uncertainties

Spotlight

Malaysia

Johor state election: MACC receives three reports of alleged corruption

Malaysia

Banks need to do more to help counter rising costs of living – Guan Eng

By Ian McIntyre

Business

BNM holds OPR at 2.75 per cent

Malaysia

MACC: No one off limits in probe into US$13 million luxury property deal

Malaysia

Govt rejects claims Jho Low secretly returned to Malaysia for 1MDB asset talks

Malaysia

School stabbing incident: Suspect claimed she was dissatisfied, allegedly bullied

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Rosmah demands action against Nga over alleged misleading election poster in Johor polls

Malaysia

Malaysia faces RM51.4b 1MDB burden after recovering RM31.3b in funds and assets

You may be interested

Places

Four premier hotels in Penang to be restored, open doors soon

By Ian McIntyre

Living

Matrix Concepts' home ownership campaign offers over RM30m rewards and prizes

Events

HashMicro rolls out AI-powered manufacturing platform to help firms tackle rising costs, disruptions

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir