The video highlights subjects that Chinese people care about, but in a lighter vein, such as someone singing songs while begging, a swindler with fake injuries to trick people and high housing prices.
"When the public talks about these things, they sometimes express their frustration, such as not being able to buy a house. I point these things out but don't have a solution," he says.
"It is just to show that competition is fierce in China. It's hard to provide for yourself so sometimes people just cheat others for money."
In February, Sui posted a video of himself greeting people for Chinese Lunar New Year in 34 different Chinese accents. The short film, which cost him less than 100,000 yuan to make, became an online hit.
His research for that video involved meeting with one person from each province or region and chatting with them to discover the key phrase from that place, he says. He tried to understand the culture behind each phrase and recorded it and kept practicing from morning to night for about 20 days.
Other than making online short films and working on commercials, Sui works for Chinese TV serials and in movies. He played the second lead in a romance movie by Hong Kong director Jingle Ma, and it will premiere later this year.
"I'm at an awkward moment when people say I'm still an Internet celebrity. It's important to take it to the next level to be mainstream."
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