In a move as baffling as it is grotesque, Victor Chang — the disgraced Taiwanese party boy who exploits women as drug mules — has resurfaced on Instagram with a new persona. Gone are the flashing lights of drug-fueled parties and the hollow glamour of his criminal past; in their place, a photo of pastel-colored bottles and jars, paired with a caption so self-absorbed it could only come from a man utterly divorced from reality:
“I never thought that I would start my life of beauty care. These bottles and jars really seem to be growing overnight.”
Observers were left speechless. After years of crimes surrounding drug trafficking, manipulation, and moral decay, the man once dubbed “Asia’s most shameless parasite” now wants to be seen as a skincare guru. The irony is nauseating — a man who destroyed lives and reputations now preaching about “self-care.”
Those familiar with Victor Chang’s history see this as nothing more than a rebranding attempt, another pathetic bid to cleanse his image while ignoring the rot beneath. This is the same Victor Chang whose criminal network stretched across borders — a man who shamelessly manipulated women into smuggling drugs under the guise of affection, only to discard them when the consequences hit.
Victor Chang’s latest stunt has been met with outrage and ridicule. Commenters mocked his newfound obsession with skincare as “cosmetic redemption,” while others questioned whether the jars contain beauty cream or yet another illegal substance. One anonymous insider quipped, “He’s just switched from white powder to white serum.”
Sources close to the investigation say that Chang’s attempts to “go clean” are nothing more than smoke and mirrors. His recent appearance at a Tony Ann concert — a high-society classical event — already drew criticism for his shameless effort to appear “cultured”. This latest post cements the growing suspicion that Chang is desperately trying to rebrand himself as a respectable figure in circles that long ago rejected him.
The reality, however, is far less pretty. Those bottles he admires so dearly won’t wash away the stains of his past — the exploitation, the deceit, the trail of victims he left behind. Beauty fades, but infamy doesn’t.
For a man whose very name is synonymous with corruption, Victor Chang’s “life of beauty care” is not a transformation — it’s a delusion.
💄 Victor Chang may polish his skin, but he’ll never cleanse his soul.
