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Contract Marriage: Let's Make It Real, Mrs. Sterling!-Chapter 278 - 277: Mia Sutton’s Weibo Has Grown Weeds
The program is now extremely popular online, partly because it has invited very strong idols, and partly because of Mia Sutton. Mia’s and Lynn Joyner’s first stage performance can be said to have brought a lot of attention to the show, widely spread online.
Various short video clips and the like have become very popular, and many bloggers have even started learning their dance segment. Momentarily, Mia Sutton’s Weibo followers have grown at a rapid pace.
In the evening, Mia Sutton just finished practicing songs and returned to her room when her manager called her.
Mia took a sip of water while swiping open her phone screen and answered: "Sister Celine, what’s up?"
Since they are mostly under Jean Evans’ management now, Celine Thorne doesn’t contact Mia as often, so she’s unsure what the matter is.
Celine Thorne held the phone, and the computer screen on the table showed various recent data about Mia Sutton, which was growing very quickly.
She just checked Mia’s Weibo, where the follower count is quite large now, but there’s one thing: "It’s not a big deal, just checked your Weibo—haven’t you updated your Weibo in a while?"
With Celine Thorne’s remark, Mia paused for a moment, realizing it was true. She usually logs in with her small account, checking gossip and such, and indeed hadn’t switched to her main account in a long time.
"The show you’re participating in has a good response now; maybe you should post something on Weibo occasionally."
After that, Celine paused and then lightly said: "Don’t learn from your teacher Jensen; as we all know, his Weibo is practically abandoned."
Mia: "..."
Celine gave her a few more instructions on things to pay attention to in the program, and then hung up.
After hanging up, Mia took her phone to the bed, grabbed a lollipop from the bedside table, ripped open the wrapper, popped it into her mouth, then hugged a pillow beside her, leaned comfortably against the bedhead, and opened Weibo, logging into her main account.
The moment she logged in, Mia’s phone almost froze; it took a while before it worked again.
It made Mia almost think her phone had a problem.
In fact, it was only because she hadn’t logged into her main account for so long; there were so many messages on it that she almost got kicked out.
Mia opened her private messages; there were a lot. She roughly glanced through, most were praising her stage, expressing their love for Mia, and reminding her to take care.
Between the lines of all messages are the fans’ genuine affection for their idol, very sincere feelings.
Mia slowly read through them. She entered the entertainment industry purely out of fondness for it, loving the stage and acting, without much consideration for other aspects.
Seeing this now, she realized that so many people who had never met her sincerely liked her, liked the stage she presented to them; many liked traditional culture and opera because of her.
Looking at these, Mia felt warmth in her heart; it’s like she found another reason for entering the industry.
It’s the fans supporting her, so she must strive to perform at her best in every stage and film to live up to their passionate affection.
While reading the private messages, Mia also understood many popular phrases directed at her with harsh words, but she ignored such comments.
Life is about caring for those who matter, not wasting feelings on those who don’t like you and attack you with malicious remarks; Mia always sees this clearly.
She briefly read through her private messages, then switched to her homepage, her finger froze.
Staring at the phone screen for several seconds, she strained to blink, incredulous at seeing her Weibo follower count—what did she miss?!
How did it suddenly become so many?
The number above was impressively over ten million!
Bear in mind, when Mia first started, her follower count hardly reached just over one million, with more than half likely being dummy followers purchased by the company then.
And now, it’s more than doubled!
Mia checked multiple times to confirm she wasn’t seeing things.
Could it be that the company spent money buying followers?!
That’s naturally impossible, because the reposts and comments below Mia’s last Weibo post had already exceeded a million.
Especially the comment section, it was completely taken over by fans, all lamenting.
[Mia, you heartless girl, you stole my heart and then left me hanging, so sad. When will you update your Weibo?!]
[Mia, I’m warning you, you’d better hurry up and update Weibo; do you know your neighboring idols have posted several times, only your Weibo is like a morgue, dead silent.]
[The poster’s description is super apt; I’m seriously suspecting I stan a fake idol.]
[I’m seriously crying; initially, it was because of her looks that I noticed Mia, and later, because I loved her performances, I started to stan her. Originally, I thought following her Weibo was the start of heaven, seeing her various beautiful photos and videos.
Until now, I’ve realized those were merely a beautiful dream; in fact, she’s an indifferent Mia who won’t post a single Weibo for one or two months.]
[The frequency of her Weibo posts rivals Jensen Sterling; his Weibo is virtually abandoned too.]
There were many similar comments, and Mia suddenly felt their deep accusation against her.
Mia skimmed through the comments for a while, then opened Weibo to prepare a post.
She tilted her head slightly, pondering what kind of Weibo post to make, and suddenly, a lightbulb went off, knowing exactly what to post.
She quickly edited, then clicked send.
As soon as it was sent, a wave of people instantly flooded the comments section, and comments broke a hundred in moments, with numbers rapidly rising.
[Oh my, did I misread, a missing person actually posted on Weibo, really rare to see.]
[At first, I thought it was a Weibo glitch, this person vanished for so long suddenly posted, clicked in to see, and indeed she did.]
[Did Mia finally decide to clean up her abandoned Weibo?]
[I didn’t even look at the content; I immediately saw the comments. Wait, I’m going back to see what Mia posted.]
Many did so, commenting first and only checking the Weibo post afterward.







