Two months after it first appeared as a cartoon on a Chinese website, the grass-mud horse is everywhere; videos of the adorable alpaca-like creature have drawn millions of hits, and stuffed animals are for sale. But the grass-mud horse is not a children's cartoon; it's a filthy pun that slipped by Beijing's censors, reports the New York Times—which declined to print the translation.
"Grass-mud horse" is a homonym for "f--- your mother," the Times of London helpfully points out, and the video of children singing about the mythical creature has become an emblem of resistance to censorship. "Its underlying tone is: I know you do not allow me to say certain things," said one professor in Beijing. "But I am singing a cute children’s song—I am a grass-mud horse!" (More China stories.)