I'm 36. When I was 23, I was diagnosed with HIV. I used to regularly get tested so I immediately found out. I'm physically 100% in very good health, I'm undetectable ever since the very beginning, never passed it to anyone, but psychologically it is kinda hard to live and deal with the stigma, the fear of telling someone you like, you feel lonely and lots of stuff. Please remember one time only may be enough to get it. I somehow live the same life of people around me, but as long as this is not curable, there's always gonna be a shadow inside me haunting. Hope a cure will come soon. You don't have to be a drug addict or a sl*t to get this stuff so… please learn from my mistake.
Why: Vulnerable personal disclosure with the most emotionally resonant comment on the video — a warm reply here will be read by many and signals the channel takes the human side seriously, not just the medical facts
Draft replyThank you for sharing this — genuinely. The psychological weight you're describing is exactly what doesn't get talked about enough, and the fact that you test regularly and have never passed it on says everything about who you are. Hope that cure comes sooner than we think.
Hi. A sexual health physician from Bangkok here. Just wanted to say thank you for talking about your feelings and thoughts on HIV/STI so openly. It is a much needed conversation and I am sure that a lot of people will benefit from this video. Also, I do agree with Andrew on how people's responses and views towards these infections are extremely diverse and context-specific. Take the willingness to disclose STI diagnosis for example, if a person is from a more conservative country where HIV and STI are still stigmatized and discriminated, disclosing your HIV status can lead to unemployment, social ban or even deportation. There are a lot of people who have to fly across the country to places like Bangkok to get their tests done and receive treatment. So, it is important to understand these nuances and collectively apply changes to the existing culture without shaming/labelling people. Meng's opinion as a foreigner in a rather conservative country like Japan was valid and sensible. It's an issue that Japanese healthcare system needs to solve for him.
Why: Medical professional publicly validating the nuance of their argument — pinning or replying amplifies credibility and adds a professional voice to what was being attacked as irresponsible
Draft replyThis is such an important framing — thank you for putting it so clearly. The point about people flying to Bangkok just to get tested is something we hadn't even thought to bring up, and it makes the structural problem so much more visible than individual choices.
I just don't understand how we're living in 2025—almost 40 years since HIV/AIDS was first discovered—and yet it feels like the younger generation of the gay community doesn't care. We still have elders among us, men who survived the worst years, some living long and healthy lives with HIV, others still HIV negative, and they're trying to pass down knowledge and guidance. But instead of listening, too many in the younger crowd act like it's a joke, giggling like schoolgirls, as if this isn't still a life-and-death issue. Yes, HIV is treatable today—but it is not curable. And beyond HIV, other STIs are becoming extremely difficult to treat because of resistance. This is not something to take lightly. When your video popped up, I gave it a chance. I watched until 6 minutes and 40 seconds, and then I stopped—I just couldn't keep going. It was clear this wasn't being taken seriously.
Why: Highest-liked comment and a genuine, heartfelt critique from someone with clear history — worth a direct, respectful response because this thread sets the emotional tone of the comment section
Draft replyYou're right that the laughter can read the wrong way if you stop early — honestly, that's fair. The reason we laugh is because we've both sat with the shame and the fear alone, and humor is how we got through it enough to talk at all. We absolutely don't think it's trivial, and we hear what you're saying about the responsibility to the generation that came before us.
HDM-HSN_FishDance · high↗ view I'm Japanese. Although most Chinese people are not causing any problems, the mass media and social media are spreading misleading information every day that Chinese people coming to Japan are having a negative impact on Japan. I can understand why Meng is hesitant to say honestly.
Why: Japanese viewer directly confirming Meng's fear about xenophobia is real and not imagined — this is the most valuable external validation of the video's most debated point, and replying amplifies it
Draft replyThank you for saying this — and for being honest about what's actually being spread in Japanese media. This is exactly the context that's hard to explain to people outside of Japan, and having someone local confirm it matters a lot.
Hey Tokyo BTMs, great video! Big fan from Sweden. Mycoplasma genitalium is not new, but it is silent or symptomless for many men. I got it last December and it took me 3 different treatments to heal it. The doctor used to say 40-60% of gay men in Sweden could have it and don't know or feel it. Some people could even heal while taking other STIs treatments, except doxycycline, which is not effective.
Why: Adds critical medical detail the video touched on but didn't fully resolve — three treatment rounds and the 40-60% stat from Sweden are genuinely useful and follow-up-worthy for a future video
Draft replyThree rounds of treatment — that's rough, really glad you got through it. And that 40-60% figure from your doctor is wild, it really underlines how many people have no idea. This is exactly the kind of thing that should be in follow-up resources, thank you.
I have never heard of MGen / Mycoplasma genitalium, thank you for taking about this! I just sent a message to my doc asking about getting tested. Also, I've already messaged a few friends asking about this, apparently I'm not the only one who is just now learning about MGen
Why: Real-world impact happening in the comments — messaged their doctor and friends in real time; this is the exact outcome the video was meant to produce and worth celebrating publicly
Draft replyThis is literally the whole point of making the video — go get tested! Let us know what your doc says, and tell your friends to tell their friends.
Japanese people STILL think they are immune to stds and that they are foreign diseases. Just look at how hard it is to get recent figures about HIV in Japan. As for guys and Grindr or other apps, the number of them into BB is quite telling. They think Prep saves them from everything and they don't even consider the risks of other Stds.I've literally had so many guys telling "You can live just fine with Hiv now with all the treatments". I'd rather live without it. Laughing about it is fine if it's to inform but I've also heard a lot of excuses in this video. You go to bathhouses and saunas that don't even offer free condoms or lube and let guys fuck you without even asking if they're on prep or them asking you. NO, not everyone has Chlamidiae in japan. I've reached the age of 52 without ever getting and Std/Sti because I'm responsible and don't take stupid risks just for some dick. It IS your responsability. We live in a time that if everyone was careful and not an irresponsible fucker, we could see the end of Aids. So why is it not happening? Grow the fuck up.
Why: Sharp, experienced criticism with real points buried in the anger — a calm, non-defensive reply shows maturity and keeps the conversation productive rather than letting the harshest framing stand unchallenged
Draft replyThe frustration is fair and we hear it. The point about bathhouses not providing free condoms is real and worth more airtime — that's a venue responsibility gap that individual choices can't fix alone. Not excuses, just trying to show the whole picture.
Hi guys, thanks for pointing out my comment from your last video about a way we deal with STI's in San Francisco. I totally understand that my view is "Eurocentric" and I have never been to Japan, all I know about it is what you present in your videos. I appreciate you trying to find solutions to stop the spread of STI's that fits the needs of the Japanese culture. :) The Japanese culture that doesn't take responsibiilty for it's own diseases (and blames foreigners) will create a whole host of problems for itself, and that's not your fault..
Why: The channel explicitly referenced this commenter in the video — they came back to respond graciously, which deserves acknowledgment and closes the loop publicly
Draft replyReally appreciate you coming back and engaging with all of this — and for taking the Japan-specific context on board. The cross-cultural comparison is genuinely useful, it just needs the local layer too, and you got that. Thanks for being part of the conversation.
Lesson on how to apologize… without really apologizing! Well done Meng. You're still exactly at the same level as when you made the comment.😢
Why: Pointed, concise criticism about the apology's sincerity — a fair read that others may quietly share; addressing it directly and honestly is better than ignoring it
Draft replyThat's a fair read — the cultural context explanation can come across as walking it back. What we were trying to show is that it's a real structural problem, not a personal excuse, but if it landed as deflection that's on us.
Wow some of the comments are insane. What are you expecting? A dry BBC style talk about sti's with some crusty TV presenter. You're watching two friends speak openly about their own experiences and laughing (gasp) at the awkwardness. Like friends do.. i think some of you guys don't have friends or people in your life that you can have such deep conversations with.
Why: Defends the video's tone in a punchy, quotable way — engaging here amplifies it without the channel having to argue its own case
Draft reply"A dry BBC style talk with some crusty TV presenter" 😭 this is going in a future intro somehow. Thank you for actually getting what we're going for.
The info on PrEP and DoxyPrEP was super useful, but I think it's also worth talking about condoms and the rise in STIs like chlamydia and syphilis. Biomedical tools are great, but relying only on them can create blind spots. And beyond that—why do we treat sex like a sport or a currency? Choosing to pause or be more intentional about sex can be just as valid and empowering. I'm not saying this from a place of prejudice, but from lived insight and reflection. Also—when did we stop using condoms, and why? It feels like we've sidelined one of the simplest, most accessible tools for safer sex. Would love to see that part of the conversation come back.
Why: Substantive, non-judgmental question about condom culture decline — a real topic gap the channel hasn't covered and a natural future video seed
Draft replyThe condom question is honestly one we've been dancing around and probably need to just do a full video on — the shift from condom culture to PrEP culture happened fast and quietly and there's a lot to unpack there. Good push.
Wow, I've never heard of Mycoplasma before here in Canada. However, we do get free STI testing and PrEP/DoxyPrEP/DoxyPEP. with our healthcare system. I do find that there is still a lot of stigma around STI's and people are too scared to tell others that they have sexual encounters with that they got tested positive for something. And your point about gay saunas/bathhouses is true as well, sometimes you can't really tell everyone to get tested if they caught something from you. I also like that anonymous notification system, maybe someone should develop an app for it. Thanks for the information! @Andrew: It was nice to meet and chat with you at Moonlight in Korea. I've seen you and Meng around in Bangkok before but I'm way too much of an introvert and shy to approach anyone. I know it's odd that I'm at these big events and yet I still prefer to be mostly alone and do my own thing. I think a lot of people probably find me really weird/awkward being by myself 😅.
Why: Met Andrew at an event, too shy to approach, came back to say hi in comments — a warm reply here costs nothing and builds genuine community loyalty
Draft replyYou were at Moonlight?! Andrew says hi back — and please come say hi next time, being alone at big events is honestly valid and there's nothing weird about it. Glad the video was useful, Canada doing free PrEP is the dream.