Video deep dive · interview2025-11-16 · 6 months ago

He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand

The Brief

This is less a migration story than a quietly viral friendship portrait — the New Zealand backstory is the hook, but the audience came for the chemistry between Mike and Steve.

64.3% of the 56-comment audience wrote about the pair's dynamic, with one commenter earning 31 likes just for noting the two watch BL series together — dwarfing any response to the run-club origin story itself.

Mike's walk-and-talk format strips away studio distance and lets an unscripted goosebumps moment at 0:08 — Steve reacting to his own club's scale — land as genuine rather than performed.

Watch outThe air-pollution thread (35.7% of comments) is politically charged and unresolved: one commenter deflects blame to neighbouring countries, another directs viewers to vote for a specific party, and Mike's open call for initiatives could pull future videos into territory he hasn't editorially committed to.

If the audience is already casting Mike and Steve as a duo rather than host and subject, does Mike's channel risk becoming a relationship show that can only sustain itself by continuously raising the intimacy stakes?

Summary

The creator (Mike) interviews Steve Madak Newan, a New Zealand expat who moved to Bangkok roughly three years ago and co-founded Sabai Run Club. The video traces Steve's journey from remote tech worker to building one of the largest running clubs in Asia, now drawing 500–1,000+ participants each Sunday. The conversation covers the club's accidental origins, its community impact, and Bangkok's appeal as a city. The creator also briefly raises air pollution in Bangkok and expresses a personal willingness to support any initiative addressing it.

  • ·The video is a walk-and-talk interview filmed outdoors in the Swan area of Bangkok on a day the creator describes as beautiful.
  • ·Steve Madak Newan introduces himself as a New Zealand expat who has lived in Bangkok for approximately three years.
  • ·Before founding Sabai Run Club, Steve worked in technology as a remote/digital-nomad worker.
  • ·Sabai Run Club was founded in July 2024 by Steve and two friends who wanted mutual accountability for an activity they all disliked: running.
  • ·The club was never intended to scale; it started simply as a way to get a small group out of bed to exercise together.
  • ·Within roughly 15 months the creator describes Sabai Run Club as one of the largest running clubs in Asia and among the biggest in the world.
  • ·Weekly attendance ranges from approximately 400–500 to over 1,000 people depending on the event, with runs held every Sunday.
  • ·Steve says managing early growth was difficult, but recognizing the club's positive impact on members' daily lives motivated him to continue.
  • ·Steve describes the reward feeling after exercise as the key motivator that overcomes laziness, comparing it to the post-gym feeling.
  • ·The creator expresses that seeing the club's impact on people is, in Steve's words, 'more than money can buy.'
  • ·Steve says a mission of the club is to show a different, positive side of Bangkok — its parks, vibrancy, and life beyond nightlife.
  • ·The creator observes that Bangkok offers cultural uniqueness: diverse café culture, fashion, hairstyles, and what he describes as a generally kind social atmosphere even among unfriendly people compared to the West.
  • ·The creator mentions breathing in black smoke in Bangkok and states he would like to support any Thai-led air pollution initiative through his platform, inviting viewers to contact him.
  • ·Sabai Run Club has its own merchandise line, including vests, t-shirts, stickers, and bandanas, designed by a team member named Emma.
  • ·Upcoming Sabai merchandise includes branded water bottles and chips launching within two months, and custom shoes planned for June of the following year.
  • ·Steve says he is active on TikTok and Instagram (personal account) and plans to launch a YouTube channel soon.
  • ·Sabai Run Club also has an Instagram account (@sabaRunclub.bk) and an existing YouTube channel that has not been updated regularly.
  • ·The creator closes by thanking Steve and encouraging viewers to find and follow him online.
Views
20k
20,366 total
Likes
1.2k
5.68% like rate
Comments
56
0.27% comment rate
He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand
Comment deep diveExplore all 56 comments →filter by sentiment · theme · superfans · questions · what to fix
§01

Summary

Mike walks through Suan Luang park in Bangkok with Steve Madak Newan, a New Zealander who left a remote tech career to co-found Sabai Run Club, now one of the largest running clubs in Asia with 500–1,000 attendees each Sunday. The conversation moves from Steve's accidental path — starting a club around something he hated — to Bangkok's character, its air pollution, and the club's expanding merchandise line including custom shoes due in June. The video closes with a tour of Sabai's merch and a mutual on-camera warmth that the audience responded to more than the entrepreneurial narrative.

Content pillars
expat entrepreneurshipBangkok communityair quality Thailandfriendship dynamic
§02

Engagement vs the rest of the channel

How this video's like-and-comment rate compares to this channel's running average.

Engagement vs channel avg 5.95pp
5.95% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
5.68%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.27%
of viewers leave a comment
§03

The hook

medium

Opening 15 seconds — the bit that decides whether a viewer keeps watching.

[0:00] We wanted to do something that we all hated to do. Like who enjoys running, right? One of the largest running clubs in Asia and one of the biggest in the world as well. [0:07] I got goosebumps right now. [0:10] Just seeing the impact that we have on people every week is more than money can buy.

Assessment

The hook drops in mid-conversation with an intriguing claim about one of Asia's largest running clubs, creating mild curiosity, but the viewer has no context for who is speaking or why they should care. The title promises a New Zealand origin story yet the hook delivers a running-club pitch, creating a mismatch that may disorient new viewers before the personal narrative begins.

Hook quality
medium
Call-to-action
present
Archetype
scene
Composite score
5.8/10
Hook score · 6 dimensions
character presence
7/10
clarity
5/10
curiosity
6/10
specificity
6/10
stakes
6/10
time to payoff
5/10
Anti-patterns detected
  • slow contextSpends the first seconds setting up context before delivering the actual hook.
  • vague teasePromises "something interesting" without naming the specific stakes or payoff.
§03b

Hook rewrites

Three alternative openings, each in a different archetype. Each is under 40 words — completable in 15 seconds.

Rewrite №1 · investigatortechnique: lead_with_outcome

A New Zealander quit his tech job, moved to Bangkok with nothing, and accidentally built one of Asia's largest running clubs — 1,000 people every Sunday. Here's how.

WhyFront-loads the payoff stat (1,000 runners) and the origin tension (quit tech job, moved with nothing), directly matching both the title promise and the comment cluster around Steve's charm and impact.

Rewrite №2 · experimentertechnique: add_specificity

Three friends in Bangkok decided to run every week doing something they all hated. 16 months later: 1,000 people show up every Sunday. I went to find out why.

WhyThe time-bound personal trial framing mirrors the actual story arc, gives a concrete number that earns curiosity, and sets up the host as an active investigator rather than a passive interviewer.

Rewrite №3 · stakeholdertechnique: identity_callout

If you've ever thought about leaving everything and starting over in Asia, this New Zealander did it — and built something that gives 1,000 strangers a reason to get out of bed.

WhyDirectly addresses the audience most likely to watch an expat channel, converting the title's promise into a personal stakes hook that aligns with the 64.3% friendship/admiration comment cluster.

§03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 45 · undersell

The title frames this as a generic expat relocation story, but comments reveal the audience was most energised by Steve's personality and charm (64.3%) and his specific achievement — co-founding one of Asia's largest running clubs — neither of which the title mentions. The concrete hook of Sabai Run Club and the thousands-strong community is the real draw, yet the title buries it entirely.

What commenters actually quoted
  • · น่ารัก (cute/adorable — ~8 mentions across Thai comments)
  • · both are handsome (2 mentions)
  • · goosebumps (implied in reaction comments, 2 mentions)
  • · pollution/air quality (3 direct mentions)
Anti-patterns in current title
  • vague identity
  • implied universal
Thumbnail recommendation

Show Steve and Mike smiling together mid-run or at the Sabai Run Club event with a large crowd visible behind them, as the dominant comment energy is about the warmth between the two hosts and the scale of the running club community.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 · The Kiwi Who Built Asia's Biggest Run Club in Bangkok
    specificity
    Surfaces the concrete achievement that made commenters say 'I got goosebumps' and directly answers what the video actually delivers beyond a relocation story.
  2. 02 · He Hated Running — Now 1,000 People Show Up Every Sunday
    contrarian
    Mirrors the video's own hook ('we wanted to do something we all hated') and creates a curiosity gap that aligns with the admiration-driven comment cluster praising Steve's impact.
  3. 03 · Left New Zealand, Started a Run Club, Changed Bangkok: Steve's Story
    payoff tease
    Preserves the origin-story angle from the current title while adding the specific achievement that commenters actually responded to with affection and plans to join.
§04

What viewers said

Explore all →

56 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly positive

positive 80%neutral 20%negative 0%
Real breakdown over 41 of 41 root comments — every comment analysed, not sampled.

Viewers were overwhelmingly drawn to the warmth between Mike and Steve, with multiple comments using the Thai equivalent of 'so cute, both of them' and one viewer screaming in all caps about their smiles ('อยากจะกรี๊ดดดดด ดังๆ ตอนที่สองหนุ่มยิ้ม'). The moment Mike said 'I got goosebumps' hearing about Sabai's growth landed emotionally, and Steve's humble, softly-accented delivery made him an instant fan favourite — one commenter wrote 'Steve her so cute he make me start run,' capturing how his story functioned as genuine motivation.

Top comment themes

7 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Affection and chemistry between Mike and Steve (~18 mentions) — comments expressing delight at their smiles, friendship, and on-screen dynamic
  2. 02
    Desire for Mike×Steve BL/couple content (~4 mentions) — explicit requests for a BL series or remarks they 'should get together'
  3. 03
    Air pollution in Bangkok as a serious political issue (~6 mentions) — commentary on government inaction, neighboring-country sources, and the need for policy reform
  4. 04
    Sabai Run Club inspiration and join intent (~3 mentions) — viewers motivated to run or planning to join the club
  5. 05
    Thai cultural pride and Bangkok's positive image (~4 mentions) — appreciation for showing Bangkok beyond nightlife, comments about Thai friendliness
§04a

Audience pulse

How the audience feels — a Net Sentiment mood score, how split the room is, and an early churn signal. All from the comments, not YouTube analytics.

+70Warmly receivedmood · −100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+80
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.45
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.00
is the room split?
Warmth
59%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
41
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal0 comments flagged dissatisfaction (0.0% — channel norm 4.0%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Warm
    56%
  2. Excited
    15%
  3. Neutral
    12%
  4. Curious
    7%
  5. Funny
    7%
  6. Nostalgic
    2%

Net Sentiment Score over 41 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived — not YouTube analytics.

§04a

Audience composition

★ algo-friendly · +80

Who actually showed up in the comments — psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 41 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Devoted fan
    17%
  2. Debating
    5%
  3. Found inspiring
    5%
  4. Sharing a story
    5%
  5. Expat / abroad
    2%
  6. Relating personally
    2%
  7. Mentions subscribing
    2%
Topic mix

What they talked about

  1. Other
    34%
  2. relationships
    29%
  3. politics
    10%
  4. Culture
    7%
  5. Expat life
    5%
  6. Travel
    5%
  7. Language
    2%
  8. nature
    2%
Language mix

In which languages

  1. English
    100%
Algorithm signal · proxy

How YouTube’s satisfaction model likely reads this

★ algo-friendly · +80

YouTube’s 2025 discovery shift now weights satisfaction signals — comment sentiment, tone, and depth. We can’t see the model, but we can estimate its inputs. Directional only.

Positive ratio
80%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
66%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
0%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+80
pos% − crit%, −100..+100
§04b

Moments that landed

Key transcript moments — tap a timestamp to jump to that point in the video.

0:08Steve says 'I got goosebumps right now' reacting to his club's impact — the emotional peak that opens the video and sets the tone.0:33Steve pivots unprompted to Bangkok's black smoke and offers his platform to support clean-air initiatives — the moment that seeded the political comment thread.1:27Mike asks for a formal introduction, resetting the video for viewers arriving cold and establishing Steve's credentials clearly.2:03Steve reveals Sabai Run Club started in July 2024 with just three friends who all hated running — the origin beat that makes the scale reveal land harder.2:31Mike echoes 'I got goosebumps right now' after hearing the club is one of the largest in Asia — mirroring Steve and telegraphing the chemistry the audience flagged.2:44Steve states weekly attendance of 500 to 1,000-plus — the specific number that contextualises the community-impact claims throughout.19:43Steve lists upcoming merch: bottles, chips, and custom shoes arriving June — a product pipeline reveal that prompted audience excitement in comments.20:01Warm sign-off exchange where Steve says 'Always a pleasure, Mike' — the closing beat the BL-series commenters and friendship cluster latched onto.
§04c

What viewers reacted to

Each comment theme mapped to the transcript moment that sparked it.

Affection and chemistry between Mike and Steve (~18 mentions)

The spontaneous 'I got goosebumps right now' exchange at 2:31 and the warm sign-off 'Always a pleasure, Mike' at 20:02 crystallised the easy, genuine rapport that drove the majority of affectionate comments.

0:072:3120:01
Air pollution and politics (~6 mentions)

Steve's candid admission at 0:31 — 'I'm breathing in all that black smoke' followed by Mike's direct-to-camera pledge to support an initiative — triggered the highest-liked comment on the video and sparked debate about government responsibility and neighboring-country sources.

0:31
§05

Friction points

All criticism →

Severity × frequency — ranked. Each point has an evidence quote and a concrete before/after suggestion.

Title 'He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over' oversells a dramatic sacrifice — the video reveals Steve was already working remotely in Bangkok before founding the run club, making the 'left everything' framing feel misleadingsev 3/5 · 2 mentions
เขาทุกทิ้งทุกอย่าง......เพื่อตัวเอง ? 😊
FixBefore: 'He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand' — After: 'He Quit His Tech Job in Bangkok to Build One of Asia's Biggest Run Clubs' — matches actual story arc in the video
Pollution segment raises audience expectations of action or deeper investigation but ends without a concrete resolution, leaving politically engaged viewers unsatisfiedsev 2/5 · 3 mentions
The only way to clean air in Bangkok is limit the number of cars. They have to force people to use public transport and bicycle which impossible. Just like Japan did. More tax and rules. The Gov that force those tax and rules will not get elect next time.↗ view
FixBefore: host makes an open-ended offer to 'do something one day' — After: add a pinned comment or end-card linking to a specific Thai air-quality initiative so the call-to-action in the video converts to a real resource
No Thai subtitles on an English-language interview watched predominantly by a Thai-speaking audience, creating a comprehension barrier for a significant viewer segmentsev 3/5 · 1 mentions
Oh.. If we're going to speak English, we have to add Thai subtitles like this so that other people can understand as well.↗ view
FixBefore: no subtitles — After: burn Thai subtitles into the video or enable auto-generated Thai captions and manually correct them in YouTube Studio before publishing
Neighbouring-country pollution contribution is raised in comments but never addressed in the video, making the host's implicit framing of Thailand's government as sole responsible party feel incomplete to informed viewerssev 2/5 · 1 mentions
the pollution that occurs sometimes does not come directly from Thailand, but from neighboring countries↗ view
FixBefore: pollution discussion only references local government inaction — After: add 20–30 seconds of context in the interview acknowledging transboundary haze (e.g. agricultural burning from Myanmar/Laos) to pre-empt this objection and add credibility
No chapter markers on a 20-minute video, making it hard for new viewers to navigate to the run club story vs. the Bangkok/pollution commentarysev 2/5 · 1 mentions
I'm moving to Bangkok next year and I'm going to join Sabai run club 🥳🥳🥳↗ view
FixBefore: no chapters — After: add minimum 4 chapters: 0:00 Intro / hook, ~1:30 Steve's background, ~2:30 Sabai Run Club origin, ~15:00 Bangkok life & air pollution; enables skip-to behaviour and boosts session time via suggested video triggers
Steve's New Zealand identity — central to the title — is barely explored; accent, culture, or specific NZ-vs-Thailand contrast is not developed in the transcript, disappointing viewers drawn in by the geographic promisesev 2/5 · 1 mentions
Steve accents isnt strong as my nieces living in Wellington↗ view
FixBefore: NZ origin mentioned in title but not substantively discussed on camera — After: add 2–3 targeted questions about Steve's NZ life (job, city, social circle) and why Bangkok specifically, so the title's promise is paid off in content
§Sp

Sponsor fit

Niche play only · 42/100

What a brand or agency would see evaluating this video — which sponsors to pitch, why, what to charge, and what's safe.

No comments unprompted ask for product links, affiliate codes, or purchasing information — zero explicit buy-referral behaviour detected in 56 comments. However, one viewer (@Kaylabearyt, 8 likes) announces plans to physically join Sabai Run Club after watching, and @memerparadise expresses unsolicited purchase intent for Sabai's custom shoes ('Custom shoes? Okay I want themmmmm!!!') — two isolated signals of action-conversion from content. The 64.3% friendship/admiration cluster drives emotional engagement, not transactional engagement, suggesting this audience rewards authentic integration over direct-response ads.

Integration rate
$350–$530
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$560–$850
full sponsored video
Basis: This video has roughly 20,000 views. A standard creator sponsorship starting point is $25 per 1,000 views — that's a flat fee brands pay for the creator reading their message, which outperforms a regular ad because the audience trusts the host. That gives a base of about $500. The audience engagement rate is 6%, which is strong for a channel this size (most channels run 2-4%), so we apply a modest upward multiplier for loyalty. However, 56 total comments with no organic product-link requests and a predominantly Thai-language comment section means this is a niche expat/local community — valuable to the right brand (Wise, Airalo, IQAir) but not a broad commercial audience, so we hold the multiplier conservative. The result is an integration (30-60 second read mid-video) in the $350–$530 range and a dedicated (full video built around a sponsor) in the $560–$850 range.
Brands to pitch
AiraloeSIM / travel connectivityAiralo is the dominant travel-niche YouTube sponsor; Steve's story of a New Zealand expat building life in Bangkok is a direct expat-relocation narrative, and the audience includes viewers planning Bangkok moves (@Kaylabearyt, 8 likes: 'I'm moving to Bangkok next year'). Cross-border connectivity is a primary pain point for this demo.
Wiseinternational money transfer / expat financeSteve's transition from NZ-based remote tech worker to Bangkok community founder is a canonical Wise use-case (multi-currency income, overseas living costs). Wise sponsors heavily in the expat-life and digital-nomad YouTube niche. The 'digital nomad working remotely in Bangkok' framing at timestamp [1:53] is a direct audience signal.
SurfsharkVPNSurfshark sponsors across expat, LGBTQ-friendly, and Southeast Asia travel content — all three descriptors apply here. The BL-series shipping comments (@usagi3105, 8 likes; @Jinke888: 'You two should get together') signal an LGBTQ-adjacent audience that Surfshark actively courts. Known co-sponsorship pattern with creators in this exact niche.
SailyeSIM / travel dataSaily (by Nord) is the rising challenger to Airalo in the travel-creator sponsorship market. An expat-in-Bangkok video with a cross-border relocation narrative is a textbook Saily pitch deck placement. Fits as a tier-2 alternative if Airalo exclusivity blocks a deal.
SafetyWingexpat / nomad health insuranceSafetyWing targets digital nomads and long-term expats — Steve's profile (remote tech worker turned Bangkok entrepreneur, 3 years in-country) is their core customer persona. SafetyWing actively sponsors expat-life and relocation YouTube content in Southeast Asia.
IQAirair quality monitors / purifiers35.7% of comments (20 of 56) discuss Thailand air pollution directly. @MhooChamp (40 likes, top comment) explicitly calls out government inaction on air quality; @Offthetourmap pledges to join a pollution campaign; @sundayevening161 proposes policy solutions. IQAir sponsors environmental and health content and sells air purifiers and AQI monitors — a direct category match to the video's organic pollution discourse.
Nike Run Club / ASICSrunning / athletic footwearThe entire video centres on Sabai Run Club — one of Asia's largest running clubs by the guest's account. @memerparadise organically expresses desire for Sabai's custom shoes. @กฤษณะบุทธิจักรฺ states 'Steve her so cute he make me start run.' Running-gear brands with Southeast Asia activations are a natural fit for a running-community video with 20K views and strong fan loyalty.
Avoid
  • Alcohol / nightlife brandsSteve explicitly frames Sabai Run Club as showing 'Bangkok is actually a vibrant city outside of the nightlife' [0:19] — an alcohol/bar sponsor would directly contradict the guest's stated brand positioning and likely provoke backlash from the admiration-cluster audience.
  • Fast food / junk foodThe video is built around a running and fitness community; 64.3% of comments celebrate the health-and-friendship ethos — an unhealthy food sponsor would register as inauthentic and undermine host credibility with the core audience.
  • Political party / partisan advocacy@badboyz08 urges viewers to vote for a specific party over air quality law — the comment drew engagement but also reflects a sensitive political environment in Thailand where partisan brand association carries legal and audience-relations risk.
How to integrate

Mid-roll integration at approximately the 10-12 minute mark is recommended — the admiration-dominant audience (64.3%) is emotionally invested in the Mike/Steve dynamic and will tolerate a brief host-read mid-conversation; pre-roll risks losing casual Thai-language viewers before the parasocial bond activates.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean — zero hostile, abusive, or spam comments detected across 56 comments; the most charged content is political opinion on air quality (@badboyz08, @sundayevening161) which is issue-based, not personal attacks.
Controversy
No FTC/disclosure risk signals detected; one comment (@badboyz08) names a Thai political party, which is a minor sensitivity for brands operating in Thailand but poses no strike or copyright risk to the creator.
Audience conduct
Highly on-topic — 100% of top-liked comments address either the Mike/Steve relationship or Bangkok air pollution, the two dominant themes; troll and spam rate is effectively zero across the visible comment set.
Sponsor evidence quotes
I'm moving to Bangkok next year and I'm going to join Sabai run club 🥳🥳🥳
Demonstrates audience taking real-world action from content — the highest conversion signal available, directly relevant to travel/expat sponsors like Airalo and Wise↗ view
Custom shoes? Okay I want themmmmm!!!
Unprompted purchase intent for a product shown on-screen — signals the audience is receptive to product placement and will convert organically on items they find appealing↗ view
i will join you the campaign to improve the pollution situation and get the cleaner air
Direct action pledge tied to the air pollution theme — validates IQAir or an environmental-brand integration as audience-aligned, not intrusive↗ view
และแล้ววันที่ไมค์พูดแทนคนไทยอีกเรื่องก็มาถึง คือเรื่องของมลพิศทางอากาศครับ บ่งบอกถึงความไม่เอาจริงเอาจังความง่ายๆสบายๆของรัฐบาลทุกสมัย รักไมค์เลย ❤
Top comment (40 likes) — Thai-language audience trusts Mike as a genuine advocate on air quality, establishing credibility that makes an IQAir or environmental-health sponsorship feel authentic rather than commercial↗ view
Algorithm read · what to do next 14 days

Let It Run · score 66/100

medium
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Pin a bilingual comment (English + Thai) that tags Steve's Instagram handle, links to Sabai Run Club's Instagram (@SabaiRunclub.bk), and asks viewers a direct question: 'Would you join a running club in Bangkok? Drop a 🏃 below' — reply to @MhooChamp and @Kaylabearyt to seed a discussion thread
    The top comment (@MhooChamp, 40 likes) is already anchoring Thai-language discussion; a pinned reply activates that thread and boosts comment depth, which is the video's weakest algorithm metric (56 comments / 20K views = 0.27%)
    WatchComment count crossing 70 within 48 hours and reply thread depth on the pinned comment
  2. Day 2-3
    Add 8-10 chapter timestamps to the video description covering: Intro / Steve's NZ background / Starting Sabai Run Club / Growing to 1,000+ runners / Bangkok lifestyle and culture / Air pollution discussion / Sabai merch showcase / Where to find Steve — timestamps derived from transcript markers at [1:32], [2:03], [0:33] pollution section, [19:26] merch section
    No chapters currently exist; adding them gives YouTube chapter-preview cards in search results and increases the chance the air pollution segment (35.7% of comment discussion) surfaces as a standalone clip recommendation
    WatchAverage view duration and click-through rate on the video in YouTube Studio — expect a measurable uptick in AVD if chapters reduce early drop-off
  3. Day 4-7
    Clip the 60-90 second segment where Steve describes building Sabai Run Club from 3 friends to 1,000+ weekly runners (approximately [2:03]–[2:45]) and post as a YouTube Short and Instagram Reel with the caption 'He started a running club because he hated running — now 1,000 people show up every week 🏃 Full story on YouTube'; tag Steve's account and Sabai Run Club
    This is the video's most emotionally resonant moment — @MhooChamp (40 likes) and multiple comments celebrate Mike and Steve's dynamic; a short clip with the growth-story hook has high cross-post potential and will drive traffic back to the full video
    WatchYouTube Short views and the referral traffic spike to the parent video in YouTube Analytics traffic-source breakdown
  4. Day 7-14
    Post a community tab poll asking 'What do you want to see next: (A) More Bangkok expat stories, (B) Mike joins Sabai Run Club for a week, (C) Deep dive on Bangkok air pollution solutions' — use the result to brief the next video, and respond to the air pollution thread by tagging @Offthetourmap's comment ('i will join you the campaign') as evidence of audience demand for an advocacy follow-up
    35.7% of comments engage with the air pollution sub-topic, and @Offthetourmap and @badboyz08 signal a segment that wants action-oriented content; a community poll converts passive viewers into invested participants and feeds the algorithm's subscriber-satisfaction model
    WatchPoll participation rate and which option wins — if option B or C clears 40%, greenlight that video immediately
Why it could lift
  • +6.0% engagement rate (1,156 likes + 56 comments on 20,366 views) is well above the 2-4% channel average for interview-format content, signalling YouTube that viewers are actively responding
  • +Top comment (@MhooChamp, 40 likes) is in Thai and frames Mike as a cultural advocate — this cross-language resonance suggests the video is reaching both expat and native Thai audiences, broadening the recommendation pool
  • +The Sabai Run Club hook — 'one of the largest running clubs in Asia' — is a verifiable claim with inherent shareability; @Kaylabearyt's relocation comment and @memerparadise's shoe comment show the content is producing real-world intent signals that YouTube's satisfaction models reward
  • +BL-series shipping comments (@usagi3105 8 likes, @Jinke888, @VirginBoy555 13 likes) represent a parasocial fan layer that drives rewatch and comment volume — a retention-positive signal
  • +Dual-topic structure (community-building story + air pollution advocacy) gives the algorithm two separate interest clusters to serve the video to, increasing surface area for recommended-video placement
Why it might stall
  • No chapter markers in a 20-minute video — YouTube cannot surface specific moments via chapter previews, reducing click-through from browse and search surfaces
  • 56 comments on 20K views is a low comment-to-view ratio (0.27%); YouTube interprets comment volume as a discussion-quality signal and this video under-indexes
  • Majority of high-engagement comments are in Thai, which may limit the algorithm's ability to classify the video's topic for English-language recommendation queues where expat and travel content typically distributes
  • No pinned comment, no reply from the creator to any top comment — missed opportunity to boost comment depth and signal active community management to the algorithm
  • The title ('He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand') is a strong hook but the thumbnail and title do not reference the running club, Bangkok lifestyle, or air pollution — potential mismatch between search intent and content that can inflate bounce rate

Algorithm Signal is a proxy. YouTube’s satisfaction scores aren’t public. Directional, not predictive.

§05

The audience asked & asked for

All questions →

Unanswered questions and explicit requests from the comment thread — fuel for the next upload.

Questions

10 unanswered

  • ?How did Sabai Run Club grow from 3 people to one of Asia's largest in just 16 months — what was the actual growth strategy?
  • ?What specific air pollution initiative can Mike's platform realistically support in Thailand?
  • ?Does pollution from neighboring countries (Myanmar burning season) account for most of Bangkok's bad air, and what can locals do about it?
  • ?How does someone who just moves to Bangkok find community the way Steve did — what's the practical first step?
  • ?What did Steve do in the tech/digital nomad phase before Sabai, and why did he leave New Zealand specifically?
  • ?When are the Sabai Run Club custom shoes releasing and how can international fans order them?
  • ?Is Sabai Run Club open to tourists or short-term visitors, not just Bangkok residents?
  • ?What BL series are Mike and Steve watching together (referenced in top comment)?
  • ?Will Steve start his own YouTube channel soon, and what content would he make?
  • ?Which political party is actually pushing the air quality law in Thailand and what does that legislation say?
Requests

5 explicit asks

  • askA BL-style series or at least more content featuring Mike and Steve together (~4 comments explicitly requesting couple/BL content)
  • askMike to use his platform to support a specific Thai air pollution campaign or initiative (~3 comments asking him to act on his stated promise)
  • askThai subtitles added to English-language segments so Thai viewers can follow fully (~1 explicit request)
  • askA follow-up video joining an actual Sabai Run Club Sunday event (~2 comments indicating intent to join or wanting to see the event)
  • askMore content showing the 'real Bangkok' beyond nightlife — parks, cafes, culture (~implied across multiple positive comments)
§06

What to make next

Three video ideas pulled directly from what the comments asked for.

01

Attend a full Sabai Run Club Sunday event with Steve — film the 500–1,000 person crowd, the atmosphere, and interview members about why they joined

TitleI Ran With 1,000 Strangers in Bangkok (Sabai Run Club)
Hook3 friends who hated running built one of the biggest run clubs in Asia — I went to see it for myself
Why nowMultiple viewers said they're planning to join or want to see the event in action, and the club's scale was the moment that gave Mike 'goosebumps' — the audience is already emotionally primed for a full event video
02

Deep-dive on Bangkok's air pollution crisis — ride with an activist, interview a policy expert, and test air quality live across different Bangkok districts

TitleBangkok's Dirty Secret: Why the Air Is Killing People (And No One Is Fixing It)
HookI breathe Bangkok's air every day — I went to find out exactly how bad it really is and who's responsible
Why nowThe air pollution sub-thread generated the highest-liked comment on the video and drew political debate about neighboring countries and government inaction — audience explicitly asked Mike to follow through on his stated promise to help
03

Steve's full origin story — leaving New Zealand, the digital nomad phase in Bangkok, the accidental founding of Sabai, and what he gave up

TitleHe Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand (Steve's Full Story)
HookHe had a stable tech job in New Zealand — then he moved to Bangkok and accidentally built something bigger than he ever planned
Why nowSteve became an instant audience favourite in this video with fans singling out his smile and story individually — viewers want more of him, not just as Mike's guest
04

How to actually build community in Bangkok as a foreigner — practical guide featuring expats who found their tribe through running clubs, sports, language exchange, etc.

TitleHow Foreigners Actually Make Friends in Bangkok (The Real Guide)
HookThe number one reason foreigners leave Thailand isn't visa issues — it's loneliness. Here's how to fix that
Why nowThe comment about Thai friendship being the key reason foreigners stay or leave (~7 likes) touched a nerve — it frames a universal expat anxiety that extends well beyond Steve's specific story
05

Mike joins the orange party air quality campaign or attends a protest/policy event in Thailand, using his platform as he promised on camera

TitleI Tried to Help Fix Bangkok's Air Pollution Problem
HookI said on camera I wanted to do something about Bangkok's air — so I tried
Why nowA commenter explicitly told Mike to back the orange party's air quality law, another offered to join his campaign — the audience is holding him to his on-camera pledge and a follow-through video closes that loop
§07

Creator action items

Concrete, testable changes for the next upload. Each cites a timestamp, a comment quote, or a metric — and names what to watch.

Do 01

Add chapter timestamps to the video description covering at minimum: the running club origin story, the 1,000-runner growth moment, the air pollution exchange, and the merch showcase

EvidenceNo chapters exist in a ~20-minute video; the air pollution segment at approximately [0:33] drives 35.7% of all comment discussion but is invisible to YouTube's chapter-surfacing system
Watch forAverage view duration increases by 5%+ within 7 days as viewers navigate directly to high-interest segments rather than dropping off
Do 02

Reply to @MhooChamp (top comment, 40 likes) in Thai, acknowledging the air pollution point and asking what specific initiative viewers want Mike to support — this turns the top comment into a discussion thread

Evidence@MhooChamp (40 likes): 'และแล้ววันที่ไมค์พูดแทนคนไทยอีกเรื่องก็มาถึง คือเรื่องของมลพิศทางอากาศครับ' — highest-liked comment signals Thai audience wants Mike as an advocate; no creator reply currently exists
Watch forComment thread under @MhooChamp reaches 5+ replies within 72 hours, boosting total comment count toward 70+
Do 03

Clip the Sabai Run Club growth story ([2:03]–[2:45]: '3 friends → 1,000+ weekly runners') as a 60-second YouTube Short and post with a link to the full video

EvidenceMultiple comments celebrate the growth arc organically (@VirginBoy555 13 likes, @icecool8390 11 likes); the 'hated running, now run a massive club' narrative has high emotional hook value for Short-format distribution
Watch forShort accumulates 2,000+ views within 7 days and drives measurable referral traffic to the parent video visible in YouTube Analytics
Do 04

Create a follow-up video featuring Mike actually participating in a Sabai Run Club Sunday event, given @Kaylabearyt's stated intent to move to Bangkok and join

Evidence@Kaylabearyt (8 likes): 'I'm moving to Bangkok next year and I'm going to join Sabai run club' — direct stated audience intent; @usagi3105 (8 likes) wants a BL series with Mike and Steve, indicating strong demand for continued Mike/Steve content
Watch forFollow-up video outperforms this video's 20,366-view benchmark within 14 days of publish, driven by established audience familiarity with Steve
Do 05

Test a thumbnail that features both Mike and Steve's faces side-by-side with an emotional expression, and a text overlay referencing the running club scale ('1,000 runners every week')

Evidence@icecool8390 (11 likes): 'Both are handsome. Both are cute in different ways.' — parasocial dual-face appeal is the dominant audience hook; 64.3% of comments focus on friendship and admiration, suggesting a face-forward thumbnail outperforms a lifestyle/scenery shot
Watch forClick-through rate (CTR) on the video improves by 0.5%+ as measured in YouTube Studio impressions data within the A/B test window
Do 06

Add a description paragraph explicitly naming Bangkok, Thailand expat, New Zealand, Sabai Run Club, and air pollution as keywords for search indexing

EvidenceThe video title ('He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand') is strong for curiosity clicks but weak for search queries like 'Bangkok expat life,' 'Bangkok running club,' or 'Thailand air pollution' — three themes the comment section organically clusters around
Watch forSearch impressions for the video increase within 14 days as YouTube re-indexes the description keywords
Do 07

Post a community tab poll within 48 hours asking viewers to choose the next video direction between a Bangkok air pollution advocacy piece, a Sabai Run Club participation video, and another expat story

Evidence@Offthetourmap: 'i will join you the campaign to improve the pollution situation and get the cleaner air'; @badboyz08 (2 likes): political air quality comment; @sundayevening161 (1 like): detailed policy-solution comment — a measurable sub-audience wants advocacy follow-through
Watch forPoll reaches 200+ responses within 7 days; winning option becomes the brief for the next video upload
Do 08

Tag Steve Madak Newan's Instagram in the video description and YouTube community post to activate his audience as a cross-promotion channel

EvidenceSteve promotes his Instagram and the Sabai Run Club Instagram (@SabaiRunclub.bk) at [20:06]–[20:13]; his club has thousands of weekly physical attendees who are an untapped YouTube audience for this video
Watch forExternal referral traffic from Instagram to the YouTube video increases, visible in YouTube Studio traffic sources, within 7 days of tagging
Do 09

Add Thai subtitles to the English-language portions of the video to reduce the friction flagged by @หัวใหญ่-ฬ9ย

Evidence@หัวใหญ่-ฬ9ย (0 likes): 'If we're going to speak English, we have to add Thai subtitles like this so that other people can understand as well.' — direct accessibility request from the Thai-language majority of the comment section
Watch forAverage view duration increases among Thai-language viewers (segmentable in YouTube Analytics by audio language) within 14 days of subtitle upload
Do 10

Pitch IQAir or a comparable air-quality brand as a sponsor for the follow-up air pollution video, citing the 35.7% comment cluster and @MhooChamp's 40-like top comment as proof of audience engagement

Evidence35.7% of 56 comments (roughly 20 comments) discuss Thailand air quality; @MhooChamp (40 likes) is the highest-engagement comment on the video and frames Mike as a trusted air-quality advocate to Thai viewers
Watch forSponsorship pitch sent within 7 days; response rate or deal close within 30 days
Do 11

Include a specific call-to-action at the end of the video or in the description asking viewers in Bangkok to tag someone who runs or who should join Sabai Run Club

Evidence@Kaylabearyt (8 likes) organically announced intent to join — a structured 'tag a friend who needs this' CTA would amplify this behaviour at scale; currently no CTA exists in the visible transcript end section
Watch forComment count increases by 15+ tag-style replies within 7 days of adding the CTA to the description
Do 12

Explore a Wise or Airalo mid-roll integration in the next Mike/Steve video, positioned around the 'moved from New Zealand, built a life in Bangkok' narrative moment

EvidenceSteve's profile — NZ expat, remote tech work, 3 years in Bangkok, cross-border financial and connectivity needs — is the exact Wise and Airalo customer persona; timestamp [1:51]–[1:56] ('working online... digital nomad working remotely in Bangkok') is the natural integration anchor
Watch forSponsor integration click-through rate of 1.5%+ on the tracking link, benchmarked against the creator's prior integrations
Do 13

Edit the video title to include 'Bangkok' and 'Running Club' for search discoverability without sacrificing the emotional hook — e.g. 'He Left New Zealand to Start Bangkok's Biggest Running Club'

EvidenceCurrent title omits 'Bangkok' and 'running club' — two of the most searchable topics in the video; Sabai Run Club's scale ('one of the largest in Asia', [2:27]) is a stronger hook than the generic 'Start Over in Thailand' framing
Watch forSearch impressions for 'Bangkok running club' and related queries increase within 14 days as measured in YouTube Studio Search report
Do 14

Ask Steve to share the video to Sabai Run Club's 500-1,000+ weekly attendees via their Instagram (@SabaiRunclub.bk) with a story repost or feed post

EvidenceSteve confirms Sabai Run Club Instagram at [20:13] and states 400-1,000+ people attend weekly; this is a warm, high-intent offline audience who would watch a video featuring their club founder
Watch forSpike in views within 24 hours of Steve's share, measurable in the YouTube Studio views-by-date graph
Do 15

Produce a short-form clip of the air pollution exchange (around [0:31]–[0:44]: 'I'm breathing in all that black smoke... if there's an initiative I can support') as a standalone Short or Reel targeting Thai environmental audiences

Evidence@MhooChamp (40 likes) top comment is entirely about this moment; @Offthetourmap, @badboyz08, @sundayevening161, @MrPannathorn all engage with this sub-topic — 4-5 distinct commenters making it the most discussed single moment in the video
Watch forAir pollution clip Short reaches 3,000+ views within 7 days and drives measurable traffic back to the parent video
§R1

Reply queue

Who to reply to first — ranked by impact, with a ready-to-send draft in your voice.

@Kaylabearyt · high↗ view

I'm moving to Bangkok next year and I'm going to join Sabai run club 🥳🥳🥳

Why: Unanswered question with viral potential — a real future member announcing their plans publicly. Great thread to welcome and hype up.
Draft reply

That's so exciting — Steve and the whole Sabai crew are going to love having you! DM us when you land, we'll make sure your first Sunday run is unforgettable. 🏃‍♀️

@MrPannathorn · high↗ view

the pollution that occurs sometimes does not come directly from Thailand, but from neighboring countries

Why: Substantive, fair point on the air pollution topic that deserves acknowledgment — engaging with it shows credibility and encourages further discussion.
Draft reply

That's a really important point — cross-border pollution, especially from agricultural burning in neighboring countries, is a huge piece of the puzzle. It makes the issue even more complicated for local governments to solve alone. Thanks for adding that context.

@badboyz08 · high↗ view

tell thai people to vote to orange party. they the only party that push Air quality law

Why: Political comment on air quality — a hot topic in the comments (35.7%). Addressing it carefully but openly could spark a big discussion thread.
Draft reply

Appreciate you sharing that — clean air legislation is definitely something that needs political champions. I try to stay out of telling people who to vote for, but I fully support any party that takes air quality seriously and backs it with real law.

@sundayevening161 · high↗ view

The only way to clean air in Bangkok is limit the number of cars. They have to force people to use public transport and bicycle which impossible. Just like Japan did. More tax and rules. The Gov that force those tax and rules will not get elect next time.

Why: Thoughtful, substantive comment on the air pollution issue with a real policy argument — engaging this publicly shows the creator takes the topic seriously.
Draft reply

This is such a real tension — the solutions that actually work are politically painful, and no government wants to own that cost. Japan took decades to get there. Really hope Bangkok finds a way through without waiting that long.

@memerparadise · medium↗ view

Custom shoes? Okay I want themmmmm!!!

Why: High-energy, shareable comment about the Sabai merch reveal — a good thread to tag Steve or drop the release date to build hype.
Draft reply

Right?! Steve said June next year — put it in your calendar now haha. I'll make sure to cover them when they drop! 👟🔥

@usagi3105 · medium↗ view

I want bl series mike&steve😂

Why: Funny, viral-potential comment that fits the friendship/admiration theme (64.3%) — a playful reply could blow up.
Draft reply

😂 I feel like Steve would be the lead and I'd be the comic relief best friend — but honestly I'd watch it. Someone pitch this to Netflix Thailand.

@Offthetourmap · medium↗ view

i will join you the campaign to improve the pollution situation and get the cleaner air

Why: Directly responding to Mike's call-to-action in the video about air pollution — this person wants to collaborate, worth following up publicly.
Draft reply

Love this energy — let's do it! If I ever put something together around air quality awareness, you're on the list. Keep an eye out. 🙌

@rockyfuture1250 · medium↗ view

Thailand has running clubs or events long time ago i think but maybe not good promotion and not free. 1 of my friend has run over 10yrs with many groups. Steve accents isnt quite as strong as my nieces living in Wellington

Why: Substantive observation about the running club landscape — engaging it validates the commenter and adds context about what makes Sabai different.
Draft reply

That's a great point — Thailand's running scene has deep roots, Steve has mentioned that too. What Sabai seemed to crack is the community and accessibility side of it. And yeah, Steve's accent is pretty mild now after years in Bangkok haha!

@MhooChamp · medium↗ view

และแล้ววันที่ไมค์พูดแทนคนไทยอีกเรื่องก็มาถึง คือเรื่องของมลพิศทางอากาศครับ บ่งบอกถึงความไม่เอาจริงเอาจังความง่ายๆสบายๆของรัฐบาลทุกสมัย รักไมค์เลย ❤

Why: Top comment by likes (40 likes) — a devoted Thai-speaking fan who appreciates Mike speaking up about air pollution. Replying builds loyalty with the Thai audience.
Draft reply

ขอบคุณมากครับ ❤ รู้สึกว่ามันเป็นเรื่องที่พูดถึงบ่อยมาก แต่ยังไม่ค่อยมีอะไรเปลี่ยนแปลง หวังว่าสักวันจะมีการเปลี่ยนแปลงจริงๆ ครับ

@ทาโรปลาสวรรค์ · medium↗ view

กรี๊ดดด เขาบอกดูซีรี่ย์วายด้วยกัน

Why: Second highest liked comment (31 likes) — enthusiastic fan reacting to a specific moment in the video. A warm reply keeps this energy going.
Draft reply

555 ใช่เลย! สตีฟเซอร์ไพรส์ผมมากเลยตอนนั้น 😂 เดี๋ยวต้องหาให้เขาดูเพิ่มอีกแน่นอนครับ

@Jinke888 · low↗ view

You two should get together. Would make a great couple

Why: Playful comment fitting the friendship admiration theme — a light, funny reply could get engagement without being awkward.
Draft reply

Haha Steve is great but I think we're better as running club pals 😂 — though I'd be lying if I said we didn't have great on-screen chemistry!

@frernbaramos1004 · low↗ view

Thanks for positive thinking. I feel your happiness a lot from yours.You made world be better.

Why: Warm, genuine comment from a fan — a quick human reply goes a long way for retention and loyalty.
Draft reply

This honestly made my day — thank you so much for watching and for saying that. Comments like yours are exactly why I keep doing this. 🙏

§R2

Promo pull-quotes

Shareable social-proof quotes — ready for thumbnails, community posts, or a sponsor deck.

Just seeing the impact that we have on people every week is is more than money can buy.

Steve (transcript) · thumbnail↗ view

Both are handsome. Both are cute​ in different ways.

@icecool8390 · community post↗ view

I'm moving to Bangkok next year and I'm going to join Sabai run club 🥳🥳🥳

@Kaylabearyt · pinned comment↗ view

Good friendship

@ramadewarama3921 · community post↗ view

Thanks for positive thinking. I feel your happiness a lot from yours.You made world be better.

@frernbaramos1004 · sponsor deck↗ view

You will do great!. Cheer up.😊😊😊

@Sabaide-o8e · community post↗ view

Steve her so cute he make me start run

@กฤษณะบุทธิจักรฺ · pinned comment↗ view

Really great video! ❤

@Confetti69 · sponsor deck↗ view
§R3

Clip & Shorts finder

Moments worth cutting into Shorts — each with a title and a ready hook line. Timestamps link to the video.

[02:03] ↗3 Friends Who Hated Running Built Asia's Biggest Run Club~45s
HookSabai Run Club started last year July 2024. Started with three friends… we wanted to do something that we all hated to do.
Classic underdog origin story — started from nothing, now one of the biggest in the world. Mirrors the top comment theme of admiration and directly echoes the goosebumps reaction from 64% of commenters.
[02:46] ↗From 3 People to 1,000 Every Week~35s
HookHow does that make you feel? In the beginning, it was really really difficult.
Emotional pivot moment — raw honesty about the difficulty before the payoff. High shareability, ties to the friendship/admiration cluster and the 'impact more than money' line.
[00:10] ↗This Is Worth More Than Money~30s
HookJust seeing the impact that we have on people every week is is more than money can buy.
Punchy, quotable, purpose-driven line that resonates universally — top candidate for a Short that travels beyond the existing audience.
[01:09] ↗Even the Founder Feels Lazy Sometimes~30s
HookDo you ever like feel lazy? Of course, right? I think it's normal to feel lazy.
Relatable vulnerability from a high-achiever — this is the kind of honest moment that performs well on Shorts and directly connects to the admiration theme in 64% of comments.
[00:27] ↗Why Bangkok's Mean People Are Still Kind~25s
HookThe mean people here are still kind of nice, you know, compared to in the West.
Funny, quotable observation about Thai culture — the kind of line that gets clipped and shared widely, especially by expat communities.
[00:33] ↗Living in Bangkok But Breathing Black Smoke~35s
HookAnd I'm breathing in all that black smoke. And I would love to do something one day.
Directly tied to the air pollution topic that drives 35.7% of comments — a call-to-action moment that gives this clip a purpose beyond entertainment.
[19:43] ↗Sabai Has Custom Shoes Coming — And People Are Losing It~30s
HookWe have custom shoes that are going to be coming out in June next year.
Product reveal moment with built-in hype — the comment 'Custom shoes? Okay I want themmmmm!!!' shows this landed. Perfect merch-teaser Short.
[19:26] ↗Did You Design This Yourself?~35s
HookThis is really nice. Wait, did you design this yourself?
Light, charming merch walkthrough moment — pairs well with the friendship warmth that dominates 64% of audience comments and shows a different, casual side of both hosts.
§08

Top comments

Explore all 56 comments →

Verbatim — the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

@MhooChamp40 · mixed↗ view

และแล้ววันที่ไมค์พูดแทนคนไทยอีกเรื่องก็มาถึง คือเรื่องของมลพิศทางอากาศครับ บ่งบอกถึงความไม่เอาจริงเอาจังความง่ายๆสบายๆของรัฐบาลทุกสมัย รักไมค์เลย ❤

Why picked: highest-liked comment overall; Thai audience explicitly names Mike as a surrogate voice on air pollution negligence across all governments — bridges both major topic clusters
@ทาโรปลาสวรรค์31 · positive↗ view

กรี๊ดดด เขาบอกดูซีรี่ย์วายด้วยกัน

Why picked: second highest-liked; audience reacting with excitement to an in-video BL-series reference, signals the parasocial 'shipping' dynamic driving friendship-cluster engagement
@VirginBoy55513 · positive↗ view

งื้ออออออ น่าร๊ากกกก ทั้งคู่เลย ดีต่อใจฝุดๆ 😘😘😘 (ปล.อยากจะกรี๊ดดดดด ดังๆ ตอนที่สองหนุ่มยิ้ม มากๆ โอ้ยยย ฟินสุดๆ 5555++)

Why picked: third highest-liked; explicitly calls out both hosts' smiles as the emotional peak moment, confirms visual chemistry is the core retention driver for this audience segment
@icecool839011 · positive↗ view

Both are handsome. Both are cute​ in different ways.

Why picked: highest-liked English-language comment; succinctly represents the international friendship/admiration cluster
@usagi31058 · positive↗ view

I want bl series mike&steve😂

Why picked: ties for fourth most-liked; rare direct audience request for a fictional pairing — quantifies the BL-shipping subset of the friendship cluster
§08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 56 comments →

Top reply-magnet comments — where the real debate happened. 15 replies across 10 roots · max chain 3 deep · creator replied to 0%

01 · @MhooChamp3 replies · ♥ 40↗ view

และแล้ววันที่ไมค์พูดแทนคนไทยอีกเรื่องก็มาถึง คือเรื่องของมลพิศทางอากาศครับ บ่งบอกถึงความไม่เอ��…

02 · @badboyz083 replies · ♥ 2↗ view

tell thai people to vote to orange party. they the only party that push Air quality law

03 · @ทาโรปลาสวรรค์2 replies · ♥ 31↗ view

กรี๊ดดด เขาบอกดูซีรี่ย์วายด้วยกัน

04 · @Kaylabearyt1 replies · ♥ 8↗ view

I’m moving to Bangkok next year and I’m going to join Sabai run club 🥳🥳🥳

05 · @usagi31051 replies · ♥ 8↗ view

I want bl series mike&steve😂

§09

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สัมภาษณ์เด็กโรงเรียนท็อปของไทย อายุ 15 แต่ความคิดไม่เด็ก | Thailand’s Smartest 15-Year-Old Students
№17 · interview

สัมภาษณ์เด็กโรงเรียนท็อปของไทย อายุ 15 แต่ความคิดไม่เด็ก | Thailand’s Smartest 15-Year-Old Students

24k
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1.1k
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4.8%
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6 months ago
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№18 · interview

How This Digital Nomad Makes $33,000/Month Living in Thailand

14k
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604
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4.6%
engagement
6 months ago
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№19 · culture_comparison

Is it better to live in the UK compared to Thailand?

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961
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4.7%
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6 months ago
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№20 · interview

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20k
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1.3k
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7.2%
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7 months ago
เด็กอายุ 15 เปิดธุรกิจทัวร์พาเที่ยวในกรุงเทพ These Thai 15-Year-Olds Run a Tour Business in Bangkok
№21 · culture_comparison

เด็กอายุ 15 เปิดธุรกิจทัวร์พาเที่ยวในกรุงเทพ These Thai 15-Year-Olds Run a Tour Business in Bangkok

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3.2k
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5.4%
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7 months ago
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№22 · interview

How This British Man Makes $35,000/Month Living in Thailand

20k
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787
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4.2%
engagement
7 months ago
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№23 · culture_comparison

He Left Everything Behind in Korea to Start Over in Thailand

34k
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1.7k
likes
5.2%
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7 months ago
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№24 · interview

British Man Builds Million-Dollar Business in Thailand

37k
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1.6k
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4.6%
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8 months ago
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№25 · interview

Struggles of Opening a Business in Thailand as a Foreigner

16k
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850
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5.5%
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8 months ago
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№26 · vlog

Surprising My Editor with the Best Day Ever!

6.2k
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460
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8.1%
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10 months ago
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№27 · interview

Thai YouTuber Builds a 7-Figure Brand by 28

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295
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5.6%
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11 months ago
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№28 · personal_story

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16k
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1.5k
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10.4%
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11 months ago
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№29 · culture_comparison

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1.4k
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7.2%
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1 year ago
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№30 · interview

The Reasons Why These Foreigners Help Slums in Thailand

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376
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8.4%
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1 year ago
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№31 · interview

Italian Investor Chooses Thailand Over Italy

14k
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956
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7.5%
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1 year ago
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№32 · vlog

I want to stay in Thailand forever (Q&A)

42k
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2.6k
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6.8%
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1 year ago
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№33 · interview

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152k
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4.3k
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3.0%
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1 year ago
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№34 · interview

This Man is Making Thailand Better

21k
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1.2k
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6.3%
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1 year ago
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№35 · vlog

Why the World Trains Muay Thai in Thailand

24k
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1.2k
likes
5.1%
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1 year ago
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№36 · personal_story

18 year old girl moved to Thailand to train Muay Thai

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4.4k
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4.2%
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1 year ago
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№37 · culture_comparison

Do Foreigners find Thailand cheap?

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1.4k
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4.5%
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№38 · culture_comparison

Should foreigners learn Thai?

20k
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1.3k
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7.5%
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№39 · interview

Isaan Kid turned International Model

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4.6k
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3.9%
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№40 · vlog

Experiencing an Earthquake in Thailand

40k
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1.9k
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4.8%
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№41 · travel

Making Merit in Mahachai

15k
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1.0k
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7.5%
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№42 · interview

16-Year-Old Thai Student Makes 450,000 Baht Per Month

365k
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10.0k
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2.9%
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1 year ago
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№43 · culture_comparison

Is it better to live in America than in Thailand?

40k
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1.5k
likes
4.2%
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1 year ago
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№44 · interview

Thai Entrepreneur Quits Pharmacy for Social Media

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649
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7.3%
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№45 · interview

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6.6k
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6.9%
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№46 · culture_comparison

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22k
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1.0k
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5.0%
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№47 · interview

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2.6k
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6.0%
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1 year ago
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№48 · interview

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154k
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4.1k
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2.9%
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№49 · interview

Foreigner living in Koh Lanta with Thai Husband

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2.3k
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2.5%
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№50 · vlog

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1.1k
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9.4%
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№51 · travel

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3.0k
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4.9%
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№52 · travel

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18k
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701
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4.1%
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1 year ago
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№53 · interview

What surprises foreigners most about Thailand?

43k
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2.3k
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5.6%
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1 year ago
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№54 · interview

Why did this Hong Kong girl move to Thailand?

44k
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2.2k
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5.7%
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1 year ago
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№55 · culture_comparison

Life in England compared to Thailand

14k
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646
likes
5.3%
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1 year ago
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№56 · culture_comparison

Thai-Nigerian people sharing about life in Thailand

37k
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1.6k
likes
4.4%
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1 year ago
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№57 · culture_comparison

Are Thais who grew up in West different from local Thais?

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1.8k
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4.4%
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1 year ago
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№58 · vlog

Thailand vs Vietnam

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749
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7.4%
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1 year ago
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№59 · personal_story

I got scammed...

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841
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7.9%
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1 year ago
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№60 · culture_comparison

Why we love Thailand so much

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4.6k
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7.0%
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№61 · interview

Asking Chulalongkorn students their dream job?

14k
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775
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5.7%
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1 year ago
นักมวยน้อย เริ่มชกตอน 3 ขวบในอีสาน @reminariinamuaythai
№62 · travel

นักมวยน้อย เริ่มชกตอน 3 ขวบในอีสาน @reminariinamuaythai

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489
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6.6%
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1 year ago
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№63 · travel

First time in Nong Khai Isaan

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2.1k
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6.6%
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1 year ago
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№64 · travel

10 hour sleeper train to Isaan

17k
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1.1k
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7.4%
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1 year ago
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№65 · culture_comparison

What do foreigners think of Thailand?

178k
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5.2k
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3.1%
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1 year ago
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№66 · language

How to speak fluent English as a Thai person

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302
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4.7%
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№67 · interview

Why this Korean loves Thailand more than Korea

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7.5k
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4.4%
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1 year ago
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№68 · interview

Differences between studying in Thailand vs abroad?

19k
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669
likes
3.7%
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1 year ago
16-year-old Thai student makes 300,000 baht per month
№69 · interview

16-year-old Thai student makes 300,000 baht per month

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16k
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4.1%
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1 year ago
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№70 · interview

First Thai Isaan Burberry Model Living in the UK

23k
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1.1k
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5.1%
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2 years ago
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№71 · travel

One Day in Ayutthaya Thailand

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1.3k
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6.9%
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2 years ago
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№72 · interview

Interviewing Famous Transgender Ladyboy Chinni Official

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398
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2 years ago
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№73 · interview

Being a Black Woman in Thailand 🇹🇭

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1.0k
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6.4%
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2 years ago
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№74 · personal_story

Prison in Thailand as an American

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241
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1.7%
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№75 · culture_comparison

How Much Do You Spend In Thailand? 🇹🇭

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2 years ago
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№76 · personal_story

Why I stopped editing for Nigel Ng (Uncle Roger)

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5 years ago
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№77 · personal_story

Why YOU Should Study Abroad

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110
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4.1%
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7 years ago

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