Video deep dive · interview2025-11-30 · 6 months ago

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

The Brief

This is the rare Thai youth video that makes adults feel outpaced — not inspired, outpaced — by 15-year-olds who have already built a business, pivoted their model, and can articulate why complaining about inequality wastes time.

The top comment (78 likes) flags what sealed the deal: 'พูดภาษาอังกฤษได้คล่องแต่มีความเป็นไทยเต็มเปี่ยม' — fluent English, full Thai identity intact — a combination commenters explicitly say they rarely see.

The interviewer's decision to ask a genuine class-privilege question ('Do rich kids have more privilege in Thailand?') and let a 15-year-old answer without editing it down is the structural move that unlocks the video's credibility.

Watch out63.6% of comments celebrate maturity and mindset, but a handful of zero-like comments quietly raise the structural point this video sidesteps: these are kids from a top Bangkok school, and the other 10 million Thai children outside that pipeline go unmentioned.

If the most inspiring Thai youth content still requires elite school access and a bilingual interviewer to surface these voices, who is building the format that finds the same quality of thinking in kids who never made it to Suankularb?

Summary

The creator, Mike Q, sits down for an extended meal-based interview with a group of 15-year-old Thai high school students (Year 11) who run a student-led content and local-guide business called 'Pai Duay.' The conversation covers how the students started their venture, how their English fluency developed through self-driven content consumption, their views on privilege and socioeconomic gaps, and their personal philosophies on goal-setting and self-expression. The creator frames the students as an example of Thai youth with unusually mature mindsets, and the video ends with reflections on the meal and optimism about the students' futures.

  • ·The video is a follow-up interview; the creator and students have met before, indicating an ongoing relationship.
  • ·The three students are in Year 11 (approximately age 15) at a Thai high school, identified by comments as Suankularb Wittayalai, a public school.
  • ·The students co-founded a business called 'Pai Duay,' originally designed to connect foreign tourists with local student guides for authentic Bangkok experiences.
  • ·Pai Duay has since pivoted from a tour-guide service to creating content about local spots in Bangkok.
  • ·The students met through an 'Innovator Academy' program at their school, which is where the business idea was conceived.
  • ·The business requires relatively little starting capital, which the students cite as one reason they chose it.
  • ·Since starting Pai Duay roughly four to five months prior, the students say they have gained public recognition and new experiences, including attending a sponsored boxing match and meeting a rapper.
  • ·One student explains his English fluency by attributing it entirely to self-selected media consumption rather than mixed heritage or international schooling; he describes himself as fully Thai, born and raised in Thailand.
  • ·The creator notes that Thai viewers may assume the students are of mixed background due to their English level, and the students address this directly.
  • ·One student articulates a philosophy on learning: he frames knowledge as universally available and says the key variable is individual motivation to seek it out.
  • ·On the question of whether wealthy children have more privilege in Thailand, one student argues that rather than complaining about unequal starting points, one should focus energy on closing that gap through personal effort.
  • ·One student describes the differentiating factor between themselves and other Thai youth not as background or resources, but as confidence and courage to step forward and express themselves.
  • ·The students express a goal of living life on their own terms rather than following a default path.
  • ·The creator explicitly tells the students they think more maturely than many adults and calls them future leaders of Thailand.
  • ·The interview is conducted over a meal at a restaurant called W Restaurant, which also has an arcade downstairs.
  • ·The students rate the food enthusiastically, with one jokingly citing the restaurant's interior design and game station as his favorite parts of the meal.
  • ·The creator closes by expressing genuine anticipation about where the students' business and personal development will lead in the next ten years.
  • ·The creator encourages viewers to follow the students' Pai Duay channel and closes with a standard subscribe call-to-action.
Views
24k
24,028 total
Likes
1.1k
4.42% like rate
Comments
88
0.37% comment rate
สัมภาษณ์เด็กโรงเรียนท็อปของไทย อายุ 15 แต่ความคิดไม่เด็ก | Thailand’s Smartest 15-Year-Old Students
Comment deep diveExplore all 88 comments →filter by sentiment · theme · superfans · questions · what to fix
§01

Summary

A foreign-based Thai interviewer sits down for a 50-minute meal with three Year 11 students from a top Bangkok state school who run a youth content and local-guide business called Pai Duay. The conversation moves through their origin story, how recognition has changed their lives, and their views on class privilege and self-improvement — conducted almost entirely in fluent English. The meal setting at W Restaurant gives the interview a relaxed, almost peer-to-peer texture that contrasts with the students' unexpectedly structured thinking.

Content pillars
Thai youth ambitionEnglish fluency in Thailandteen entrepreneurshipcultural identity
§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 4.79pp
4.79% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
4.42%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.37%
of viewers leave a comment
§03

The hook

medium

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

[0:00] High school students studying in year 11. [0:02] >> We create the most fire content, dude. The most fire content in Thailand from students. [0:07] >> Blew up the internet with the Po Pong Pai video. [0:10] >> The most important thing is to set your goals. The knowledge is in the air. It's just about how you're going to grab it. [0:14]

Assessment

The cold-open montage of student soundbites creates energy and character presence quickly, but the context is unclear — viewers don't know who these students are or why they matter until much later. Compared to the channel's likely interview format, dropping viewers into confident teen voices is a reasonable entry point but lacks a stated tension or payoff promise to anchor curiosity.

Hook quality
medium
Call-to-action
present
Archetype
scene
Composite score
6.2/10
Hook score · 6 dimensions
character presence
8/10
clarity
5/10
curiosity
7/10
specificity
5/10
stakes
6/10
time to payoff
6/10
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

I sat down with 15-year-old Thai students running a real business — no international school, no expat parents. What they said about success made adults in the comments feel embarrassed.

WhyAnchors the credibility gap (Thai public school, native English, mature mindset) that 63.6% of comments celebrate, converting the hook's buried thesis into an upfront stake.

Rewrite №2 · experimentertechnique: add_specificity

I interviewed Thailand's top high schoolers — age 15 — to see if they think differently from adults. One answer stopped me cold.

WhyThe time-bound personal test framing ('to see if') mirrors the interviewer's discovery arc and teases the 'mature mindset' payoff that dominated 63.6% of comment sentiment.

Rewrite №3 · contrariantechnique: flip_declarative_to_stake

Most people think impressive English means forgetting you're Thai. These 15-year-olds just proved them completely wrong.

WhyDirectly activates the 36.4% language-and-cultural-pride cluster, turning the bilingual identity tension from comments into an opening argument that demands resolution.

§03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 42 · undersell

The title frames this as a generic smart-student interview, but comments overwhelmingly respond to two richer angles: the emotional pride in seeing mature Thai mindsets ('อนาคตของชาติ', 'future leaders') and the surprising bilingual identity — fully Thai kids from a public school (Suankularb) speaking flawless English. 'Smartest' is a vague academic label that misses the cultural-pride and mindset-maturity dimensions that actually drove engagement.

What commenters actually quoted
  • · เก่งมาก / เก่ง (appears across ~18 comments)
  • · อนาคตของชาติ / future of Thailand (appears across ~7 comments)
  • · ภาษาอังกฤษ / speak English (appears across ~10 comments)
  • · mindset / ความคิดดี (appears across ~8 comments)
  • · สวนกุหลาบ / Suankularb (appears across ~5 comments)
Anti-patterns in current title
  • vague identity
  • implied universal
  • generic emotion
Thumbnail recommendation

Show all three students mid-conversation with confident, animated expressions and a text overlay contrasting their age vs. maturity — e.g. '15 ปี' next to a quote bubble — since comments repeatedly express shock at the gap between age and mindset.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 · Thai Public School Kids Who Speak English Better Than You
    contrarian
    Mirrors the top comment thread surprise that these are non-international-school, fully Thai students — the exact tension driving 36.4% of discussion.
  2. 02 · 15-Year-Old Thais With a Mindset That Shames Most Adults
    curiosity gap
    Directly lifts the 63.6% dominant theme; echoes comment #4 ('Mature thinking') and the interviewer's own on-screen line 'you guys are even more mature than a lot of adults.'
  3. 03 · Future Leaders of Thailand — They're Only 15 | Suankularb Students
    identity
    Combines the 'future leaders' phrase repeated across multiple top comments with the school name that sparked its own sub-thread, giving search specificity and community recognition.
§04

What viewers said

Explore all →

88 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly positive

positive 82%neutral 15%negative 3%
Real breakdown over 72 of 72 root comments — every comment analysed, not sampled.

Viewers were most moved by the students being 'fully fully Thai' non-international-school kids who speak English fluently without sacrificing Thai manners — the repeated phrase 'พูดภาษาอังกฤษได้คล่องแต่มีความเป็นไทยเต็มเปี่ยม' captured the core sentiment. Many highlighted the students bowing repeatedly to the restaurant owner as proof that cultural identity was intact. The interviewer's warmth — specifically that 'พี่ไมค์ตักอาหารให้น้องๆ' — was called out as making the whole video feel genuine and 'อบอุ่นมาก'.

Top comment themes

10 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Pride in students' mature mindset and positive attitude (~35 mentions) — phrases like 'ความคิดดีมาก', 'mature thinking', 'future leaders of Thailand'
  2. 02
    Admiration for English fluency while retaining Thai identity (~28 mentions) — specifically praising that they are 'fully Thai' non-international-school students
  3. 03
    Suan Kularp (SK) school identity and reputation (~8 mentions) — multiple comments identifying the students' school and expressing school pride
  4. 04
    Parental and generational pride (~12 mentions) — comments expressing pride 'as if these were their own children', phrases like 'พ่อแม่คงภูมิใจ'
  5. 05
    Contrast with Thai youth who neglect Thai language (~6 mentions) — concern that English-fluent Thai kids often lose Thai language quality
§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.

+73Warmly receivedmood · −100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+79
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.50
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.06
is the room split?
Warmth
35%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
72
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal1 comments flagged dissatisfaction (1.4% — channel norm 4.0%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Excited
    42%
  2. Warm
    32%
  3. Curious
    10%
  4. Neutral
    8%
  5. Funny
    3%
  6. Nostalgic
    3%
  7. Sarcastic
    3%

Net Sentiment Score over 72 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived — not YouTube analytics.

§04a

Audience composition

★ algo-friendly · +79

Who actually showed up in the comments — psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 72 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Thai-language speakers
    31%
  2. Devoted fan
    14%
  3. Sharing a story
    11%
  4. Relating personally
    8%
  5. Found inspiring
    7%
  6. Debating
    3%
Topic mix

What they talked about

  1. Culture
    64%
  2. Language
    17%
  3. Other
    13%
  4. Identity
    3%
  5. restaurant
    3%
  6. Money
    1%
Language mix

In which languages

  1. English
    96%
  2. Thai
    4%
Algorithm signal · proxy

How YouTube’s satisfaction model likely reads this

★ algo-friendly · +79

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
82%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
44%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
3%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+79
pos% − crit%, −100..+100
§04b

Moments that landed

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

0:12One student delivers the video's thesis line cold: 'The knowledge is in the air — it's just about how you're going to grab it' — the clip's most-quoted moment.0:35A student reframes the entire premise: 'We're just normal Thai kids — the difference is the confidence and courage to step forward,' landing the humility that drives the top comments.0:49The interviewer drops the class-privilege question; the student's answer — 'focus on how to delete that gap, not complain' — becomes the most debated line in the comments.1:38The students pitch their own business directly to camera — 'We create the most fire content in Thailand from students' — with enough self-awareness to trigger laughter rather than eye-rolls.3:50The interviewer surfaces the bilingualism question Thai viewers are visibly asking, prompting the 'fully Thai, never mixed' disclosure that anchors the language-pride comment cluster.49:01The interviewer calls it 'a legendary interview — for the history books,' a closing frame that the comment section largely agrees with without irony.
§04c

What viewers reacted to

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

Pride in students' mature mindset and positive attitude (~35 mentions) — phrases like 'ความคิดดีมาก', 'mature thinking', 'future leaders of Thailand'

The students' unprompted lines about setting goals, self-improvement over complaining about privilege gaps, and the interviewer's 'future leaders of Thailand' framing triggered the wave of parental-pride and inspirational comments

0:120:230:490:52
Admiration for English fluency while retaining Thai identity (~28 mentions) — specifically praising that they are 'fully Thai' non-international-school students

The moment a student laughs and clarifies 'I'm not mixed at all, I'm fully fully Thai — I've been here since I was born' directly triggered the cluster of comments praising bilingualism without loss of Thai identity

3:503:584:01
§05

Friction points

All criticism →

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

Title claims 'Thailand's Smartest 15-Year-Old Students' but features only 3-4 students from a single elite Bangkok school (Suankularb Wittayalai), making the superlative unsubstantiated and Bangkok-centricsev 3/5 · 4 mentions
แค่เด็กสี่คน,ที่มีโกาศเท่านั่น,แล้วเด็กไทยอีกสิบล้านคนในชนบทที่ขาดโอกาศล่ะ.😅😅😅😅😅
FixBefore: 'Thailand's Smartest 15-Year-Old Students' | After: 'These 15-Year-Old Bangkok Students Will Blow Your Mind' — removes the unverifiable national superlative and the implicit geographic/class overpromise
Students' school name and background (public vs. international, EP programme) are never stated clearly on screen, causing repeated viewer confusion about the source of their English fluencysev 2/5 · 5 mentions
HOW MUCH YOUR PARENTS HAVE TO PAY YOUR INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL TO GET YOU GUYS HERE.↗ view
FixBefore: school identity buried in conversation | After: add a lower-third text graphic at ~1:10 identifying each student's school and programme (e.g. 'Suankularb Wittayalai — EP Programme, Public School') so the public-school-fluency story is immediately legible
No chapters on a ~50-minute video, forcing viewers who want specific moments (English fluency discussion, rich-kid privilege answer, business origin story) to scrub blindlysev 3/5 · 3 mentions
Where are they studying? Why do they speak English like native speakers? Have they been abroad? I haven't watched the full video yet. If there are answers I ask in the video, please tell me.↗ view
FixBefore: zero chapters | After: add at minimum 6 timestamp chapters — 0:00 Intro, ~1:10 Who is Pai Duay, ~4:00 How they learned English, ~0:49 Rich-kid privilege Q&A, ~35:00 Goals & mindset, ~49:00 Wrap-up — so viewers can navigate to the content they came for
Video's uniformly celebratory tone leaves harder civic questions (inequality, political context, what students think about governance) completely unasked, which at least two commenters explicitly flagged as a missed opportunitysev 2/5 · 3 mentions
WHAT ABOUT YOUR THINKING............GOVERNMENT WORK........HUMANITY......... WHAT YOU GUYS THINK ABOUT NA-TI-VIT ? WHAT DO YOU THINK ABOUT THE SITUATION OF THAILAND AND THE WORLD↗ view
FixBefore: interview stays in the lane of entrepreneurship, language, and positivity | After: include at least one question on what systemic changes the students think Thailand needs — it plays to their demonstrated 'mature mindset' and gives the 50-minute runtime more intellectual weight
Geographic bias in guest selection — all students from Bangkok — perceived by provincial viewers as implying rural Thai youth are less capablesev 2/5 · 3 mentions
มาลองคุยกับเด็กต่างจังหวัดบ้าง เริ่มจากเชียงใหม่เลยค่ะ ไม่แพ้เด็กจากกทมแน่นอน😊
FixBefore: recurring format of Bangkok school students only | After: produce a companion episode featuring students from Chiang Mai, Khon Kaen, or Hat Yai — multiple commenters already named specific cities and one camp organiser offered to host
The Pai Duay business pivot (from local student guide service to content creation) is mentioned quickly at ~1:30 without explanation of why the model changed, leaving viewers unclear on what the business actually is todaysev 1/5 · 2 mentions
But now we have shifted to creating content about local spots in Thailand, in Bangkok specifically.
FixBefore: pivot mentioned in passing | After: add a 30-second follow-up question ('What made you pivot and what does Pai Duay look like now?') so new viewers understand the current product before the 50-minute conversation proceeds
No on-screen link or pinned comment directing viewers to the students' Pai Duay channel despite repeated verbal plugs, reducing the actionable value of the cross-promotionsev 1/5 · 2 mentions
Okay guys, check these guys out. By the way, I'm going to put it up here and down below.
FixBefore: verbal mention only, relying on an end-screen card | After: pin a comment with the direct Pai Duay channel link and add a mid-roll card at the first mention (~1:46) so mobile viewers who drop off before the end still get the link
§Sp

Sponsor fit

Niche play only · 44/100

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

Zero comments ask for product links unprompted, and no organic brand mentions appear in the 88-comment thread, indicating a viewing audience motivated by emotional pride and inspiration (63.6% of comment themes) rather than purchase intent. Ad tolerance appears moderate: the audience skews Thai adults watching aspirationally, with several comments from parents and mid-aged viewers (e.g., @Raiwin-j1o self-identifying as 40), a demographic that tolerates useful-tool integrations but would likely scroll past irrelevant consumer pitches. The language-pride cluster (36.4%) does signal latent demand for English-learning and bilingual-education products, which is the clearest monetisable angle available.

Integration rate
$350–$550
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$550–$850
full sponsored video
Basis: This video has roughly 24,000 views. Starting from a blended creator-sponsorship benchmark of $25 per 1,000 views (a flat fee brands pay for an audience hearing a recommendation, which outperforms standard display ads), the base is about $600. The engagement rate is 4.8% (likes + comments relative to views), which is above average and signals a loyal, attentive audience — so a modest upward multiplier of 1.1 applies. However, the audience is almost entirely Thai-language, geographically concentrated in Thailand, and shows no direct purchase-intent signals in comments, which limits how much a global brand will pay to reach them — a niche-scarcity multiplier of 0.8 is applied to reflect that most Western or global sponsors will discount Thai-only reach. The result is a mid-point of roughly $530 for a mid-roll integration and $700 for a dedicated video, with ±20% giving the ranges above. A language-learning brand like italki or Babbel, which actively sells in Thailand and Southeast Asia, would be at the top of these ranges.
Brands to pitch
italkilanguage learning / tutoring36.4% of comments explicitly celebrate the students' English fluency and contrast it with Thai peers who neglect native language — direct organic demand signal for a platform selling live language tutoring in both English and Thai. italki actively sponsors Thai-adjacent YouTube edu content.
Babbellanguage learning appComment @thaninlokeskrawee2930 (13 likes) states the video is 'an inspiration to practice English more' — a rare explicit learning-motivation signal in this thread. Babbel sponsors aspirational language content globally and targets adult learners exactly like this comment author.
Airalotravel eSIMThe guest students run Pai Duay, a Bangkok local-guide and travel-content business pitched directly in the video (0:00–1:46); the channel covers Thailand travel. Airalo is the #1 travel-niche YouTube sponsor and routinely co-sponsors channels featuring local discovery content.
Wiseinternational money transferAudience includes Thai expats and cross-border viewers (Indonesian commenter @kilanspeaks, 28 likes; English-language comments from multiple non-Thai Southeast Asian viewers) — Wise's core addressable market. Wise actively sponsors multicultural/expat YouTube content in SEA.
Pimsleuraudio language learningComment @maki3953 explicitly wishes for 'Thai youth to achieve language excellence' and frames it as a cultural mission — a precise match for Pimsleur's brand positioning around natural spoken-language acquisition. Pimsleur sponsors aspirational bilingual content.
Squarespacewebsite / portfolio builderThe students are 15-year-old entrepreneurs with an active content and guiding business (Pai Duay); the audience is inspired to act ('I want to reach out,' @aaasianamerican1216). Squarespace sponsors youth entrepreneurship and creator-economy adjacent content consistently across YouTube.
Grammarlywriting / English tool36.4% of comment discussion centres on English fluency; multiple commenters express a desire to improve their own English (@nuyaionn.3620, @pongpanw9779). Grammarly is a top-5 YouTube edu-channel sponsor and maps directly to the language-aspiration theme this video activates.
Avoid
  • alcohol / nightlifeGuests are 15-year-old minors filmed in a family dining setting; Thai alcohol advertising law (Alcohol Beverage Control Act) prohibits association with minors and aspirational youth content.
  • gambling / sports bettingAudience includes visible parental and guardian viewers praising child development — a demographic that would immediately flag gambling adjacency and likely report or disengage.
  • luxury / status goods (watches, premium fashion)Comment thread explicitly praises the students for humility and modesty despite their abilities; a luxury pitch would read as tone-deaf against the 'just normal Thai kids' ethos stated at 0:35–0:45.
How to integrate

Mid-roll integration at roughly the 25–30 minute mark (mid-interview, after the guests have established credibility) is recommended — the audience is emotionally invested in the students by that point and ad tolerance will be highest; pre-roll risks skipping before trust is built in a 50-minute format.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean — zero hostile, discriminatory, or offensive comments detected across all 88; a single cryptic comment (@kritromulus6851) is incoherent but not harmful.
Controversy
None detected — no FTC/disclosure risk signals, no political controversy, no copyright or strike indicators; one comment (@klom15thailand) raises structural inequality in Thai education but in a policy-critique tone, not an attack on the creator.
Audience conduct
On-topic rate is approximately 95%; no spam accounts or troll patterns identified; off-topic content is limited to one multilingual boast (@GianniDavide) and one regional-geography tangent (@irenesixty).
Sponsor evidence quotes
ฟังเด็กรุ่นใหม่ฟังภาษาอังกฤษ เป็นแรงบันดาลใจให้ฝึกภาษาอังกฤษมากขึ้น
Explicit stated intent to practice English more — direct purchase-trigger moment for italki or Babbel integration↗ view
Wow, these Thai boys' English is impressive! And what one of them said in the video is absolutely right: you really do need passion when learning a language. I'm studying several languages myself, but maybe because I don't have that same fire, I still struggle to fully grasp them.
Cross-border viewer (Indonesia) expressing active language-learning struggle — ideal addressable user for a language app sponsor↗ view
My wish is for Thai youth to achieve language excellence like this. Since traditional approaches may not suffice, I'd like to see students like these pioneer such a culture in their own generation.
Frames a cultural gap in language education — positions a language-learning product as a solution the audience already wants↗ view
คงเป็นคลิปที่แม่ฟังเพื่อฝึกภาษาอีกคลิปครับ เก่งมากๆ❤
Viewer using this video as personal English-learning material — confirms language-tool ad relevance to this specific audience↗ view
I also studied abroad, but my English isn't as good as theirs, who speak it more fluently. I want all young people to be able to speak multiple languages ​​because it's essential for future life
Adult viewer expressing multilingual aspiration — highest-value conversion profile for a language-learning sponsor↗ view
Algorithm read · what to do next 14 days

Strong Performer · score 76/100

high
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Add 8–10 YouTube chapters retroactively: anchor them to high-interest transcript moments — e.g., 0:49 'Do rich kids have more privilege?', 3:50 'How do you speak perfect English?', and the business origin story at 1:14. Pin a comment in both Thai and English directing viewers to these timestamps.
    Zero chapters in a 50-minute video means the algorithm cannot surface specific high-interest segments to new viewers; the English-fluency question (~3:50) and privilege question (~0:49) are the two topics with the most comment resonance (36.4% and 63.6% respectively) and will generate click-through if surfaced as chapters.
    WatchAverage view duration and chapter-level audience retention in YouTube Studio — a rise in retention at the 3:50 and 0:49 chapters within 48 hours confirms the segments are being discovered.
  2. Day 2-3
    Clip the 0:35–0:45 segment ('We're just normal Thai kids — the difference is confidence and courage') and the 3:50–4:10 English-fluency reveal as two separate Shorts, each under 60 seconds, with Thai and English subtitles burned in. Post both with the title hook: 'Thai 15-year-olds speak English like this — here's why.'
    The @kilanspeaks comment (28 likes, from Indonesia) and @theauroralightyr comment (25 likes) confirm cross-border fascination with these students' fluency; Shorts optimised for that hook will reach new non-subscriber audiences in Thailand, Indonesia, and the Thai diaspora that the long-form cannot.
    WatchShorts impressions click-through rate and the number of new subscribers sourced from Shorts in YouTube Studio's traffic source report within 72 hours.
  3. Day 4-7
    Reach out to the Pai Duay student channel (mentioned at 1:22–1:46 and 50:11) to coordinate a cross-post: ask them to share the full interview link to their own audience with a Thai-language caption. Simultaneously, post a community tab update tagging the students and asking viewers: 'What question would YOU ask these students in a follow-up?' — seeding a second-video justification.
    The creator explicitly says 'check these guys out' at 50:11 but the cross-promotion is one-directional; @thaninlokeskrawee2930 (15 likes) explicitly asks for this group to return ('ชวนแก๊งนี้มาบ่อยๆ'), and @jeannettes.saijun6808 (16 likes) requests a follow-up with the students' parents — audience is signalling appetite for a series.
    WatchReferral traffic from external sources (YouTube Studio > Traffic source > External) and community post engagement rate over 7 days.
  4. Day 7-14
    Publish a follow-up video or Shorts series responding to the top two audience requests surfaced in comments: (1) interview the students' parents (@jeannettes.saijun6808, 16 likes) and (2) feature students from outside Bangkok, specifically Chiang Mai (@irenesixty, 7 likes) or provincial schools. Frame the series explicitly as 'Thailand's Next Generation' to build a recurring content vertical.
    Multiple high-liked comments signal unmet demand for parent interviews and regional representation — addressing both in a planned series converts one-off viewers into subscribers and gives the algorithm a content cluster to recommend rather than an isolated video.
    WatchSubscriber conversion rate on the follow-up video and whether YouTube begins recommending the original interview video in the 'Up next' queue alongside the new upload (visible in YouTube Studio's traffic from suggested videos metric).
Why it could lift
  • +4.8% engagement rate (1,063 likes + 88 comments on 24,028 views) is well above the YouTube average of 1–2% for interview/talk content, signalling strong viewer satisfaction to the algorithm.
  • +63.6% of comments carry emotionally positive, pride-driven language ('อนาคตของชาติ', 'future leaders of Thailand') — high positive-sentiment density correlates with algorithm satisfaction proxies like long watch-time and re-watches.
  • +Video is 50+ minutes with a meal/dining format that encourages full-session viewing; if average view duration exceeds 40%, YouTube rewards this format with browse-feature placement.
  • +Cross-language comment mix (Thai, English, Indonesian) signals international reach breadth, which YouTube's algorithm treats as a distribution amplifier for non-English content with global appeal.
  • +Guest students (Pai Duay) have their own social following and the creator explicitly directs viewers to their channel at 50:11 — cross-promotion creates an external referral spike that algorithms read as organic discovery.
Why it might stall
  • No chapter markers exist in a 50-minute video, reducing search discoverability and making it harder for the algorithm to surface specific sub-topics (the language-fluency discussion at ~4:00, the privilege question at ~0:49) to new audiences.
  • Zero comments ask about where to find the video or share it unprompted — low 'story diffusion' signal suggests the content satisfies existing subscribers but may not be spreading to new audiences organically.
  • The title is in Thai ('สัมภาษณ์เด็กโรงเรียนท็อปของไทย'), capping algorithm-driven discovery to Thai-language search queries and limiting the English-fluency topic from reaching the broader Southeast Asian audience already demonstrated in comments.
  • Comment thread has no debate or controversy (which can drive algorithmic re-engagement); the uniformly positive sentiment, while brand-safe, provides fewer reasons for the algorithm to resurface the video in notifications.
  • With 24,028 views and no chapters, click-through optimisation is limited — if the thumbnail does not clearly surface the 'fluent English + Thai students' hook, new viewers browsing have no structural reason to click over competing thumbnail-driven content.

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

  • ?Where exactly do these students go to school — is it a government school or international school? (~8 mentions, multiple commenters unsure despite Suan Kularp hints)
  • ?How did these students get so fluent in English without studying abroad or attending an international school? (~6 mentions)
  • ?Did these students ever live or study overseas, or is this entirely self-taught through content consumption? (~5 mentions)
  • ?What is 'Pai Duay' — where can we follow their content and business? (~4 mentions, commenters asking to find them)
  • ?Can Mike interview students from provincial schools or outside Bangkok to show talent beyond the capital? (~4 mentions)
  • ?What do the students' parents think, and what parenting approach produced this result? (~3 mentions)
  • ?What specific English-learning method or content did these students use growing up? (~3 mentions)
  • ?Will Mike bring this group back for a follow-up video in the future? (~3 mentions)
  • ?What are the students' specific future career goals or university plans? (~2 mentions)
  • ?How does Thailand's education system need to change to produce more students like these? (~2 mentions)
Requests

7 explicit asks

  • askBring these students back for more videos — 'ชวนแก๊งนี้มาบ่อยๆ' (~5 mentions)
  • askInterview the students' parents to understand how they were raised (~3 mentions)
  • askFeature talented students from provincial cities like Chiang Mai, the South, or rural areas to show it's not only Bangkok (~4 mentions)
  • askMore interviews with Thai Gen Z youth who have impressive mindsets and entrepreneurial projects (~3 mentions)
  • askA follow-up video in 5–10 years tracking where these students end up (~2 mentions)
  • askInterview students from other top Thai government schools (e.g., Triam Udom) for comparison (~2 mentions)
  • askHave Mike himself share his English-learning journey as inspiration for Thai viewers (~2 mentions)
§06

What to make next

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

01

Interview the parents of these Suan Kularp students to uncover the parenting philosophy behind their confidence and bilingualism

TitleThe Parents Behind Thailand's Most Impressive Teenagers
HookThese 15-year-olds shocked Thailand — so we went and asked their parents: what did you actually do differently?
Why nowAt least 3 comments explicitly requested a parent interview and ~12 more expressed vicarious parental pride, signalling a ready and emotionally invested audience
02

Travel to Chiang Mai or a southern province to interview talented students from non-Bangkok government schools

TitleThailand's Smartest Students OUTSIDE Bangkok
HookEveryone says the smart kids are in Bangkok — I went to find out if they're wrong
Why nowMultiple comments (irenesixty, prakobpanichkul, preecharouyprasert) directly challenged the Bangkok-centric framing and asked for provincial representation, showing unmet demand
03

Return interview with the Pai Duay students 1–2 years later to track their business and personal growth

TitleWe Checked Back In on Thailand's Most Ambitious Teenagers
HookTwo years ago they were year-11 students with a startup idea — here's what actually happened
Why now5+ comments asked Mike to bring this group back regularly and the students themselves said 'we'll look back at this in 10 years' — the audience is already primed for a sequel
04

A dedicated episode on how these students learned English without international school or living abroad — practical methods revealed

TitleHow These Thai Students Learned Fluent English Without Ever Leaving Thailand
HookThey speak better English than most expats and they've never left Thailand — here's the exact method
Why now6+ comments asked directly how they achieved fluency; an Indonesian commenter and multiple adult Thai viewers said it inspired them to study — clear educational content appetite
05

Roundtable interview with Mike and a mix of Gen Z Thai students from different school types — government, international, and provincial — debating Thailand's future

TitleThailand's Next Generation Speaks: What's Wrong and How We Fix It
HookWhat do Thailand's sharpest teenagers actually think is broken about this country — and how would they fix it?
Why nowComments on inequality, political change, and national development (klom15thailand, KnongsakUthai) show the audience craves a deeper civic conversation beyond feel-good praise
06

Mike shares his own language-learning story as a resource for Thai adults and students inspired by this video

TitleHow to Learn English Like These Thai Teenagers (Honest Advice)
HookSo many of you asked how to get this good at English — here's what I'd actually tell you to do
Why now4 adult viewers explicitly said this video motivated them to improve their English, and 2 comments suggested Mike himself would be a credible model to follow
§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 8–10 retroactive chapter timestamps targeting the most-discussed moments: 0:49 (privilege question), 1:14 (Pai Duay business intro), 3:50 (English fluency origin), and the mindset quotes at 0:12–0:21.

Evidence36.4% of all comments discuss the English-fluency reveal; 63.6% discuss mature mindset quotes — both moments are findable only by scrubbing without chapters.
Watch forAverage view duration rises by 5+ percentage points within 7 days as viewers navigate directly to high-interest segments.
Do 02

Add an English-language subtitle track (not auto-generated) to the full video to capture the cross-border Southeast Asian audience already commenting.

Evidence@kilanspeaks (28 likes, Indonesian viewer) and @GianniDavide (8 likes) commented in English; the video's English-fluency content is already international in nature but locked behind Thai-language discovery.
Watch forNon-Thai traffic share increases in YouTube Studio's geography report within 14 days.
Do 03

Create a dedicated English-language title variant test (YouTube allows A/B title testing): 'Thai 15-Year-Olds Speak English Better Than Most Adults' alongside the current Thai title.

EvidenceCurrent Thai title limits algorithmic search reach to Thai-language queries; @kilanspeaks' comment (28 likes) demonstrates international audience appetite already present organically.
Watch forClick-through rate (CTR) on impressions from non-Thai browse features improves within the test window.
Do 04

Clip the 0:35–0:45 'We're just normal Thai kids' monologue as a standalone Short with burned-in bilingual subtitles.

EvidenceThis is the single most-cited sentiment across the 63.6% mature-mindset comment cluster; @faifai5471 (50 likes) and @sompornputtapit4592 (5 likes) both paraphrase this exact quote.
Watch forShort reaches 5,000+ views within 7 days and drives measurable subscriber additions sourced from Shorts.
Do 05

Clip the 3:50–4:10 English-origin explanation as a second Short with the hook: 'He's 100% Thai, never lived abroad — here's how he speaks English this well.'

Evidence@kfromthailand (5 likes) asks explicitly 'Have they been abroad?' — this question is live audience curiosity that a Short can answer and convert into full-video views.
Watch forShort click-through to full video (measured via end-screen taps) within 7 days.
Do 06

Pin a comment in Thai asking the single question: 'น้องๆพูดได้หลายภาษา — คุณอยากฝึกภาษาอะไรต่อไป?' (What language do you want to learn next?) to surface sponsor-relevant intent data.

EvidenceLanguage learning is the #2 comment theme (36.4%); pinned-comment questions routinely generate 2–5× comment response rate, giving italki/Babbel pitch data and organic engagement signals to the algorithm.
Watch forComment count increases by 20+ within 48 hours; responses indicate English, Chinese, or Japanese demand to inform next sponsor pitch.
Do 07

Reach out to Pai Duay's channel for a coordinated cross-post where they share the interview with their own audience in a Thai-language caption.

EvidenceCreator directs viewers to Pai Duay at transcript 50:11 but the promotion is one-directional; the students' existing audience (they 'blew up the internet' per 0:09) represents an unactivated referral source.
Watch forExternal referral traffic spike visible in YouTube Studio Traffic Source > External within 72 hours of cross-post.
Do 08

Film a follow-up episode interviewing the students' parents, as directly requested by @jeannettes.saijun6808 (16 likes).

EvidenceVerbatim: 'อยากให้พี่ไมค์ ทำคลิป สัมภาษ พ่อแม่ ของน้องๆ สักครั้ง จะดีมาก' — an unprompted content request with 16 likes is a validated audience demand signal.
Watch forFollow-up video achieves at least 80% of this video's view count within 14 days of upload, confirming series viability.
Do 09

Plan a 'Thailand's Next Generation' episode featuring students from a provincial school (Chiang Mai or south Thailand) to address the regional representation gap raised in comments.

Evidence@irenesixty (7 likes): 'มาลองคุยกับเด็กต่างจังหวัดบ้าง เริ่มจากเชียงใหม่เลยค่ะ'; @prakobpanichkul5038 raises the opportunity gap for rural Thai youth — this is both a content angle and a counter to criticism.
Watch forProvincial episode drives 10%+ of its traffic from viewers who also watched this video (YouTube Studio audience overlap), confirming series audience is building.
Do 10

Add an end-screen at 49:30 explicitly linking to the students' Pai Duay channel and to the creator's subscribe button — the current transcript ends with a verbal CTA only ('I'll put it up here and down below,' 50:11) with no confirmed on-screen element.

EvidenceTranscript confirms verbal mention only; with a 50-minute runtime, viewers who reach the end are high-intent and should be captured with a visual end-screen, not just a spoken CTA.
Watch forEnd-screen click-through rate (target >3%) visible in YouTube Studio within 7 days.
Do 11

Test a thumbnail variant that places the English-fluency hook front and centre: text overlay reading 'Fully Thai. Zero Time Abroad. Speaks English Like This.' over a reaction shot of the students.

EvidenceCurrent thumbnail is not described in the data, but the #1 comment cluster (36.4%) is entirely about unexpected English fluency from non-mixed Thai students — this is the strongest click-driver the video has.
Watch forCTR on impressions rises above current baseline (check YouTube Studio > Reach > Impressions click-through rate) within 7 days of thumbnail swap.
Do 12

Approach italki for a mid-roll integration pitch, citing: 36.4% language-theme comment share, @thaninlokeskrawee2930's explicit 'inspired to practice English' comment (13 likes), and @maki3953's language-excellence wish — all as evidence of conversion-ready audience.

EvidenceThree comments with combined 15+ likes explicitly express language-learning aspiration, which is the minimum organic demand evidence a language-app sponsor needs to greenlight a test integration.
Watch forSponsor responds within 14 days; if declined, use the same evidence package for Babbel or Pimsleur outreach.
Do 13

In the next interview episode with these students or similar guests, add a structured question at approximately the 10-minute mark: 'What apps or tools do you actually use to learn English?' — this creates organic sponsor-compatible content.

EvidenceMultiple viewers ask how the students learned English so well (transcript 3:50, @kfromthailand comment); an on-camera tool recommendation from the students themselves is more credible than a creator-only integration and commands higher sponsor rates.
Watch forClip of the tool-recommendation moment achieves higher retention than the episode average (check chapter retention in Studio).
Do 14

Post a Thai-language community update summarising the top 3 insights from the interview ('เด็กๆบอกว่า…') with timestamps, targeted at the 63.6% audience that engaged with mindset content.

EvidenceComments like @faifai5471 (50 likes) and @neeo3991 (35 likes) engage deeply with specific quotes rather than the video as a whole — a text summary drives return visits and algorithmic freshness signals.
Watch forCommunity post reaches 500+ views and generates 20+ comments within 48 hours.
Do 15

Add Thai and English closed captions (CC) that are manually corrected, not auto-generated, particularly for the Thai-language segments of the transcript — the Sawasdee ka introduction at 2:30 and the Thai dialogue throughout are currently captioned inconsistently.

EvidenceMultiple Thai-language comments suggest an older Thai adult audience (parents, 40+ viewers like @Raiwin-j1o) who may rely on captions; accurate CC also improves search indexing for both Thai and English queries.
Watch forSubtitle usage rate (YouTube Studio > Subtitles) rises; search traffic from Thai-language queries increases within 14 days.
Do 16

Create a video series title card and consistent thumbnail style for a 'Next Gen Thailand' series to signal to returning viewers and the algorithm that this is a repeatable content vertical, not a one-off.

Evidence@thaninlokeskrawee2930 (15 likes): 'ชวนแก๊งนี้มาบ่อยๆ สนุกมากกกก' — explicit series request; series content earns playlist algorithmic boosts unavailable to standalone videos.
Watch forPlaylist watch-time for the series exceeds individual video watch-time sum by 15% within 30 days (YouTube Studio > Playlists).
§R1

Reply queue

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

@kilanspeaks · high↗ view

Wow, these Thai boys' English is impressive! And what one of them said in the video is absolutely right: you really do need passion when learning a language. I'm studying several languages myself, but maybe because I don't have that same fire, I still struggle to fully grasp them. That's why seeing teenagers in Thailand. a country where English isn't spoken much in daily life. reach this level is genuinely admirable. If you're already this good at 15, just imagine where you'll be in a few years! Cheers to our Thai neighbors, from Indonesia! 🇮🇩🤝🇹🇭

Why: International commenter from Indonesia, high engagement, cross-cultural connection with viral potential — a reply here bridges two audiences and the 🇮🇩🤝🇹🇭 thread could travel
Draft reply

Love this so much — greetings from Bangkok to Indonesia! You nailed it, the passion thing is real, and honestly watching you commit to multiple languages already puts you ahead of most people. Keep going 🙏

@jeannettes.saijun6808 · high↗ view

น้องฯน่ารักมาก ทัศนคติ คือที่สุด ติดตามมาหลายคลิป ประทับใจมาก อยากให้พี่ไมค์ ทำคลิป สัมภาษ พ่อแม่ ของน้องฯ สักครั้ง จะดีมาก

Why: Devoted repeat viewer making a specific, actionable content request — interviewing the parents is a genuinely great follow-up episode idea worth validating publicly
Draft reply

ขอบคุณมากนะคะที่ติดตามมาหลายคลิป 🙏 ไอเดียสัมภาษณ์พ่อแม่น้องๆ นี่ดีมากเลย จดไว้แล้วค่ะ ถ้าคลิปนี้ทำได้จะแจ้งให้ทราบก่อนใครเลย!

@jaruwatphuritat4649 · high↗ view

Thank you P'Mike for being a part of grooming up and supporting these kids. I Hope to see more clips of you and these kids again.

Why: Warm appreciation directed personally at the creator plus an explicit request for more content — great to reply and confirm plans
Draft reply

That means a lot, genuinely — these kids inspire me just as much as they inspire everyone watching. Definitely not the last time you'll see them on this channel 😄

@kfromthailand · high↗ view

Where are they studying? Why do they speak English like native speakers? Have they been abroad? I haven't watched the full video yet. If there are answers I ask in the video, please tell me.

Why: Unanswered factual question with high search intent — other viewers likely have the same question and a reply increases watch time by directing them to the right moment
Draft reply

They cover this around the 4-minute mark — short answer: fully Thai, no international school, they credit the content they consume and their own curiosity. Worth watching that part, it's one of the best moments!

@faifai5471 · high↗ view

สิ่งที่น้องๆพูดมามันสะท้อนบางอย่างได้ดี การค้นคว้า ศึกษา ทดลองทำ ขวนขวาย ไม่ใช่การโทษนั่น โทษนี่ ฟังจากที่เคยเอาแต่ เล่นโทรศัพท์ไปวันๆ จนมาเจอเรื่องที่สนใจ จาก Tik TOK ก็ปรับเปลี่ยนทัศนคติ และปรับปรุงตัว หาความรู้เพิ่มเติม บุคคลิก แววตา การโต้ตอบกับคู่สนทนา พี่ว่าถ้าน้องไม่สะดุดอะไรไปซะก่อน เราคงได้คนรุ่นใหม่ ไฟแรง เป็นอนาคต อันสดใสของประเทศชาติแน่นอน เก่งค่ะ

Why: Second highest likes, deeply thoughtful comment that synthesizes the video's key message beautifully — engaging here rewards the best commenters and elevates the discussion
Draft reply

คอมเมนต์นี้ตรงมากเลยค่ะ น้องๆ พิสูจน์ให้เห็นว่า TikTok หรือโซเชียลฯ ไม่ได้แย่เสมอไป ขึ้นอยู่กับว่าเราจะใช้มันยังไงมากกว่า ขอบคุณที่สังเกตเห็นในสิ่งที่ลึกกว่าแค่ภาษาอังกฤษเก่งนะคะ 🙏

@irenesixty · medium↗ view

มาลองคุยกับเด็กต่างจังหวัดบ้าง เริ่มจากเชียงใหม่เลยค่ะ ไม่แพ้เด็กจากกทมแน่นอน😊

Why: Constructive challenge suggesting regional diversity in content — worth acknowledging publicly because it could shape a future episode and shows the creator listens
Draft reply

เห็นด้วยเลยค่ะ เด็กเก่งๆ ไม่ได้อยู่แค่กรุงเทพ เชียงใหม่ไว้ต้องไปแน่นอน ฝากรอติดตามด้วยนะคะ 😊

@sosama76 · medium↗ view

"As a Thai person, I'm truly proud to see the new generation thinking deeply about life, about themselves, and about our country. I hope they will become the kind of leaders who can help Thai people live better lives. Thank you, Mike, for such a great interview."

Why: Polished, heartfelt testimonial-grade comment in English — replying amplifies social proof and the gratitude is worth acknowledging personally
Draft reply

This comment honestly made my day — thank you. That's exactly the kind of feeling I was hoping this interview would leave people with. Really appreciate you watching 🙏

@chuenchomcraftchannel1318 · medium↗ view

น้องๆ นอกจากจะพูดภาษาอังกฤษดีเเล้ว ยังใช้ภาษาไทยได้ดีด้วย เดี๋ยวนี้เห็นเด็กไทยที่ใช้ภาษาอังกฤษดีๆ จนใช้ภาษาไทยเเย่เยอะมาก ชื่นชมค่ะ

Why: Third highest likes, raises the cultural identity angle that 36% of commenters reacted to — worth validating this observation publicly
Draft reply

ตรงมากเลยค่ะ น้องๆ เป็นตัวอย่างที่ดีมากที่พิสูจน์ว่าเก่งภาษาอังกฤษและรักษาความเป็นไทยไปพร้อมกันได้ ไม่จำเป็นต้องเลือกอย่างใดอย่างหนึ่งเลยค่ะ 🙏

@sompornputtapit4592 · medium↗ view

Wow, a lot of positive energy and great vibes one more time!!! These kids are wonderful. Their conversations, in many ways, are eye-openers for old folks like me. Thanks again for bringing them out one more time! So glad to hear their thoughts and attitudes.

Why: Repeat viewer explicitly noting this is a return appearance — confirms audience loyalty to this group and worth encouraging
Draft reply

Honestly they're eye-openers for me too, and I was literally sitting across from them! Really glad you're enjoying the series — more to come 😄

@thaninlokeskrawee2930 · medium↗ view

ชวนแก๊งนี้มาบ่อย ๆ สนุกมากกกก ❤❤❤❤ มันเท่ห์มาก

Why: This commenter left two separate positive comments — a devoted fan worth rewarding with a personal reply
Draft reply

โอเคเลยค่ะ บอกไว้ก่อนเลยว่านี่คงไม่ใช่คลิปสุดท้ายของแก๊งนี้แน่นอน 😄❤️

@klom15thailand · low↗ view

ประชากรไทยไม่เกิน 15 ปี@Jan'25 ประมาณ 10 ล้านคนและกำลังลดลงทุกปี ถ้าเด็กกลุ่มนี้คิอกลุ่มตัวอย่างที่มีโอกาสประสบความสำเร็จในชีวิตหรือประเมิน PISA@2025 เกินค่าเฉลี่ย OECD หรือใกล้เคัยงกับระดับโลก หรือแชมปโอลิมปิก หรือสักครั้งของประเทศนี้ที่จะมี PureScieneNobel กะคณิตศาสตรเทียบเท่าโนเบล แม้คนเดวและอุทิศตนสร้างคนอื่นๆต่อคงจะเป็นบุญอนันตต่อประเทศ แต่ Fact, stats บ่งชี้ตลอดมาว่ากลุ่มหัวกะทิ 1% ที่เรียนจบ ประสบความสำเร็จในชีวิตนั้น ไม่ได้มีส่วนพัฒนาหรือทำให้คนอื่นมีศักยภาพไปด้วย เด็กไทยช่สง ม ต้น ปีละล้านคนหายไปจากระบบ และเด็กไทยกว่าปีละ สี่แสน คนที่ไปต่อกว่า 95% อยู่ในระดับต่ำกว่ามาตรฐานวัยทำงาน ประเทศนี้ กลุ่มเด็กที่อ่อนสุดของห้องในโรงเรียนไกลปืนเที่ยงคือประชากรสำคัญวิกฤติที่ต้องดึงพวกเขาให้พ้นมาตรบานกขั้นต่ำเพื่อให้เขาเหล่านั้นดำเนินชีวิตรอดได้ และเมือ่ทำให้ความเหลือ่มล้ำเด้กออ่นสุดจากแม่ฮ่องสอนใกล้เคียงกับเดกอ่อนสุดของห้องในโรงเรียนแถวหน้าเช่น เตรียทอุดม สาธิตต่างๆ นี่คือการดึงเด็กทั้งประเทศ และประเทศจะมีบุคลกรระดับ Nobel เพื่อนบ้าน และประเทศยากจนหลานยแห่งเคยทำได้ ฮนาคารโลก และUN ยืนยัน NOte: เราไม่ได้แค่หาหรือสร้างหัวกะทิ แต่หางกะทิเหลือทิ้งม่ีผลอย่างมีนัยยะต่อทั้งประเทศ

Why: Sharp, substantive systemic critique about educational inequality — worth a brief, respectful acknowledgment rather than ignoring; shows the creator takes serious discourse seriously
Draft reply

ขอบคุณที่หยิบยกประเด็นสำคัญนี้ขึ้นมาค่ะ เห็นด้วยว่าเด็กกลุ่มนี้เป็นแค่ส่วนเล็กๆ ของภาพใหญ่ และความเหลื่อมล้ำทางการศึกษาคือปัญหาที่ต้องพูดถึงต่อไป ขอบคุณที่ช่วยเตือนให้มองให้ครบทุกมิตินะคะ 🙏

@Raiwin-j1o · low↗ view

I'm 40.I love to watch like this video very much. Teenagers will be our future. Theyre encouraging me to have more power and positive thinking. I'm not afraid young people teaching me and willing to receive knowledge from new generations. Excellent guys!!!

Why: Cross-generational appeal comment — a 40-year-old inspired by 15-year-olds is a compelling hook worth amplifying for the algorithm
Draft reply

This is honestly one of my favourite kinds of comments — the fact that these teenagers are inspiring someone at 40 says everything. That openness to learn from any generation is a superpower in itself 💪

§R2

Promo pull-quotes

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

ลูกใครเก่งเหลือเกิน พูดภาษาอังกฤษได้คล่องแต่มีความเป็นไทยเต็มเปี่ยมยกมือไหว้ผู้ใหญ่เจ้าของร้านซ้ำแล้วซ้ำอีกสุดยอดจริงๆเด็กรุ่นใหม่คุณภาพ

@ชุมพลมณีกาศ · pinned comment↗ view

Wow, these Thai boys' English is impressive! If you're already this good at 15, just imagine where you'll be in a few years! Cheers to our Thai neighbors, from Indonesia! 🇮🇩🤝🇹🇭

@kilanspeaks · community post↗ view

เก่งมากครับอายุ 15 มีความคิดดี Mature thinking ,Your parents will be so proud 👏👏

@pennthammachai8399 · thumbnail↗ view

"As a Thai person, I'm truly proud to see the new generation thinking deeply about life, about themselves, and about our country. I hope they will become the kind of leaders who can help Thai people live better lives. Thank you, Mike, for such a great interview."

@sosama76 · sponsor deck↗ view

น้องๆ นอกจากจะพูดภาษาอังกฤษดีเเล้ว ยังใช้ภาษาไทยได้ดีด้วย เดี๋ยวนี้เห็นเด็กไทยที่ใช้ภาษาอังกฤษดีๆ จนใช้ภาษาไทยเเย่เยอะมาก ชื่นชมค่ะ

@chuenchomcraftchannel1318 · community post↗ view

Thank you P'Mike for being a part of grooming up and supporting these kids. I Hope to see more clips of you and these kids again.

@jaruwatphuritat4649 · sponsor deck↗ view

You guys are even more mature than a lot of adults. Future leaders of Thailand.

Mike Q (transcript) · thumbnail↗ view

These kids are wonderful. Their conversations, in many ways, are eye-openers for old folks like me.

@sompornputtapit4592 · community post↗ view
§R3

Clip & Shorts finder

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

[0:12] ↗"The Knowledge Is In The Air" — 15-Year-Old's Life Philosophy~30s
HookThe most important thing is to set your goals. The knowledge is in the air — it's just about how you're going to grab it.
This line was the most quoted sentiment in the comments' 'mature mindset' cluster (63.6%) — short, punchy, and quotable enough to stand alone as a motivational Short
[0:35] ↗"We're Just Normal Thai Kids" — The Confidence Speech~45s
HookWe're just a kid in Thailand, the same as all of you guys. Difference is the confidence and the courage we had to step forward.
This moment directly connects to the viral-potential theme — multiple commenters praised this exact sentiment about confidence over privilege, and it answers the 'rich kids' question in a way that resonates widely
[0:49] ↗"Stop Complaining, Delete The Gap" — 15-Year-Old Shuts Down Excuses~35s
HookInstead of complaining about that, you should use the time and focus on how to delete that gap.
Directly addresses the privilege question with a mindset answer — high tension setup, satisfying payoff, and mirrors the attitude commenters like @faifai5471 praised most
[3:50] ↗Fully Thai, Zero International School — How He Learned English~40s
HookI'm not mixed at all. I'm like fully fully Thai. The thing that makes me good at English is mostly the content that I watch.
This moment generated a dedicated comment sub-theme (36.4% language cluster) and directly answers @kfromthailand's top question — high search traffic potential from people asking 'how to learn English in Thailand'
[0:23] ↗Future Leaders Of Thailand — The Moment The Interviewer Said It~25s
HookYou guys are even more mature than a lot of adults. Future leaders of Thailand.
The phrase 'future leaders of Thailand' appears organically in multiple top comments — clipping the exact moment the creator said it creates a satisfying callback loop for social sharing
[49:01] ↗"This Is For The History Books" — A Legendary Ending~35s
HookThat was a legendary interview. I think this is for the history books.
A warm, cinematic close that reinforces the 'proud of Thailand's future' sentiment dominating 63.6% of comments — works as an emotional payoff Short to drive full-video watch-throughs
[1:15] ↗15-Year-Olds Running A Real Business In Bangkok~40s
HookWe're high school students studying in year 11, doing a business called Pai Duay.
The business origin story is inherently shareable and taps into the 'young entrepreneur' Short format that performs well — also serves as discovery content for the Pai Duay brand
"Blew Up The Internet" — The Po Pong Pai Moment~30s
HookBlew up the internet with the Po Pong Pai video.
Commenters like @thaninlokeskrawee2930 wanted this gang back repeatedly — this nostalgic callback hook teases earlier viral content and rewards loyal viewers while intriguing new ones
§08

Top comments

Explore all 88 comments →

Verbatim — the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

@ชุมพลมณีกาศ78 · positive↗ view

ลูกใครเก่งเหลือเกิน พูดภาษาอังกฤษได้คล่องแต่มีความเป็นไทยเต็มเปี่ยมยกมือไหว้ผู้ใหญ่เจ้าของร้านซ้ำแล้วซ้ำอีกสุดยอดจริงๆเด็กรุ่นใหม่คุณภาพ

Why picked: highest-liked comment in entire thread; explicitly names both the English fluency and Thai cultural respect gesture (wai) as dual praise — anchors the 36.4% language+identity cluster
@faifai547150 · positive↗ view

สิ่งที่น้องๆพูดมามันสะท้อนบางอย่างได้ดี การค้นคว้า ศึกษา ทดลองทำ ขวนขวาย ไม่ใช่การโทษนั่น โทษนี่ ฟังจากที่เคยเอาแต่ เล่นโทรศัพท์ไปวันๆ จนมาเจอเรื่องที่สนใจ จาก Tik TOK ก็ปรับเปลี่ยนทัศนคติ และปรับปรุงตัว หาความรู้เพิ่มเติม บุคคลิก แววตา การโต้ตอบกับคู่สนทนา พี่ว่าถ้าน้องไม่สะดุดอะไรไปซะก่อน เราคงได้คนรุ่นใหม่ ไฟแรง เป็นอนาคต อันสดใสของประเทศชาติแน่นอน เก่งค่ะ

Why picked: second-highest liked; most detailed behavioral analysis — traces the students' transformation from phone-addicted teens to motivated creators, giving the 63.6% mature-mindset cluster its richest supporting narrative
@chuenchomcraftchannel131847 · positive↗ view

น้องๆ นอกจากจะพูดภาษาอังกฤษดีเเล้ว ยังใช้ภาษาไทยได้ดีด้วย เดี๋ยวนี้เห็นเด็กไทยที่ใช้ภาษาอังกฤษดีๆ จนใช้ภาษาไทยเเย่เยอะมาก ชื่นชมค่ะ

Why picked: third-highest liked; only comment that explicitly contrasts these students against the broader Thai youth trend of losing Thai language proficiency — primary evidence for the 36.4% language-pride cluster's critical sub-theme
@kilanspeaks28 · positive↗ view

Wow, these Thai boys' English is impressive! And what one of them said in the video is absolutely right: you really do need passion when learning a language. I'm studying several languages myself, but maybe because I don't have that same fire, I still struggle to fully grasp them. That's why seeing teenagers in Thailand. a country where English isn't spoken much in daily life. reach this level is genuinely admirable. If you're already this good at 15, just imagine where you'll be in a few years! Cheers to our Thai neighbors, from Indonesia! 🇮🇩🤝🇹🇭

Why picked: highest-liked international comment; unique because the commenter self-identifies as an Indonesian language learner, extending the video's reach beyond Thai audience and adding cross-cultural credibility to the English fluency discussion
@theauroralightyr25 · positive↗ view

น้องสองคนใส่แว่นซ้ายมือ จาก รร สวนกุหลาบวิทยาลัย รร รัฐแท้ๆ มีรู้จักอีกหลายคนใน รร นี้ที่พูดภาษาอังกฤษเหมือนฝรั่งที่ไม่เคยเรียน รร อินเตอร์

Why picked: identifies the students' specific school (Suankularb Wittayalai — a public school) by name, lending authenticity and directly countering any assumption that fluency requires an international school fee
§08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 88 comments →

Top reply-magnet comments — where the real debate happened. 16 replies across 8 roots · max chain 3 deep · creator replied to 3%

01 · @theauroralightyr5 replies · ♥ 25↗ view

น้องสองคนใส่แว่นซ้ายมือ จาก รร สวนกุหลาบวิทยาลัย รร รัฐแท้ๆ มีรู้จักอีกหลายคนใน รร นี้ที่พูดภาษาอ��…

02 · @ชุมพลมณีกาศ3 replies · ♥ 78↗ view

ลูกใครเก่งเหลือเกิน พูดภาษาอังกฤษได้คล่องแต่มีความเป็นไทยเต็มเปี่ยมยกมือไหว้ผู้ใหญ่เจ้าของร้า…

03 · @chuenchomcraftchannel13183 replies · ♥ 47↗ view

น้องๆ นอกจากจะพูดภาษาอังกฤษดีเเล้ว ยังใช้ภาษาไทยได้ดีด้วย เดี๋ยวนี้เห็นเด็กไทยที่ใช้ภาษาอังกฤษ…

04 · @faifai54711 replies · ♥ 50↗ view

สิ่งที่น้องๆพูดมามันสะท้อนบางอย่างได้ดี การค้นคว้า ศึกษา ทดลองทำ ขวนขวาย ไม่ใช่การโทษนั่น โทษนี่ …

05 · @thaninlokeskrawee29301 replies · ♥ 15· creator replied↗ view

ชวนแก๊งนี้มาบ่อย ๆ สนุกมากกกก ❤❤❤❤ มันเท่ห์มาก

§09

More from this channel

Other featured deep dives on this channel.

อยู่ไทย vs อยู่อังกฤษ ชีวิตต่างกันแค่ไหน? | England vs Thailand: Which Is Better For Us?
№01 · travel

อยู่ไทย vs อยู่อังกฤษ ชีวิตต่างกันแค่ไหน? | England vs Thailand: Which Is Better For Us?

33k
views
1.7k
likes
5.6%
engagement
this month
ผมกลับบ้านที่อังกฤษหลังจากอยู่ไทย 4 ปี | I Finally Came Home After 4 Years
№02 · vlog

ผมกลับบ้านที่อังกฤษหลังจากอยู่ไทย 4 ปี | I Finally Came Home After 4 Years

92k
views
3.9k
likes
4.6%
engagement
this month
ร้านอาหารของผมต้องการให้คุณช่วย | My Restaurant in Thailand Needs Your Help (an update video)
№03 · personal_story

ร้านอาหารของผมต้องการให้คุณช่วย | My Restaurant in Thailand Needs Your Help (an update video)

8.9k
views
775
likes
9.5%
engagement
1 month ago
ผมกำลังจะเปิดร้านอาหารคลีนที่ประเทศไทย | Opening my first clean food restaurant in Thailand
№04 · personal_story

ผมกำลังจะเปิดร้านอาหารคลีนที่ประเทศไทย | Opening my first clean food restaurant in Thailand

20k
views
1.7k
likes
9.9%
engagement
1 month ago
ชายชาวอเมริกันเปิดร้าน Texan BBQ ที่ไทย| American Man Brought Real Texan BBQ to Thailand
№05 · interview

ชายชาวอเมริกันเปิดร้าน Texan BBQ ที่ไทย| American Man Brought Real Texan BBQ to Thailand

44k
views
1.5k
likes
3.6%
engagement
2 months ago
This Australian Man Opened a Thai Restaurant in Hong Kong
№06 · interview

This Australian Man Opened a Thai Restaurant in Hong Kong

31k
views
1.4k
likes
4.7%
engagement
3 months ago
He Left Everything in The Netherlands For This Life in Thailand
№07 · interview

He Left Everything in The Netherlands For This Life in Thailand

12k
views
688
likes
6.0%
engagement
3 months ago
First Time Flying in a Private Plane in Thailand
№08 · travel

First Time Flying in a Private Plane in Thailand

8.9k
views
516
likes
6.1%
engagement
3 months ago
What Do Singaporeans Think About Thailand?
№09 · culture_comparison

What Do Singaporeans Think About Thailand?

39k
views
1.5k
likes
4.0%
engagement
3 months ago
Exploring a Real Thai Town in Hong Kong
№10 · travel

Exploring a Real Thai Town in Hong Kong

16k
views
985
likes
6.4%
engagement
4 months ago
My British-Chinese Family Learn Thai For The First Time
№11 · language

My British-Chinese Family Learn Thai For The First Time

23k
views
1.6k
likes
7.6%
engagement
4 months ago
My British-Chinese Family Comes to Visit Me in Thailand
№12 · vlog

My British-Chinese Family Comes to Visit Me in Thailand

99k
views
5.7k
likes
6.2%
engagement
4 months ago
First Time Going to a Wedding in Thailand
№13 · vlog

First Time Going to a Wedding in Thailand

91k
views
3.2k
likes
3.6%
engagement
4 months ago
My British-Chinese Sister Comes to Visit Me in Thailand
№14 · vlog

My British-Chinese Sister Comes to Visit Me in Thailand

123k
views
7.0k
likes
6.1%
engagement
4 months ago
Why This Foreigner Opened a Car Repair Shop in Thailand
№15 · interview

Why This Foreigner Opened a Car Repair Shop in Thailand

27k
views
1.4k
likes
5.3%
engagement
5 months ago
3 Years Living in Thailand as a Foreigner Changed My Life Forever
№16 · personal_story

3 Years Living in Thailand as a Foreigner Changed My Life Forever

62k
views
3.6k
likes
6.1%
engagement
5 months ago
How This Digital Nomad Makes $33,000/Month Living in Thailand
№17 · interview

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

14k
views
604
likes
4.6%
engagement
6 months ago
He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand
№18 · interview

He Left Everything in New Zealand to Start Over in Thailand

20k
views
1.2k
likes
6.0%
engagement
6 months ago
Is it better to live in the UK compared to Thailand?
№19 · culture_comparison

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

22k
views
961
likes
4.7%
engagement
6 months ago
Learning Thai Changed My Life in Thailand
№20 · interview

Learning Thai Changed My Life in Thailand

20k
views
1.3k
likes
7.2%
engagement
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

63k
views
3.2k
likes
5.4%
engagement
7 months ago
How This British Man Makes $35,000/Month Living in Thailand
№22 · interview

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

20k
views
787
likes
4.2%
engagement
7 months ago
He Left Everything Behind in Korea to Start Over in Thailand
№23 · culture_comparison

He Left Everything Behind in Korea to Start Over in Thailand

34k
views
1.7k
likes
5.2%
engagement
7 months ago
British Man Builds Million-Dollar Business in Thailand
№24 · interview

British Man Builds Million-Dollar Business in Thailand

37k
views
1.6k
likes
4.6%
engagement
8 months ago
Struggles of Opening a Business in Thailand as a Foreigner
№25 · interview

Struggles of Opening a Business in Thailand as a Foreigner

16k
views
850
likes
5.5%
engagement
8 months ago
Surprising My Editor with the Best Day Ever!
№26 · vlog

Surprising My Editor with the Best Day Ever!

6.2k
views
460
likes
8.1%
engagement
10 months ago
Thai YouTuber Builds a 7-Figure Brand by 28
№27 · interview

Thai YouTuber Builds a 7-Figure Brand by 28

5.4k
views
295
likes
5.6%
engagement
11 months ago
The Truth Behind Being a YouTuber in Thailand
№28 · personal_story

The Truth Behind Being a YouTuber in Thailand

16k
views
1.5k
likes
10.4%
engagement
11 months ago
Japanese in Thailand – What’s Their Life Really Like?
№29 · culture_comparison

Japanese in Thailand – What’s Their Life Really Like?

21k
views
1.4k
likes
7.2%
engagement
1 year ago
The Reasons Why These Foreigners Help Slums in Thailand
№30 · interview

The Reasons Why These Foreigners Help Slums in Thailand

4.8k
views
376
likes
8.4%
engagement
1 year ago
Italian Investor Chooses Thailand Over Italy
№31 · interview

Italian Investor Chooses Thailand Over Italy

14k
views
956
likes
7.5%
engagement
1 year ago
I want to stay in Thailand forever (Q&A)
№32 · vlog

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

42k
views
2.6k
likes
6.8%
engagement
1 year ago
Why So Many Foreigners Join This University in Thailand
№33 · interview

Why So Many Foreigners Join This University in Thailand

152k
views
4.3k
likes
3.0%
engagement
1 year ago
This Man is Making Thailand Better
№34 · interview

This Man is Making Thailand Better

21k
views
1.2k
likes
6.3%
engagement
1 year ago
Why the World Trains Muay Thai in Thailand
№35 · vlog

Why the World Trains Muay Thai in Thailand

24k
views
1.2k
likes
5.1%
engagement
1 year ago
18 year old girl moved to Thailand to train Muay Thai
№36 · personal_story

18 year old girl moved to Thailand to train Muay Thai

111k
views
4.4k
likes
4.2%
engagement
1 year ago
Do Foreigners find Thailand cheap?
№37 · culture_comparison

Do Foreigners find Thailand cheap?

33k
views
1.4k
likes
4.5%
engagement
1 year ago
Should foreigners learn Thai?
№38 · culture_comparison

Should foreigners learn Thai?

20k
views
1.3k
likes
7.5%
engagement
1 year ago
Isaan Kid turned International Model
№39 · interview

Isaan Kid turned International Model

128k
views
4.6k
likes
3.9%
engagement
1 year ago
Experiencing an Earthquake in Thailand
№40 · vlog

Experiencing an Earthquake in Thailand

40k
views
1.9k
likes
4.8%
engagement
1 year ago
Making Merit in Mahachai
№41 · travel

Making Merit in Mahachai

15k
views
1.0k
likes
7.5%
engagement
1 year ago
16-Year-Old Thai Student Makes 450,000 Baht Per Month
№42 · interview

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

365k
views
10.0k
likes
2.9%
engagement
1 year ago
Is it better to live in America than in Thailand?
№43 · culture_comparison

Is it better to live in America than in Thailand?

40k
views
1.5k
likes
4.2%
engagement
1 year ago
Thai Entrepreneur Quits Pharmacy for Social Media
№44 · interview

Thai Entrepreneur Quits Pharmacy for Social Media

9.6k
views
649
likes
7.3%
engagement
1 year ago
British Man wants to be Thai
№45 · interview

British Man wants to be Thai

108k
views
6.6k
likes
6.9%
engagement
1 year ago
Thai Food vs German Food
№46 · culture_comparison

Thai Food vs German Food

22k
views
1.0k
likes
5.0%
engagement
1 year ago
British girl speaks Fluent Thai
№47 · interview

British girl speaks Fluent Thai

46k
views
2.6k
likes
6.0%
engagement
1 year ago
Is Thailand considered a third-world country?
№48 · interview

Is Thailand considered a third-world country?

154k
views
4.1k
likes
2.9%
engagement
1 year ago
Foreigner living in Koh Lanta with Thai Husband
№49 · interview

Foreigner living in Koh Lanta with Thai Husband

97k
views
2.3k
likes
2.5%
engagement
1 year ago
First time making Thai food
№50 · vlog

First time making Thai food

13k
views
1.1k
likes
9.4%
engagement
1 year ago
Is Thailand Actually Dangerous?
№51 · travel

Is Thailand Actually Dangerous?

71k
views
3.0k
likes
4.9%
engagement
1 year ago
The Cheapest Accommodation in Thailand
№52 · travel

The Cheapest Accommodation in Thailand

18k
views
701
likes
4.1%
engagement
1 year ago
What surprises foreigners most about Thailand?
№53 · interview

What surprises foreigners most about Thailand?

43k
views
2.3k
likes
5.6%
engagement
1 year ago
Why did this Hong Kong girl move to Thailand?
№54 · interview

Why did this Hong Kong girl move to Thailand?

44k
views
2.2k
likes
5.7%
engagement
1 year ago
Life in England compared to Thailand
№55 · culture_comparison

Life in England compared to Thailand

14k
views
646
likes
5.3%
engagement
1 year ago
Thai-Nigerian people sharing about life in Thailand
№56 · culture_comparison

Thai-Nigerian people sharing about life in Thailand

37k
views
1.6k
likes
4.4%
engagement
1 year ago
Are Thais who grew up in West different from local Thais?
№57 · culture_comparison

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

46k
views
1.8k
likes
4.4%
engagement
1 year ago
Thailand vs Vietnam
№58 · vlog

Thailand vs Vietnam

11k
views
749
likes
7.4%
engagement
1 year ago
I got scammed...
№59 · personal_story

I got scammed...

13k
views
841
likes
7.9%
engagement
1 year ago
Why we love Thailand so much
№60 · culture_comparison

Why we love Thailand so much

73k
views
4.6k
likes
7.0%
engagement
1 year ago
Asking Chulalongkorn students their dream job?
№61 · interview

Asking Chulalongkorn students their dream job?

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

นักมวยน้อย เริ่มชกตอน 3 ขวบในอีสาน @reminariinamuaythai

7.7k
views
489
likes
6.6%
engagement
1 year ago
First time in Nong Khai Isaan
№63 · travel

First time in Nong Khai Isaan

34k
views
2.1k
likes
6.6%
engagement
1 year ago
10 hour sleeper train to Isaan
№64 · travel

10 hour sleeper train to Isaan

17k
views
1.1k
likes
7.4%
engagement
1 year ago
What do foreigners think of Thailand?
№65 · culture_comparison

What do foreigners think of Thailand?

178k
views
5.2k
likes
3.1%
engagement
1 year ago
How to speak fluent English as a Thai person
№66 · language

How to speak fluent English as a Thai person

6.6k
views
302
likes
4.7%
engagement
1 year ago
Why this Korean loves Thailand more than Korea
№67 · interview

Why this Korean loves Thailand more than Korea

180k
views
7.5k
likes
4.4%
engagement
1 year ago
Differences between studying in Thailand vs abroad?
№68 · interview

Differences between studying in Thailand vs abroad?

19k
views
669
likes
3.7%
engagement
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

400k
views
16k
likes
4.1%
engagement
1 year ago
First Thai Isaan Burberry Model Living in the UK
№70 · interview

First Thai Isaan Burberry Model Living in the UK

23k
views
1.1k
likes
5.1%
engagement
2 years ago
One Day in Ayutthaya Thailand
№71 · travel

One Day in Ayutthaya Thailand

20k
views
1.3k
likes
6.9%
engagement
2 years ago
Interviewing Famous Transgender Ladyboy Chinni Official
№72 · interview

Interviewing Famous Transgender Ladyboy Chinni Official

21k
views
398
likes
2.1%
engagement
2 years ago
Being a Black Woman in Thailand 🇹🇭
№73 · interview

Being a Black Woman in Thailand 🇹🇭

17k
views
1.0k
likes
6.4%
engagement
2 years ago
Prison in Thailand as an American
№74 · personal_story

Prison in Thailand as an American

16k
views
241
likes
1.7%
engagement
2 years ago
How Much Do You Spend In Thailand? 🇹🇭
№75 · culture_comparison

How Much Do You Spend In Thailand? 🇹🇭

7.4k
views
194
likes
2.7%
engagement
2 years ago
Why I stopped editing for Nigel Ng (Uncle Roger)
№76 · personal_story

Why I stopped editing for Nigel Ng (Uncle Roger)

253k
views
3.2k
likes
1.5%
engagement
5 years ago
Why YOU Should Study Abroad
№77 · personal_story

Why YOU Should Study Abroad

3.2k
views
110
likes
4.1%
engagement
7 years ago

AI CHAT

Chat about this video

Ask anything about the content, what the audience said, or how this video performed. Sign in to get started.