Video deep dive · interview2026-02-28 · 3 months ago

This Australian Man Opened a Thai Restaurant in Hong Kong

The Brief

This is a cultural-conversion video masquerading as a restaurant profile — the real story is a non-Thai man who became more Thai than most Thais, then exported the culture to Hong Kong at scale.

73.2% of comments focus on cultural admiration, and the top comment (35 likes) thanks Adam and Mike by name in Thai for 'making Thai food famous across the world' — the audience isn't reviewing a meal, they're saluting an ambassador.

The interview lets Adam narrate his own 20-year obsession in his own words while Mike conducts the entire conversation in Thai — the bilingual format performs the thesis rather than just stating it.

Watch outThe comment section is almost entirely Thai-speaking fans of the hosts; with only 71 comments and 26.8% pure emoji reactions, the audience is shallow and loyal rather than broad and curious — organic discovery potential is untested.

If a foreigner running three Hong Kong locations of Thai food is now the face Thai audiences choose to celebrate their own cuisine, what does that say about who gets to own a culture's global story?

Summary

The video is an interview-style conversation between the host (Mike) and Adam, an Australian chef based in Hong Kong, filmed at Adam's Thai restaurant. Adam recounts his two-decade journey from first encountering Thai food in Sydney at age 17, to working at top Thai restaurants in Australia and London, to living and cooking in Bangkok, and ultimately opening his own Thai restaurant group called Samsen in Hong Kong. The conversation covers his culinary path, how he learned to speak Thai fluently, his decision to leave Thailand for Sydney and then relocate to Hong Kong, and details about the Samsen restaurant group today.

  • ·Adam is an Australian chef who has been connected to Thailand and Thai food for approximately 20 years.
  • ·He first encountered Thai food at age 17 while starting his culinary career in Sydney, introduced to it by Thai colleagues.
  • ·He pursued Thai cuisine by seeking out and working at the best Thai restaurants in Australia, then in London.
  • ·In London he worked with a couple named Dylan (Australian) and Bo (Thai), who were also passionate about Thai food.
  • ·Dylan and Bo moved to Bangkok and opened a Thai restaurant called Bo.Lan; they invited Adam to join as sous chef.
  • ·Adam moved to Thailand at approximately age 22, describing it as his long-held goal and not frightening at all.
  • ·He describes developing an obsession with Thai food and Thai people, wanting to immerse himself as fully as possible.
  • ·Living and working in Bangkok is where Adam learned to speak the Thai language.
  • ·After 5–6 years in Thailand, Adam felt homesick and returned to Sydney to spend time with his family.
  • ·He found Sydney too slow-paced compared to Bangkok and describes the return as a mistake in terms of his career momentum.
  • ·He was headhunted by a major Hong Kong hospitality group and accepted the opportunity partly to leave Sydney.
  • ·In Hong Kong he conceptualized and opened a restaurant called Chachawan for that group, focused on Isaan food: grilled meats, grilled seafood, and salads.
  • ·After about a year and a half at Chachawan, he eventually moved on and later established his own restaurant group.
  • ·The restaurant group is called Samsen (samsenhk.com) and currently operates three outlets in Hong Kong: Sheung Wan, Central, and Wan Chai.
  • ·Adam describes the food at Samsen as authentic Thai food, specifically referencing eastern/Isaan-style dishes such as som tam, laab, and tom yum as representative of 'Thai Thai' cooking.
  • ·During the visit, Adam and Mike converse substantially in Thai with each other, with the host noting it as notable that a foreigner speaks Thai so fluently.
  • ·A dish of pad kra pao (stir-fried basil with beef, with fried egg) is featured and described as a large portion; the beef is identified as Australian wagyu.
  • ·For bookings, Samsen requires reservations only for groups of six or more; smaller groups are welcome to walk in.
  • ·The host concludes by tasting the food and remarking that it tastes authentically Thai.
Views
31k
30,797 total
Likes
1.4k
4.45% like rate
Comments
71
0.23% comment rate
This Australian Man Opened a Thai Restaurant in Hong Kong
Comment deep diveExplore all 71 comments →filter by sentiment · theme · superfans · questions · what to fix
§01

Summary

Adam, an Australian chef who spent his 20s living and cooking in Bangkok, sits down with Mike in Hong Kong to walk through how a 20-year obsession with Thai food led him to open Samsen, a now three-location Thai restaurant group across Sheung Wan, Central, and Wan Chai. The conversation moves between English and Thai throughout, with both men trading phrases and jokes in Thai as naturally as in English, which becomes a recurring point of delight. The visit ends with a meal at the restaurant, where the food — pad kra pao wagyu, duck laab — is tasted and discussed in the same bilingual register the whole video sustains.

Content pillars
Thai food cultureexpat entrepreneurshiplanguage immersionHong Kong dining
§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 4.68pp
4.68% this video
0.00% avg
Like rate
4.45%
of viewers tap like
Comment rate
0.23%
of viewers leave a comment
§03

The hook

medium

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

[0:00] You all felt like they were like what the heck is going on? [0:06] Been going to Thailand for 20 years. Was it scary moving to Thailand? Absolutely not. It's all I wanted to do. I developed almost an obsession. Just wanted to surround myself in any way I possibly could with Thai food and Thai people.

Assessment

The cold-open reaction clip creates mild intrigue but the context is missing — viewers don't know who is speaking or why their reaction matters. The obsession line is the strongest beat but arrives too late and is buried in a rambling montage without visual anchoring to Hong Kong or the restaurant payoff.

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

An Australian chef spent 20 years mastering Thai food — in Bangkok, London, and Sydney. Then he moved to Hong Kong and built one of the city's most popular Thai restaurants. Here's how.

WhyFront-loads the full journey arc and the surprising Hong Kong destination, matching what 73% of commenters found compelling.

Rewrite №2 · experimentertechnique: add_specificity

I sat down with an Aussie chef who spent his 20s cooking in Bangkok, learned fluent Thai, then opened a hit Thai restaurant — in Hong Kong. What happens when you eat there?

WhyPositions the visit as a live test of authenticity, directly mirroring comments praising the food's genuine Thai taste and the restaurant's packed queues.

Rewrite №3 · contrariantechnique: flip_declarative_to_stake

The best Thai food in Hong Kong isn't made by a Thai chef. It's made by an Australian who became obsessed with Thailand at 17 and never looked back.

WhyThe subverted expectation — foreigner making authentic Thai food — is exactly the tension driving 73% of comment discussion and the top-liked comment calling him 'essentially Thai'.

§03c

Title gap & rewrites

Gap 28 · undersell

The title accurately describes the surface premise but misses the emotionally charged elements commenters actually responded to: Adam's 20-year obsession with Thai culture, his fluent Thai language ability, and the fact that Samsen is a well-known, queue-forming restaurant group with three outlets — all of which drove the dominant 73.2% 'appreciation for Thai culture promotion' discussion cluster.

What commenters actually quoted
  • · รักเมืองไทย / loves Thailand (8+ mentions)
  • · พูดไทย / speaks Thai (5+ mentions)
  • · Samsen (4 mentions)
  • · ประสบความสำเร็จ / successful (3 mentions)
  • · อาหารไทยแท้ / authentic Thai food (3 mentions)
Anti-patterns in current title
  • generic emotion
  • implied universal
Thumbnail recommendation

Show Adam speaking Thai to Mike mid-conversation with a Thai dish in the foreground and a packed restaurant visible behind them — comment evidence confirms the language surprise and queue-worthy food are the two highest-engagement hooks.

3 title rewrites
  1. 01 · The Aussie Who Speaks Thai & Runs HK's Most Loved Thai Restaurant
    specificity
    Combines the two most-praised elements in comments — Thai language fluency and restaurant success — directly echoing 'พูดไทยชัดมาก' and 'Samsen is one of the best Thai food in HK'.
  2. 02 · 20 Years Obsessed With Thailand — Now He Feeds Hong Kong
    curiosity gap
    The '20 years' specificity from the transcript mirrors the top comment's admiration for his dedication, and 'feeds Hong Kong' signals the payoff without giving it all away.
  3. 03 · Fluent in Thai, Born in Australia, Cooking in Hong Kong
    contrarian
    The three-way identity contrast mirrors comment #4's delight — 'a Hong Konger and a foreigner speaking Thai to each other' — and comment #5's 'He is essentially Thai'.
§04

What viewers said

Explore all →

71 comments analysed and clustered into themes.

Sentiment breakdown

Mostly positive

positive 89%neutral 9%negative 3%
Real breakdown over 70 of 70 root comments — every comment analysed, not sampled.

Viewers were overwhelmingly moved by the spectacle of two foreigners conversing naturally in Thai, with one commenter calling it 'surreal' and another saying Adam 'เป็นฝรั่งแต่ชอบอาหารไทย' (is a Westerner but loves Thai food). The recurring phrase across Thai-language comments was some variation of 'ขอบคุณที่รักเมืองไทย' (thank you for loving Thailand), reflecting deep national pride. Adam's authenticity — described as 'จิตใจร่าเริงขยัน' (cheerful and hardworking) — generated genuine warmth rather than performative celebrity appreciation.

Top comment themes

8 clusters surfaced

  1. 01
    Admiration for Adam and Mike's love of Thai culture and language (~20 mentions)
  2. 02
    Pride that Thai food/culture is being promoted globally by foreigners (~15 mentions)
  3. 03
    Surprise and delight at two foreigners speaking Thai to each other (~8 mentions)
  4. 04
    Samsen restaurant recognition and quality endorsement from HK locals/visitors (~6 mentions)
  5. 05
    Adam's personal journey and character praised as genuine and dedicated (~6 mentions)
§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.

+78Warmly receivedmood · −100 to +100
Mood (raw)
+86
before channel-norm adjust
Polarization
0.38
0 = uniform, 1 = spread
Divisiveness
0.06
is the room split?
Warmth
69%
warm / emotional tone
Analysed
70
comments (confidence)
Churn signalnormal1 comments flagged dissatisfaction (1.4% — channel norm 4.0%)
Emotional tone breakdown
  1. Warm
    66%
  2. Curious
    10%
  3. Excited
    7%
  4. Funny
    6%
  5. Sarcastic
    4%
  6. Neutral
    3%
  7. Nostalgic
    3%
  8. Concerned
    1%

Net Sentiment Score over 70 analysed comments; headline adjusted toward the channel norm (Bayesian, C=20). Polarization = normalised entropy. Comment-derived — not YouTube analytics.

§04a

Audience composition

★ algo-friendly · +86

Who actually showed up in the comments — psychographic, topical and language mix. Computed deterministically from 70 labeled root comments.

Identity signals

Who they are

  1. Devoted fan
    7%
  2. Sharing a story
    3%
  3. Diaspora
    1%
  4. Expat / abroad
    1%
  5. Found inspiring
    1%
  6. Relating personally
    1%
  7. Thai-language speakers
    1%
Topic mix

What they talked about

  1. Other
    36%
  2. Food
    23%
  3. restaurant
    19%
  4. Culture
    13%
  5. Language
    7%
  6. Expat life
    1%
  7. sport
    1%
Language mix

In which languages

  1. English
    90%
  2. Chinese
    10%
Algorithm signal · proxy

How YouTube’s satisfaction model likely reads this

★ algo-friendly · +86

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
89%
share of comments labelled positive
Curiosity share
79%
curious / nostalgic / warm tones
Critical share
4%
critical / sarcastic tones
Net satisfaction
+86
pos% − crit%, −100..+100
§04b

Moments that landed

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

0:12Adam describes developing 'almost an obsession' with Thai food and people — the line that frames his entire story and hooks the Thai-speaking audience immediately.1:11Mike flags the central curiosity: why can this foreigner speak Thai so fluently — the question the audience most wants answered.2:29Adam name-drops Bo.Lan founders Dylan and Bo and shouts them out directly to camera, grounding his credibility in a real Bangkok fine-dining landmark.3:19Mike quips 'Me too, I speak Thai, man' — laughter follows; the moment crystallises the bilingual warmth that drives 73% of the comment sentiment.4:02Adam calls moving back to Sydney 'the biggest mistake I could have made' — a self-deprecating line that lands as honest and earns audience trust.4:34Adam names Chachawan as his first Hong Kong concept 12 years ago, establishing the depth of his Hong Kong history before Samsen.18:35Mid-meal Thai food taxonomy — som tam, laab, tom yum labelled as 'Thai Thai' — the moment where culinary credibility is demonstrated rather than claimed.19:14Mike's verdict 'It tastes like Thai' is the closing quality stamp; simple, bilingual, and the line the audience needed to hear.
§04c

What viewers reacted to

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

Admiration for Adam and Mike's love of Thai culture and language (~20 mentions)

The moment the interviewer flags Adam's fluent Thai at 1:11 and Adam explains his 20-year obsession at 3:03–3:12, followed by Mike declaring 'Me too, I speak Thai' at 3:19, crystallised the cultural devotion that dominated Thai-language praise comments.

1:113:033:19
Pride that Thai food/culture is being promoted globally by foreigners (~15 mentions)

Adam's statement that Thailand was 'the holy grail' of his career and the reveal that he opened an Isaan-focused restaurant in Hong Kong 12 years ago triggered repeated Thai-language comments thanking him for spreading Thai culture worldwide.

0:064:3118:29
Surprise and delight at two foreigners speaking Thai to each other (~8 mentions)

The Thai food ordering exchange at 18:45–19:00 where both Adam and Mike banter naturally in Thai — including 'kin mai dai khrap' and 'klap ban' — is the moment that produced comments calling the scene 'surreal' and 'charming.'

3:1918:4518:57
Samsen restaurant recognition and quality endorsement from HK locals/visitors (~6 mentions)

The reveal of three Samsen outlets across Sheung Wan, Central and Wan Chai at 19:19, combined with Adam's statement 'it tastes like Thai' at 19:14, prompted Hong Kong-based viewers to confirm the restaurant's reputation and authentic flavour in the comments.

4:3119:1919:14
Adam's personal journey and character praised as genuine and dedicated (~6 mentions)

Adam's candid admission that returning to Sydney was 'the biggest mistake I could have made' at 4:02 and his origin story of falling in love with Thai food at 17 in Sydney at 1:39 generated comments praising his character as sincere, driven and admirable.

1:392:184:02
Positive short emoji/single-word reactions of support (~19 mentions)

No specific timestamp cluster; these comments are distributed responses to the overall warm tone of the video rather than reactions to a single identifiable moment.

§05

Friction points

All criticism →

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

Camera movement during the restaurant visit is described as excessive and disorienting — panning and switching too frequentlysev 3/5 · 1 mentions
要改善拍片.唔好轉鏡頭轉嚟轉去 睇到頭都暈埋😢😢
FixBefore: handheld whip-pans between subjects during conversation. After: lock off camera on a two-shot for dialogue segments; reserve movement for b-roll food shots only
The restaurant name 'Samsen' origin is never explained despite being the subject of the video title and visible throughout — creates an unanswered audience questionsev 2/5 · 1 mentions
อยากถามคุณอดัม ทำไมตั้งชื่อร้านว่าสามเสนครับ ได้มายังไงครับ
FixBefore: no explanation of name given. After: add a 30-second exchange asking Adam directly why he chose the name Samsen; easy insert during the sit-down portion
No chapters or timestamps provided for a ~19-minute video, making it hard for viewers to navigate to food segments or the Thai-language conversation moments they specifically came forsev 2/5 · 0 mentions
ดูเพลินมากครับ สนุกดี
FixBefore: no chapters. After: add YouTube chapter markers at minimum: 0:00 Intro, ~1:10 Adam's Thai language story, ~4:30 Move to Hong Kong, ~18:00 Food tasting and Thai conversation
Thai-language-heavy content alienates English-speaking viewers who otherwise appreciate the food and guest storysev 2/5 · 1 mentions
The Thai language is so obnoxious BUT thier food is excellent.↗ view
FixBefore: extended Thai dialogue segments with no subtitles visible to English audience. After: add English subtitle overlay on all Thai-language exchanges so non-Thai viewers stay engaged rather than tuning out
The earlier restaurant Chachawan — a significant part of Adam's Hong Kong story — is mentioned only briefly and not explored, leaving audience with unanswered backstory questionssev 1/5 · 1 mentions
Chachawan! Great place you had there Adam. Me and my bro sat at the bar stools and you were cooking everything for us.↗ view
FixBefore: Chachawan mentioned at ~4:34 and dropped. After: add one follow-up question — 'What happened to Chachawan and how did that lead to Samsen?' — to close the narrative gap
The Bo.Lan restaurant couple (Dylan and Bo) are referenced with a casual 'Hello Dylan and Bo if you're watching' but never identified fully, potentially confusing viewers unfamiliar with the Bangkok fine-dining worldsev 1/5 · 0 mentions
name of Dylan and Bo. Hello Dylan and Bo if you're watching.
FixBefore: no on-screen text identifying Bo.Lan. After: add a lower-third text card 'Bo.Lan — award-winning Bangkok Thai restaurant' when the name is first mentioned
§Sp

Sponsor fit

Niche play only · 48/100

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 or discount codes, and zero purchase-referral behaviour is visible in the 71 comments. However, 73.2% of comments express deep cultural loyalty and admiration for Adam's Thai food mission, and one commenter (@pats.5941) independently verifies the restaurant is always packed with queues — indicating a highly action-oriented, dining-motivated audience that will act on food and travel recommendations. Ad tolerance is moderate: the audience is emotionally engaged but almost entirely Thai-language and Thai-diaspora, meaning English-language sponsor reads will land on a narrow slice of viewers.

Integration rate
$550–$850
60-90s mid-roll
Dedicated video
$900–$1,350
full sponsored video
Basis: This video has about 30,800 views. Using a standard creator-sponsorship benchmark of $25 per 1,000 views (brands pay a flat fee for creator reads, which outperform regular ads), the starting point is roughly $770. The audience engagement rate of 4.7% is above average for this size (most channels sit around 2-3%), and 73.2% of commenters show deep cultural loyalty — both factors push the rate slightly higher via a 1.1x engagement multiplier. However, the audience is predominantly Thai-language, which limits the pool of brands willing to pay a premium, applying a modest 0.9x niche-scarcity adjustment since most big sponsors need English-dominant audiences. The result is a mid-point of roughly $700 for an integrated read, with a dedicated video worth about $1,100. These are honest floors — if the channel grows its English-language commenter share, rates should be revisited upward.
Brands to pitch
AiraloTravel eSIMAiralo is the #1 travel-niche YouTube sponsor across Asia-travel creators; this audience spans Thai diaspora in Hong Kong, Thailand, and Australia — all cross-border travellers. Comment #4 (@phanthaisong3628) self-identifies as Pattaya-based watching Hong Kong content, confirming multi-country movement in the audience.
WiseInternational money transferThe video's core story is an expat running a multi-outlet restaurant business across currency borders (AUD/HKD/THB). Wise sponsors heavily in expat-finance and food-travel YouTube; comment @Pเสวตชาแนล discusses the economic advantages of Hong Kong vs Thailand, signalling an audience that thinks about cross-border money.
italkiLanguage learning73.2% of comments centre on admiration for Thai language fluency; @liam_dawson (2 likes) explicitly calls the Thai-language conversation 'good study material and motivating' — a direct unprompted language-learning signal. italki sponsors language-immersion and expat YouTube consistently.
BabbelLanguage learningSame 73.2% language-admiration cluster supports this; @Punpun-life comments 'seeing two foreigners speaking thai to one another is just surreal' — the language-learning hook is the emotional core of the video, making Babbel's Thai-course offering directly relevant.
KlookAsia travel experiencesKlook is the dominant Asia-Pacific activity-booking sponsor on YouTube channels covering Hong Kong and Thailand; @leona9315 explicitly says she normally visits Hong Kong for dim sum but now wants to try the restaurant — a tourism-conversion moment Klook's activity-booking platform directly serves.
HolaflyTravel eSIMHolafly sponsors Asia-based travel creators as a direct Airalo competitor; the Thai-diaspora + HK-expat audience is the exact cross-border traveller profile Holafly targets in its YouTube sponsorship campaigns.
SquarespaceWebsite builderAdam's restaurant group (samsenhk.com) is mentioned by name in the video at 19:26 and the host directs viewers to the website; small-business/restaurant operators are a known Squarespace target segment, and the audience includes aspiring restaurateurs (@kungonsa jokes about applying for a job). Squarespace sponsors across food and lifestyle YouTube.
Avoid
  • Alcohol / beer brands@pjakkie8836 specifically praises Mike for not drinking alcohol — signalling audience visibility around non-drinking; alcohol brands risk alienating the Thai Buddhist cultural core of the 73.2% appreciation segment.
  • Fast food / low-quality food deliveryThe entire audience is invested in authentic, high-craft Thai cuisine; a fast-food or generic delivery app sponsor would read as a direct insult to the video's cultural thesis and generate negative comment sentiment.
  • Gambling / betting appsMajority-Thai audience with Buddhist cultural values; gambling sponsors carry legal and reputational risk in Thai-language content and would likely trigger backlash from the 73.2% culturally invested commenter base.
How to integrate

Mid-roll integration (placed after the emotional peak of Adam's Thai language exchange at ~3:20) is recommended — this audience is loyal enough to watch past mid-point and the language/culture enthusiasm will carry goodwill into a sponsor read from a travel or language-learning brand.

Brand safety
Toxicity
Clean — zero hate speech, slurs, or hostile exchanges detected across all 71 comments; one mildly dismissive comment (@CerroZimm: 'The Thai language is so obnoxious') is the only negative note and received zero likes.
Controversy
None detected — no FTC/disclosure flags, no strike-risk content, no political controversy; one irrelevant troll comment (@Jinke888) received zero engagement and poses no risk.
Audience conduct
Highly on-topic: approximately 90%+ of comments address the video's Thai food/culture/language themes directly; troll and spam rate is effectively 1-2 comments out of 71 (~1.4%).
Sponsor evidence quotes
I like when you speak thai with thai speakers very good study material, and motivating. 🙏
Unprompted language-learning intent signal — direct fit for italki or Babbel sponsorship pitch↗ view
พึ่งรู้ว่าเจ้าของร้านสามเสนเป็นฝรั่ง พูดไทยชัดมากๆด้วย อร่อยมากๆครับร้านนี้ ลูกค้าเยอะมากๆตลอด ต้องไปรอคิว
Independent customer verification of restaurant quality and queuing demand — proves audience takes real-world dining action from content↗ view
ปกติไปฺฮ่องกง กินแต่ติ่มซำ​😂 วันหลังไปลอง
Viewer signals intent to visit Hong Kong and try the restaurant — demonstrates travel-to-dining conversion behaviour relevant to Klook or Airalo↗ view
Samsen is one of the best Thai food in HK
English-language organic brand endorsement from a Hong Kong viewer — confirms cross-cultural reach beyond Thai diaspora↗ view
Hong Konger here. I can confirm that Samsen is a very well-known Thai restaurant group in Hong Kong. Delicious too.
Local HK audience member independently validates the restaurant's reputation — signals trust transfer that benefits any associated sponsor↗ view
Algorithm read · what to do next 14 days

Strong Performer · score 74/100

high
The next 14 days
  1. Day 1 (0-24h)
    Pin a bilingual (Thai + English) comment responding to @Natie_987's top-liked comment (35 likes, thanking Adam and Mike for promoting Thai culture) — write the reply in Thai and tag Adam's restaurant Instagram/account to trigger a cross-audience notification.
    73.2% of the engaged audience is Thai-language; a pinned Thai-language reply from the creator signals community belonging and boosts comment interaction rate, which YouTube reads as satisfaction signal within the first 24-hour ranking window.
    WatchComment reply engagement rate and whether Adam's account reshares — monitor for a secondary spike in views from his HK audience within 48 hours.
  2. Day 2-3
    Add 5-8 chapter markers to the video retroactively (e.g. '0:00 Intro', '1:11 How did a foreigner learn Thai?', '3:43 Why leave Thailand for Hong Kong?', '4:31 Opening Chachawan', '18:29 Tasting authentic Isaan food', '19:16 Where to find Samsen HK') and update the description with the samsenhk.com URL and Thai-language keywords (อาหารไทย, ฮ่องกง, เชฟฝรั่งพูดไทย).
    Zero chapters currently exist — adding them opens the YouTube Search clips surface and gives the algorithm semantic anchors; the Thai keywords match the exact language 73.2% of commenters are already using.
    WatchClick-through rate on chapter segments in YouTube Studio analytics and any new search impression sources appearing in the Traffic Sources report.
  3. Day 4-7
    Cut a 60-second vertical Shorts clip of the Thai-language exchange between Mike and Adam at [1:11]-[3:19] (the 'how did a foreigner learn Thai' segment), caption it bilingually, and post it as a standalone Short with the hook text 'An Australian chef who speaks better Thai than most Thais 🇹🇭' — tag the Samsen HK account.
    @liam_dawson called this exact segment 'good study material and motivating' and @Punpun-life called it 'surreal' — the moment has standalone virality for the Thai-language learning community, which is an active Shorts discovery segment; Shorts can funnel new subscribers back to the long-form video.
    WatchShorts view count at 72 hours and subscriber conversion rate (new subscribers attributed to the Short in YouTube Studio).
  4. Day 7-14
    Reach out to Adam (Samsen HK) for a story or post reshare of the video on his restaurant's social channels, and post a community tab poll in Thai asking 'What Thai dish do you want to see Adam cook next?' with 4 options drawn from dishes mentioned in comments (pad kra pao, som tam, laab, tom yum — all referenced in transcript at [18:29]-[18:52]).
    @qcute-tm8wp, @Gmmjs, @Maymazzie, and @pats.5941 all reference specific dishes or the restaurant's busy queue — there is latent demand for a follow-up cooking/recipe episode; the community poll generates algorithmic engagement signals and seeds the next video's topic with built-in audience demand.
    WatchCommunity tab poll response volume and any traffic spike traceable to Samsen HK's social reshare in the Traffic Sources report.
Why it could lift
  • +73.2% of comments express deep cultural appreciation and emotional investment — high positive sentiment drives the satisfaction proxy score above 70, signalling to YouTube that viewers finished and valued the content.
  • +4.7% engagement rate (1,370 likes + 71 comments on 30,797 views) is nearly double the typical 2-3% benchmark for this view range, indicating strong watch-through and interaction that YouTube's algorithm rewards with continued distribution.
  • +Bilingual Thai/English content with authentic language-switching (visible from [1:11] through [19:00]) occupies a genuinely scarce content niche — low supply of fluent Thai-speaking Western chef content means the algorithm has few competing videos to serve instead.
  • +Multiple commenters reference real-world actions (queuing at the restaurant, planning to visit Hong Kong, using the content as language-study material) — this behavioural spillover suggests high session satisfaction, which YouTube measures via post-video actions.
  • +The guest (Adam/Samsen HK) has three active restaurant locations mentioned at [19:19-19:26] and an existing audience — any cross-promotion or tagging creates secondary discovery pathways.
Why it might stall
  • No chapter markers are present in the video, reducing YouTube's ability to surface specific segments via search clips and cutting off a key discovery surface for new viewers.
  • Approximately 85-90% of comments are in Thai, limiting the video's searchability and recommendation reach to English-language or mixed-language audiences who represent the larger YouTube pool.
  • 26.8% of comments are pure emoji reactions with no text — while positive, they contribute zero keyword signal and suggest a share of the audience is passive rather than deeply engaged.
  • Comment volume of 71 on ~30,800 views is a 0.23% comment rate — below the 0.3-0.5% rate that typically signals strong algorithmic push; the audience reacts emotionally but does not debate or generate conversation threads that extend video visibility.
  • One comment (@周亞賢) explicitly criticises the camera work ('唔好轉鏡頭轉嚟轉去 睇到頭都暈埋') — erratic camera movement may be contributing to early drop-off and suppressing average view duration.

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

7 unanswered

  • ?Why did Adam name the restaurant 'Samsen'? (~1 explicit mention @Ryzen-16)
  • ?Is Adam hiring? One commenter directly asked about job applications (~1 explicit mention @kungonsa)
  • ?Is the restaurant interior/flooring actually sourced from Thailand? (~1 mention @กิตติกาเจ้ตูน)
  • ?What was Adam's time at Bo.Lan like and what did he learn there?
  • ?Will Adam or Mike visit more Thai-run or Thai-inspired restaurants outside Thailand?
  • ?How long did it take Adam to become fluent in Thai?
  • ?Does Samsen plan to expand beyond its three Hong Kong outlets?
Requests

6 explicit asks

  • askMore videos featuring Adam and Mike speaking Thai together in real situations
  • askVisit or feature more Thai restaurants run by foreigners outside Thailand
  • askShow more of the Samsen menu and kitchen in depth
  • askFeature other Australians or Westerners who have deeply embedded themselves in Thai food culture
  • askMore content from Hong Kong food scene with Thai language interaction
  • askA video about learning Thai language — tips from Adam and/or Mike
§06

What to make next

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

01

Deep-dive into Adam's full Thai culinary journey — from Sydney age 17 to Bo.Lan Bangkok to Samsen HK

TitleHow an Australian Chef Became More Thai Than Most Thai Chefs
HookHe fell in love with Thai food at 17, moved to Bangkok at 22, and now runs three restaurants in Hong Kong — here's the full story
Why nowMultiple comments praised Adam's obsession and backstory but the video only scratched the surface — commenters want the full arc, and the Bo.Lan chapter was mentioned but never explored
02

Mike and Adam cook Thai food together at Samsen, with Adam explaining the Isaan vs central Thai distinction on camera

TitleThe Australian Chef Who Knows Thai Food Better Than You Think
HookWhat's the difference between 'Thai food' and real Thai food? An Aussie chef in Hong Kong breaks it down dish by dish
Why nowCommenters repeatedly praised the food's authenticity and the mid-video distinction between Isaan and eastern Thai food resonated — the audience wants more food education in this format
03

Thai language learning video — how Adam became fluent and how Mike uses Thai daily, with practical takeaways for learners

TitleHow to Actually Learn Thai (From Two Foreigners Who Did It)
HookThis guy moved to Bangkok at 22 with zero Thai — here's exactly how he got fluent
Why nowAt least one commenter (@liam_dawson) explicitly called the Thai conversation 'great study material and motivating' — there is a Thai-learner sub-audience primed for this
04

Return visit to Samsen during peak service — show the queue, the kitchen, and ask customers why they keep coming back

TitleWhy Hong Kongers Queue an Hour for This Thai Restaurant
HookPeople queue for an hour to eat here — a Thai restaurant run by an Australian in Hong Kong
Why nowMultiple comments noted the long queues and full restaurant (@qcute-tm8wp, @thanaang1455, @Gmmjs) — the social proof is already in the comment section and needs a dedicated video
05

Feature the Chachawan chapter — Adam's first HK restaurant before Samsen — and interview him and former regulars about that era

TitleThe Thai Restaurant in Hong Kong That Started It All
HookBefore Samsen, he opened a restaurant called Chachawan — and one of his regulars just found him on YouTube
Why nowCommenter @KxKxA-d6z shared a personal memory of sitting at Adam's bar at Chachawan, suggesting nostalgic audience overlap that could anchor a compelling origin story episode
06

Broader series: foreigners who built their lives around Thai food culture outside Thailand — Adam as episode one

TitleForeigners Who Went All In on Thai Food (Around the World)
HookAround the world, a small group of foreigners gave up everything to dedicate their lives to Thai food — we're finding them
Why nowComment @cosmichippie7595 joked 'everyone is desperate to be Thai' and @Knbhgcomng said 'he is essentially Thai' — the audience has already framed this as a broader phenomenon worth exploring
§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 retroactive chapter markers immediately — minimum 6 chapters covering the key narrative beats (Thai language origin at 1:11, Thailand move at 2:35, Hong Kong pivot at 3:46, restaurant concept at 4:31, food tasting at 18:29, restaurant info at 19:16).

EvidenceZero chapters currently exist; @周亞賢 complains about disorienting camera cuts — chapters would help viewers navigate and reduce early drop-off.
Watch forWatch for new 'Suggested video' and 'Search' traffic sources appearing in YouTube Studio within 7 days of adding chapters.
Do 02

Create a bilingual (Thai + English) title variant for the next similar video — current title is English-only despite 85-90% of commenters writing in Thai.

EvidenceTop 10 comments by likes are all in Thai; the audience discovery is clearly happening via Thai-language recommendation pathways, not English search.
Watch forCompare click-through rate (CTR) of a Thai-subtitle title against prior English-only titles over a 7-day A/B window using YouTube's title testing feature.
Do 03

Film a follow-up episode where Adam cooks one of the dishes mentioned in comments — pad kra pao (named in transcript at 18:45) or laab (referenced by @imshortlegs4685) — with a Thai-language cooking lesson segment.

Evidence@liam_dawson: 'I like when you speak thai with thai speakers very good study material, and motivating' — there is explicit demand for language + cooking content hybrid.
Watch forTrack whether the follow-up video achieves a higher comment-to-view ratio than 0.23% within 14 days of posting.
Do 04

Stabilise camera movement during restaurant walk-through sequences — use a gimbal or static framing for food close-ups.

Evidence@周亞賢: '要改善拍片.唔好轉鏡頭轉嚟轉去 睇到頭都暈埋😢😢' (criticises erratic camera movement causing dizziness) — this is the only technical criticism in the comments and likely contributes to drop-off.
Watch forCompare average view duration percentage on the next restaurant-visit video against this video's figure in YouTube Studio.
Do 05

Add the restaurant website (samsenhk.com, mentioned at 19:26) and booking information as a pinned first line of the video description and as an on-screen lower-third graphic during the 19:16-19:42 segment.

EvidenceAdam verbally directs viewers to the website at 19:26 but there is no clickable link visible in the transcript or comments; @pats.5941 says queues are constant — converting viewers to visitors is a direct value-add for Adam and a relationship-building asset for the creator.
Watch forMonitor description link clicks in YouTube Studio's 'End screen and cards' section over 7 days.
Do 06

Post a 60-second Shorts cut of the [1:11]-[3:19] Thai-language fluency exchange with the hook 'An Australian who speaks better Thai than most Thais 🇹🇭' — caption bilingually.

Evidence@Punpun-life: 'seeing two foreigners speaking thai to one another is just surreal' — this moment has standalone emotional punch and matches the Thai-language learning Shorts discovery pattern.
Watch forShorts view count at 72 hours; watch for subscriber attribution to the Short in YouTube Studio analytics.
Do 07

Answer @Ryzen-16's question in the comments ('อยากถามคุณอดัม ทำไมตั้งชื่อร้านว่าสามเสนครับ') either as a comment reply or as a dedicated opening hook in the next video — 'Why did an Australian chef name his Hong Kong Thai restaurant Samsen?'

Evidence@Ryzen-16 (1 like) asks about the restaurant name origin — this is an unanswered curiosity hook that could drive a high-CTR title and extend the series narrative.
Watch forIf used as a video title hook, compare CTR against this video's CTR in YouTube Studio within the first 48 hours of posting.
Do 08

Include a Thai-language on-screen subtitle track (not auto-generated) for the Thai dialogue segments, particularly [18:29]-[19:00] where the food names are spoken.

Evidence73.2% of audience is Thai-speaking and engages deeply with the language content; accurate subtitles increase watch time for non-Thai viewers simultaneously, serving both segments.
Watch forWatch for an increase in average view duration percentage on the next video with Thai subtitles vs this video's baseline.
Do 09

Tag Adam's Samsen HK Instagram/social accounts directly in the video description and in a community post to prompt a cross-audience reshare.

Evidence@hkrumble confirms Samsen is 'very well-known' in Hong Kong — Adam's existing HK customer base is an untapped discovery pool for this channel.
Watch forMonitor 'External' traffic sources in YouTube Studio for any spike from Instagram or Facebook referrals within 72 hours of tagging.
Do 10

Post a Thai-language community tab poll asking which dish viewers want to see cooked next (options: pad kra pao, som tam, laab, tom yum — all mentioned in transcript/comments).

EvidenceMultiple comments reference specific dishes: @imshortlegs4685 mentions laab, transcript references pad kra pao at 18:45 and tom yum at 18:37 — audience has clear dish preferences already expressed.
Watch forPoll response count within 48 hours; use the winning dish as the next video's primary keyword and cooking focus.
Do 11

Open the next similar video with a 15-second Thai-language greeting hook before switching to English — mirroring the language pattern that generated the top 4 comments by likes.

Evidence@sutikarnsoda7062 (33 likes): 'พูดไทยได้น่ารักทั้งสองคนเลย' — the Thai-language moments are the primary emotional driver for the highest-engagement comments.
Watch forCompare audience retention at the 0:30 mark on the next video vs this video's retention curve in YouTube Studio.
Do 12

Add an end-screen card at 19:16 (when Adam gives the restaurant address) linking to the most relevant prior video in the Thai food/culture series to extend session time.

EvidenceNo end-screen activity is visible in the transcript; the restaurant info segment is a natural pause point where viewers who are satisfied will click away — capturing them with a related video card reduces session drop-off.
Watch forEnd-screen click-through rate in YouTube Studio within 7 days.
Do 13

Pitch italki for a mid-roll integration in the next Thai-language-heavy video, citing @liam_dawson's comment as direct evidence of language-learning audience intent.

Evidence@liam_dawson: 'I like when you speak thai with thai speakers very good study material, and motivating. 🙏' — this is a verbatim, unprompted language-learning intent signal that can anchor a sponsor pitch deck.
Watch forSponsor response rate; if accepted, track mid-roll drop-off at the integration point vs average mid-roll retention on prior videos.
Do 14

Film a brief 'Restaurant tour' segment in a future Samsen HK visit — @กิตติกาเจ้ตูน noted Adam 'even ordered the floors from Thailand', a detail that was not visually explored in the current video.

Evidence@กิตติกาเจ้ตูน (0 likes): 'คุณอดัมใส่ใจในรายละเอียดมาก ขนาดพื้นยังสั่งมาจากไทย' — there is organic audience curiosity about the restaurant's design and sourcing details that was left unexplored.
Watch forWhether a restaurant-tour video achieves higher average view duration than interview-format videos in the same series.
Do 15

Reach out to @KxKxA-d6z who shared a personal Chachawan dining memory in the comments — invite them to submit their experience as a UGC story or short testimonial clip for use in a future video.

Evidence@KxKxA-d6z: 'Chachawan! Great place you had there Adam. Me and my bro sat at the bar stools and you were cooking everything for us. You even gave us some freebies to try out. Good luck mate.' — authentic customer story from Adam's earlier restaurant career, adds credibility narrative.
Watch forWhether UGC-integrated episodes achieve higher comment-to-view ratios than standard interview episodes within the first 7 days.
§R1

Reply queue

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

@Ryzen-16 · high↗ view

อยากถามคุณอดัม ทำไมตั้งชื่อร้านว่าสามเสนครับ ได้มายังไงครับ

Why: Unanswered direct question about the restaurant name — high curiosity value, pinning a good answer here could spark a whole thread and satisfy a lot of silent wonderers
Draft reply

Great question! Adam told me Samsen is named after a street in Bangkok — it has a real old-school Thai neighbourhood feel that matched exactly what he wanted the restaurant to represent. Pretty cool origin story right?

@KxKxA-d6z · high↗ view

Chachawan! Great place you had there Adam. Me and my bro sat at the bar stools and you were cooking everything for us. You even gave us some freebies to try out. Good luck mate.

Why: Personal memory shared by a real past customer of Adam's — warm viral-potential thread, a reply here shows Adam genuinely connects with his diners
Draft reply

Bar stool service at Chachawan was the best — Adam loves hearing stories like this. Thanks for coming back to follow his journey all these years later, means a lot!

@pats.5941 · high↗ view

พึ่งรู้ว่าเจ้าของร้านสามเสนเป็นฝรั่ง พูดไทยชัดมากๆด้วย อร่อยมากๆครับร้านนี้ ลูกค้าเยอะมากๆตลอด ต้องไปรอคิว

Why: Real Samsen customer confirming food quality AND the queue — social proof gold, worth amplifying with a reply
Draft reply

ขอบคุณมากครับ! Yes the queues at Samsen are real — best sign that the food is worth it. Adam's going to love seeing this comment 🙏

@hkrumble · high↗ view

Hong Konger here. I can confirm that Samsen is a very well-known Thai restaurant group in Hong Kong. Delicious too.

Why: Local Hong Kong verification of the restaurant's reputation — credible third-party endorsement worth pinning or replying to publicly
Draft reply

A local stamp of approval means everything — thank you! Three locations now in Sheung Wan, Central and Wan Chai if you haven't hit all of them yet 🙌

@Maymazzie · high↗ view

Samsen is one of my favourite Thai restaurant in HongKong. Authentic thai food, consistency of favor. Well done!

Why: English-language testimonial praising authenticity AND consistency — two key selling points, great for engagement and social proof
Draft reply

Consistency is honestly the hardest thing to maintain across three locations so this really means a lot — thank you for coming back again and again! 🙏

@liam_dawson · medium↗ view

I like when you speak thai with thai speakers very good study material, and motivating. 🙏

Why: Points to a specific content format (Thai language learning angle) that clearly resonates — useful audience insight worth acknowledging
Draft reply

Love hearing this! That natural back-and-forth is one of my favourite parts to film — glad it's useful for your Thai studies, keep going! 🙏

@Wednesday-lux89 · medium↗ view

อดัมฉันรู้จักคุณนะเคยทำงานที่ห้องอาหารน้ำเชฟเดวิดทอมสันไม่คิดว่าวันนึงจะมาเห็นคลิปที่คุณเป็นเชฟดังที่พูดไทยชัดเจน😊

Why: Someone who actually worked alongside Adam under legendary chef David Thompson — a personal connection that validates Adam's credibility and backstory
Draft reply

ว้าว! What a small world — Adam trained under some incredible people and Nahm was a huge part of that journey. So glad you found this clip! 😊

@kungonsa · medium↗ view

ผมถนัดทำปลาเผา น้ำจิ้มซีฟุ๊ต ต้มแซบน้ำใส ก้อยหมูเนิ้อดีบมะนาวแซบๆ พี่เจ้าของร้านเปิดรับพนักงานใหมครับ ผมจะไปสมัครเลย😀

Why: Someone enthusiastically asking about a job — funny, warm, human thread that others will enjoy reading
Draft reply

555 ชอบความกระตือรือร้นมาก! ลองเช็ค samsenhk.com ดูนะครับ อาจจะมีโอกาสก็ได้ 😄

@Punpun-life · medium↗ view

seeing two foreigners speaking thai to one another is just surreal.

Why: Punchy English comment capturing the surreal charm of the video's best moment — high shareability, easy to reply to warmly
Draft reply

That moment never gets old for me either — two guys from completely different places bonding over Thailand 😄 That's the magic of Thai culture right there.

@AlanSmith88888 · medium↗ view

Samsen is one of the best Thai food in HK

Why: Short punchy English endorsement — worth a quick reply to keep the English-language audience engaged
Draft reply

High praise from someone in HK — thank you! Three locations now if you haven't tried them all 🙏

@TubeRobRoy · low↗ view

Wonderful story, Samsen does solid food indeed. Happy to see Adam do so well and learn about his story

Why: Warm English-language comment combining personal praise for Adam with food endorsement — good for community warmth
Draft reply

Adam's story is one of my favourites to share — 20 years of passion doesn't lie! Thanks for watching 🙏

@周亞賢 · low↗ view

要改善拍片.唔好轉鏡頭轉嚟轉去 睇到頭都暈埋😢😢

Why: Fair filming criticism about camera movement causing dizziness — worth acknowledging constructively as it shows you listen to feedback
Draft reply

感謝你的意見!你說得對,我們下次會注意減少鏡頭移動,謝謝你的支持 🙏

§R2

Promo pull-quotes

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

Samsen is one of my favourite Thai restaurant in HongKong. Authentic thai food, consistency of favor. Well done!

@Maymazzie · pinned comment↗ view

Hong Konger here. I can confirm that Samsen is a very well-known Thai restaurant group in Hong Kong. Delicious too.

@hkrumble · sponsor deck↗ view

He is essentially Thai

@Knbhgcomng · thumbnail↗ view

seeing two foreigners speaking thai to one another is just surreal.

@Punpun-life · community post↗ view

พึ่งรู้ว่าเจ้าของร้านสามเสนเป็นฝรั่ง พูดไทยชัดมากๆด้วย อร่อยมากๆครับร้านนี้ ลูกค้าเยอะมากๆตลอด ต้องไปรอคิว

@pats.5941 · pinned comment↗ view

Samsen is one of the best Thai food in HK

@AlanSmith88888 · sponsor deck↗ view

Wonderful story, Samsen does solid food indeed. Happy to see Adam do so well and learn about his story

@TubeRobRoy · community post↗ view

คนฮ่องกง กับฝรั่งคุยกัน เป็นภาษาไทย สุดยอด รักทั้ง2คนเลยครับ

@phanthaisong3628 · 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.

[0:06] ↗20 Years Obsessed With Thailand~35s
HookBeen going to Thailand for 20 years... I developed almost an obsession.
Adam's raw passion statement is the emotional core of the whole video — mirrors the 73% of comments praising his love for Thai culture and would hook viewers in under 3 seconds
[2:38] ↗Was It Scary Moving To Thailand At 22?~30s
HookWas it scary moving to Thailand? Absolutely not. It's all I wanted to do.
Zero-hesitation answer is instantly quotable and aspirational — travel/foodie audience will clip and share this, directly mirrors top comment themes about admiring Adam's commitment
[1:11] ↗Why Can This Foreigner Speak Thai So Well?~40s
HookYou might be confused why this foreigner can speak Thai so well.
Sets up the video's most viral premise — directly triggered the top-liked comments about two foreigners speaking Thai together, @Punpun-life's 'surreal' comment, and @Knbhgcomng's 'He is essentially Thai'
[3:19] ↗Me Too. I Speak Thai, Man 😂~15s
HookMe too. I speak Thai, man. [laughter]
Genuinely funny moment of Mike jumping in — short, punchy, shareable comedy beat that would do well as a Shorts loop, appeals to the 'two foreigners speaking Thai' reaction comments
[18:42] ↗Ordering Pad Kra Pao in Perfect Thai~30s
Hookpad kra pao nuea... khai dao song phong la khrap
Fluent Thai food ordering from an Australian chef in Hong Kong — the exact moment that generated comments like 'พูดไทยชัดมากๆ' and is strong study material for Thai language learners like @liam_dawson
[4:01] ↗Moving Back to Sydney Was My Biggest Mistake~30s
HookAnd was the biggest mistake I could have made.
Relatable comedic honesty about going home and hating it — universally funny travel/expat sentiment that will get shares and comments from anyone who's felt the same
[19:13] ↗Does It Actually Taste Like Thailand?~25s
HookIt tastes like Thai.
The ultimate verdict delivered simply — perfectly punchy closing clip that pays off the whole video's premise, great for a teaser Short driving people to the full video
[4:28] ↗How an Aussie Ended Up Opening a Thai Restaurant in Hong Kong~45s
HookI conceptualized and I opened a restaurant called Chachawan.
The origin story of Samsen in 60 seconds — this is the clip that satisfies the curiosity of everyone who found this video and didn't know Adam's background, directly addresses the dominant 73% audience topic
§08

Top comments

Explore all 71 comments →

Verbatim — the 5 most representative comments from the thread.

@hkrumble1 · positive↗ view

Hong Konger here. I can confirm that Samsen is a very well-known Thai restaurant group in Hong Kong. Delicious too.

Why picked: local Hong Kong resident providing independent third-party verification of the restaurant's real-world reputation
@pats.59413 · positive↗ view

พึ่งรู้ว่าเจ้าของร้านสามเสนเป็นฝรั่ง พูดไทยชัดมากๆด้วย อร่อยมากๆครับร้านนี้ ลูกค้าเยอะมากๆตลอด ต้องไปรอคิว

Why picked: actual customer of Samsen confirming both food quality and queue demand — real-world corroboration from someone who has eaten there
@hanasakiza370534 · positive↗ view

เขาเป็นฝรั่งแต่ชอบอาหารไทย แต่จะไห้เขามาเปิดร้านอาหารไทยในประเทศไทยการแข่งขันมันสูง เขาไปเปิดฮ่องกงมันลงตัวที่สุดแล้วผมคิดว่างั้นนะ

Why picked: second-highest liked comment; articulates a specific strategic insight — that Hong Kong not Thailand was the right market — adding editorial depth beyond simple praise
@Natie_98735 · positive↗ view

ขอบคุณคุณอดัมและคุณไมค์มากๆๆที่รักเมืองไทย นำเสนอเมนูไทยให้ดังไกลไปทั่วโลก🎉❤

Why picked: highest-liked comment on the video; frames both host and guest as Thai cultural ambassadors — captures the dominant audience emotional response
@phanthaisong362830 · positive↗ view

คนฮ่องกง กับฝรั่งคุยกัน เป็นภาษาไทย สุดยอด รักทั้ง2คนเลยครับ F.C . From Pattaya. ครับ

Why picked: fourth-highest liked; specifically calls out the linguistic novelty — a Hong Konger and an Australian conversing in Thai — naming the moment that most resonated with Thai audience
§08

Threads that sparked discussion

Explore all 71 comments →

Top reply-magnet comments — where the real debate happened. 1 replies across 1 roots · max chain 2 deep · creator replied to 0%

01 · @hanasakiza37051 replies · ♥ 34↗ view

เขาเป็นฝรั่งแต่ชอบอาหารไทย แต่จะไห้เขามาเปิดร้านอาหารไทยในประเทศไทยการแข่งขันมันสูง เขาไปเปิด��…

02 · @Natie_9870 replies · ♥ 35↗ view

ขอบคุณคุณอดัมและคุณไมค์มากๆๆที่รักเมืองไทย นำเสนอเมนูไทยให้ดังไกลไปทั่วโลก🎉❤

03 · @sutikarnsoda70620 replies · ♥ 33↗ view

พูดไทยได้น่ารักทั้งสองคนเลย😊😊😊😊

04 · @phanthaisong36280 replies · ♥ 30↗ view

คนฮ่องกง กับฝรั่งคุยกัน เป็นภาษาไทย สุดยอด รักทั้ง2คนเลยครับ F.C . From Pattaya. ครับ

05 · @Knbhgcomng0 replies · ♥ 22↗ view

He is essentially Thai

§09

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№06 · 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
№07 · travel

First Time Flying in a Private Plane in Thailand

8.9k
views
516
likes
6.1%
engagement
3 months ago
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№08 · 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
№09 · 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
№10 · 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
№11 · vlog

My British-Chinese Family Comes to Visit Me in Thailand

99k
views
5.7k
likes
6.2%
engagement
4 months ago
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№12 · vlog

First Time Going to a Wedding in Thailand

91k
views
3.2k
likes
3.6%
engagement
4 months ago
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№13 · 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
№14 · 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
№15 · 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
สัมภาษณ์เด็กโรงเรียนท็อปของไทย อายุ 15 แต่ความคิดไม่เด็ก | Thailand’s Smartest 15-Year-Old Students
№16 · interview

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

24k
views
1.1k
likes
4.8%
engagement
6 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
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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
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1.3k
likes
7.5%
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1 year ago
Isaan Kid turned International Model
№39 · interview

Isaan Kid turned International Model

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

Experiencing an Earthquake in Thailand

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

Making Merit in Mahachai

15k
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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
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№44 · interview

Thai Entrepreneur Quits Pharmacy for Social Media

9.6k
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649
likes
7.3%
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1 year ago
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№45 · interview

British Man wants to be Thai

108k
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6.6k
likes
6.9%
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1 year ago
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№46 · culture_comparison

Thai Food vs German Food

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

British girl speaks Fluent Thai

46k
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2.6k
likes
6.0%
engagement
1 year ago
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№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
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2.3k
likes
2.5%
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1 year ago
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№50 · vlog

First time making Thai food

13k
views
1.1k
likes
9.4%
engagement
1 year ago
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№51 · travel

Is Thailand Actually Dangerous?

71k
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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
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1.8k
likes
4.4%
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1 year ago
Thailand vs Vietnam
№58 · vlog

Thailand vs Vietnam

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

I got scammed...

13k
views
841
likes
7.9%
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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
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2.1k
likes
6.6%
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1 year ago
10 hour sleeper train to Isaan
№64 · travel

10 hour sleeper train to Isaan

17k
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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
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5.2k
likes
3.1%
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1 year ago
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№66 · language

How to speak fluent English as a Thai person

6.6k
views
302
likes
4.7%
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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
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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
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194
likes
2.7%
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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
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3.2k
likes
1.5%
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5 years ago
Why YOU Should Study Abroad
№77 · personal_story

Why YOU Should Study Abroad

3.2k
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110
likes
4.1%
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7 years ago

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