josephbloggs Posted Wednesday at 12:39 PM Posted Wednesday at 12:39 PM 4 hours ago, Gobbler said: It raises the question: Who is providing protection and safety while on the train? Apparently, no one. If someone was getting raped on the train, who would provide police protection? You're on your own in the subway. He was playing music, he wasn't raping anyone.
josephbloggs Posted Wednesday at 12:49 PM Posted Wednesday at 12:49 PM 4 hours ago, Zaphod Priest said: So yes, music is banned under Sharia law, and most certainly is banned in Iran. 1979 was a pretty long time ago. 46 years!! Music is NOT banned in Iran. Nor is it banned under Sharia law. Stop posting rubbish please. I assume you have never been there, nor do you know any Iranians. Music is controlled but not banned. If it was banned why do they have concerts? https://www.livemusicproject.org/events/genres/485/iranian?near=worldwide&include= https://mixmag.net/read/live-concerts-blamed-drought-cancelled-iran-news#:~:text=While concerts are allowed in,ground between moderates and conservatives.
sherlockh Posted Wednesday at 01:01 PM Posted Wednesday at 01:01 PM Years ago especially in London, buskers used the power of their own voices to entertain. Now it seems that they need to have loudspeakeo irritate the public! They have been moved out of certain areas in UK and I would suggest that the same should apply in Thailand. If your voice is not good enough don't even bother.Pack up your speakers and go home.
newbee2022 Posted Wednesday at 01:04 PM Posted Wednesday at 01:04 PM 16 hours ago, webfact said: screenshot An influencer's antics on Bangkok's MRT have stirred up a storm! A foreign content creator, identified as the Iranian TikToker @shayanparsTV, found himself at the centre of controversy after a video surfaced showing him blasting music on a moving MRT train. The incident, which transpired on May 11, drew ire from fellow commuters who did not appreciate the unsolicited soundtrack. As the train approached Klong Toey station, frustration bubbled over when a local passenger could no longer contain his annoyance, shouting “Hey!” at the loud influencer. Undeterred by the confrontation, the influencer uploaded the incident to TikTok, cheekily captioning it: “He screamed at me like I ruined his life.” The clip rocketed into viral status, igniting a fierce debate across Thai social media platforms. While some commentators suggested that the reaction was overly dramatic, a substantial portion condemned the influencer for his lack of respect towards local customs. The issue raises important questions about the boundaries of public behaviour and the responsibilities that come with content creation in shared spaces. Despite criticism, the influencer remains unfazed, having previously orchestrated similar episodes at the Siam BTS station and on other MRT trains. Drawing in 731,000 followers, @shayanparsTV continues to amass views and followers through his disruptive escapades, seemingly making a career out of sharing his beats in public spaces worldwide. This latest stunt underscores ongoing concerns over how influencers can sometimes disregard the peace of everyday commuters in their quest for online fame. The ramifications of this event spotlight the growing tension between content creators and communities expecting mutual respect in shared public environments. Watch on TikTok Adapted by ASEAN Now from Bangkok Post 2025-05-14 Idiot, beat him up 😂
terryofcrete Posted Wednesday at 01:24 PM Posted Wednesday at 01:24 PM Ban all foreigners! Oh wait….. 1
speckio Posted Wednesday at 01:34 PM Posted Wednesday at 01:34 PM Another nuicance youtuber like johny... areest deport and ban 1
2long Posted Wednesday at 01:40 PM Posted Wednesday at 01:40 PM We all know that if there was no reaction form the locals, his view count would be 90% less. Therefore, he's trying to get attention and reactions. Cancel the pr*ck
wensiensheng Posted Wednesday at 02:17 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:17 PM And the BTS police were where?
GoodieAfterDark Posted Wednesday at 02:21 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:21 PM 8 hours ago, spidermike007 said: Who are these influencers, and why is anyone being influence by them? Don't these people have a life? That is the new economy for the laid off and unemployed in America, making videos on Youtube with clickbaits. Some of those influencers are making six figures. 1
Will B Good Posted Wednesday at 02:23 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:23 PM I guess from the way he is walking he's trialling a new butt plug? 1
songhklasid Posted Wednesday at 02:48 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:48 PM I would push the c##t off the very next station , no respect rgds SS
Gobbler Posted Wednesday at 02:55 PM Posted Wednesday at 02:55 PM 2 hours ago, josephbloggs said: He was playing music, he wasn't raping anyone. Your ability to parse a sentence is quite surprising.
BangkokReady Posted Wednesday at 03:22 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:22 PM These people aren't influencers. They literally harass people then film it and this gets them views and donations from other sociopaths who enjoy watching them harass people. They need to give them a proper name that actually reflects what they are doing. This should also be dealt with like any kind of public harassment. 1
BangkokReady Posted Wednesday at 03:24 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:24 PM 7 hours ago, Gobbler said: It raises the question: Who is providing protection and safety while on the train? Apparently, no one. The reason that these types are drawn to Asian countries is that they know that people are unlikely to confront them with immediate physical violence, as would happen in many other parts of the world.
BangkokReady Posted Wednesday at 03:26 PM Posted Wednesday at 03:26 PM 5 hours ago, sikishrory said: Always hope to see them get belted but it never happens. My opinion they shouldn't even be acknowledged by media as that is why they do it. You should look up "Johnny Somali".
terryofcrete Posted Wednesday at 04:25 PM Posted Wednesday at 04:25 PM 15 hours ago, JoePai said: He should try that outside the Ayatollah's window 😎 Or mine !
CLUBBER Posted Wednesday at 04:34 PM Posted Wednesday at 04:34 PM 10 hours ago, pacovl46 said: He’s clearly a dimwit with room temperature IQ. Like most of his followers I'm sure . 1
Kinok Farang Posted Wednesday at 10:34 PM Posted Wednesday at 10:34 PM TIT.And I don’t mean “this is Thailand”.
baansgr Posted Wednesday at 11:12 PM Posted Wednesday at 11:12 PM More self entitled rubbish, smack the nonce, why is it always arabs or far right Nazis bringing all their hatred here.
JimHuaHin Posted Thursday at 01:39 AM Posted Thursday at 01:39 AM Does he have a work permit? If not, arrest him and deport him
sanabavy IV Posted Thursday at 03:42 AM Posted Thursday at 03:42 AM satanic music! enjoy (deleted) ayatollahs.
Captain Flack Posted Thursday at 06:43 AM Posted Thursday at 06:43 AM A racist troll post removed @Ironmike Rule 15. You will not discriminate or post slurs, degrading or overly negative comments on the basis of race, gender, age, religion, ethnicity, nationality, disability, medical history, marriage, civil partnership, pregnancy, maternity, paternity, gender identity, sexual orientation or any other irrelevant factor.
khunpeer Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago On 5/14/2025 at 3:17 AM, webfact said: screenshot An influencer's antics on Bangkok's MRT have stirred up a storm! A foreign content creator, identified as the Iranian TikToker @shayanparsTV, found himself at the centre of controversy after a video surfaced showing him blasting music on a moving MRT train. The incident, which transpired on May 11, drew ire from fellow commuters who did not appreciate the unsolicited soundtrack. As the train approached Klong Toey station, frustration bubbled over when a local passenger could no longer contain his annoyance, shouting “Hey!” at the loud influencer. Undeterred by the confrontation, the influencer uploaded the incident to TikTok, cheekily captioning it: “He screamed at me like I ruined his life.” The clip rocketed into viral status, igniting a fierce debate across Thai social media platforms. While some commentators suggested that the reaction was overly dramatic, a substantial portion condemned the influencer for his lack of respect towards local customs. The issue raises important questions about the boundaries of public behaviour and the responsibilities that come with content creation in shared spaces. Despite criticism, the influencer remains unfazed, having previously orchestrated similar episodes at the Siam BTS station and on other MRT trains. Drawing in 731,000 followers, @shayanparsTV continues to amass views and followers through his disruptive escapades, seemingly making a career out of sharing his beats in public spaces worldwide. This latest stunt underscores ongoing concerns over how influencers can sometimes disregard the peace of everyday commuters in their quest for online fame. The ramifications of this event spotlight the growing tension between content creators and communities expecting mutual respect in shared public environments. Watch on TikTok Adapted by ASEAN Now from Bangkok Post 2025-05-14 oh well, wrong time,wrong place...
Chris Daley Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago The land of frowns. Look at those miserable faces. 2
josephbloggs Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 40 minutes ago, Chris Daley said: The land of frowns. Look at those miserable faces. Always with the negative miserable comments. Do you expect commuters to sit on the train randomly grinning for no reason?? Do you do that?? 1
KhunLA Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, Chris Daley said: The land of frowns. Look at those miserable faces. You obviously don't use BTS/MRT too much if at all. Are you even in TH ? Pretty sure, everyone on the rail lines would rather be some place else, except me when playing tourist and getting a cheap sightseeing tour of different neighborhoods. Besides, most are staring at their phones anyway
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