Behind the Fake Agent Life: When Glamorous Online Personas Hide Ugly Truths

Exposing the secret lives of “fake agents” who flaunt luxury online but live a life of lies offline.

post date  Posted on 26 มี.ค. 2568   view 34592
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There are lots of trending “celebrity-style” personalities out there.
And the real estate agent world? Oh, it’s no different.

Here are just a few of the things some so-called “agents” do to fake their way into the spotlight:

  • Photoshop a cashier’s cheque to make it look like it's made out to them — sometimes 29 million baht, sometimes 59 million.

  • Pose next to someone else’s supercar, hiding the license plate and claiming, “Just picked up my new ride!”

  • Borrow a luxury car and park it somewhere visible — just to use it as leverage to borrow money.

  • Take photos of client money (tens of millions) and say it’s their commission.

  • Ask for a friend’s commission slip, blur out the name, and post it with a caption like “Another deal closed by me.”
    (Sometimes they even remake old slips to make them look new.)

  • Get a video of someone counting tens of millions in cash, crop out identifying parts, and post it like they’re the one holding all that money.

  • Photoshop themselves into luxury show homes, saying they just bought a new house.

  • Live in high-end areas like Thonglor or Krungthep Kreetha — until they get kicked out for not paying rent, treated like a stray.

  • Repost luxury hotel check-ins from IG, claiming one big deal is enough to fund their lifestyle for a whole year.

  • Post staged contract signing photos, attach an old slip, and caption it “Oops! Another case closed 💼✨”

  • Stand in front of the Land Department office, blur their face, and say they’ve just sealed the deal.

  • Offer to help friends sell branded items, only to resell them and use the money for personal gain.

  • Hire bar boys to play ‘celebrity boyfriend’ roles for content, pretending to have a star partner driving them around.

  • Claim to close hundred-million-baht deals non-stop, but when hired — they’re underqualified, underwhelming, and clearly not ready to handle high-level clients.

  • Borrow photos or videos, then block the original owner from seeing the post — just to avoid getting exposed.

  • Call people asking for help with tax evasion, saying they made "too much money" and now they're under audit.
    (…Do they even make enough to be audited?)

These celeb-style scammers? The one in the news isn't the last — not even close.
There are many more still out there, waiting to be exposed.

So please, consume online content with a lot of caution.
(Underline that. Bold it. Highlight it.)

Don’t believe everything you see online.
Everything can be faked now — especially with AI making it easier than ever.

Real success doesn’t scream.
The truly successful don’t need to show off to strangers.
They live quietly, among close friends, in real-life circles.
Because once you’re too loud, the tax office comes knocking.
.
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