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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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