One of BTS members, Kim Taehyung, has over 70 million followers. Recently, during a live broadcast, he enthusiastically promoted a piece of chocolate sent by a Turkish friend. This move immediately triggered a chain reaction—chocolate stock was sold out within seconds. The popularity was so high that it even caught the attention of Korean buyers, who directly ordered 25 containers of chocolate from Turkey. This event is quite interesting: how quickly can a product go from being ignored to being in high demand with a celebrity’s endorsement? It seems that in any industry, the process of converting influence into purchasing power is astonishingly fast.
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ThatsNotARugPull
· 4h ago
Sell short in just a few seconds? That's the power of the top trend, truly amazing.
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ValidatorViking
· 22h ago
ngl this is just influence economics on steroids, no different than consensus finality collapsing when validator set gets too concentrated. one dude's endorsement = instant liquidity crunch, literally watched the network's throughput get slashed in real-time. concerning stuff if you think about it.
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down_only_larry
· 22h ago
Seconds to sell out? Truly impressive, this is what traffic monetization looks like.
Old man loses horse, Turkey chocolate makes a fortune.
Basically, it's fan economy—one word from a celebrity can replace a million in advertising fees.
But only 25 containers... how much can that really sell?
I just want to know if that chocolate is really delicious or if it's just buying into the celebrity persona.
Has anyone purchased it and can give a review? I'm very curious.
This move is brilliant, an invisible king of product promotion.
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MetaverseMigrant
· 22h ago
Seconds to sell out? That's the star effect for you, just a joke.
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GasFeeBarbecue
· 22h ago
Seconds to snatch it up? That's the power of traffic, it's terrifying.
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wagmi_eventually
· 22h ago
Sell out in just a few seconds, this is the traffic secret
Really, the celebrity effect is terrifying, and our crypto is the same套路
25 containers directly dropped, businessmen's vision is indeed sharp
But I just want to know if that chocolate tastes good, and if it will flop after the hype dies down
One of BTS members, Kim Taehyung, has over 70 million followers. Recently, during a live broadcast, he enthusiastically promoted a piece of chocolate sent by a Turkish friend. This move immediately triggered a chain reaction—chocolate stock was sold out within seconds. The popularity was so high that it even caught the attention of Korean buyers, who directly ordered 25 containers of chocolate from Turkey. This event is quite interesting: how quickly can a product go from being ignored to being in high demand with a celebrity’s endorsement? It seems that in any industry, the process of converting influence into purchasing power is astonishingly fast.