michelle for @sonokido 🫶

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michelle for @sonokido 🫶
BESTIES!!!
I drew Allison Hart from sonokido's comic, Ventura City Drifters! She herself isn't a Drifter ofc. I kinda just made up an outfit for her. Read the comic!! https://vcdcomic.carrd.co/
I like Rose a normal amount, okay?
Windows Vista - Video CD
Alina Scratch Pixel Art 25-10-18
Tis one for @sonokido.bsky.social
Why Me and Thee Swept the Nation: Lakorn Logic, Karaoke Nostalgia, and the DNA of Thai Media
Sophie
"Me and Thee" is the kind of phenomenon that lingers long after the credits roll.
After seeing the One Word clip from the finale, I took a deep dive into academic research on Thai television and karaoke VCD culture. These contexts explain exactly how Me and Thee—a BL series—managed to achieve the kind of nationwide viral success that most shows in the genre never reach.
This virality wasn’t an accident; it was cultural.
1. Lakorn: More Than "Just a Drama"
If you aren’t familiar with lakorn (Thai TV soaps), it’s important to realize how much they differ from what international audiences typically call a "series." Lakorns are loud, unapologetically melodramatic, and visually over-the-top. Think ear-piercing screams, dramatic slaps, intense zoom-ins, and plot twists that escalate at breakneck speed. Subtlety isn't the point—impact is.
In global terms, lakorn is closest in spirit to:
Makjang dramas (Korea)
Classic Latin American telenovelas
Indonesian sinetron
Indian TV serials
Philippine teleseryes
Turkish dizis
In Thailand, lakorn is not niche entertainment. It is prime-time, mainstream, national media, deeply woven into everyday life.
2. Lakorn as Cultural Transmission
Lakorn has roots far older than television. The word itself comes from Southeast Asian performance traditions, and its storytelling lineage can be traced back to:
Folk theatre
Court dance
Forms like likay and lakhon
Historically, these performances conveyed ideas about religion, kingship, morality, social roles, and community life. Modern lakorn inherits this function.
Academic studies of Thai television suggest that lakorn operates as a mechanism of cultural transmission. It doesn’t just entertain—it teaches:
Family structures
Respect for elders
Social harmony
Spiritual beliefs
Everyday Thai lifestyles (temple merit-making, festivals, communal living)
This is why lakorn often feels emotionally close to Thai audiences. They don’t see it as fantasy alone, but as an exaggerated mirror of lived experience.
This is also where the term “lakorn nam nao” (“polluted” or overly melodramatic soap operas) comes in. The “pollution” refers not to bad quality, but to:
Unrealistic luxury
Over-the-top acting
Intensified emotions
Yet these very traits make lakorn iconic, quotable, parody-able—and unforgettable.
3. Why Me and Thee Broke Out of BL Containment
Most BL series circulate within a relatively contained fandom space. Me and Thee didn’t—because it borrowed the visual and emotional grammar of lakorn.
Crucially, Pond Naravit’s portrayal of Thee draws directly from the archetype of the classic lakorn male lead: dramatic, intense, emotionally expressive, and visually coded in a way older audiences immediately recognize.
So even though the story is BL, it feels familiar to viewers who don’t usually watch BL. It speaks a language they already know.
4. Karaoke VCDs: The Other Half of the Puzzle
The second viral element—Pond’s One Word OST MV—makes sense only when you understand karaoke VCD culture.
Unlike in the US or Europe, VCDs were a dominant media format in Southeast Asia, especially in the 1990s and early 2000s. This is something even Gen Z Thai actors like Pond and Phuwin have mentioned: VCDs were how many children were introduced to music before they could even read properly.
Karaoke VCDs were everywhere:
Homes
Shops
Buses
Bars
Markets
Roadside stalls
Often pirated, cheaply produced, and endlessly replayed 😅
Their defining features:
On-screen lyrics
Simple visuals
Long, static shots
Warm, yellowish tones
Minimal editing
These videos weren’t meant to distract. They were functional media, designed for participation—for singing along.
5. Why Karaoke Resonates So Deeply in Thailand (and SEA)
Karaoke fits seamlessly into Thai social life because music and communal participation are central to social bonding. Singing happens at:
Family gatherings
Festivals
Local events
Casual hangouts
Thai music traditions like luk thung and mor lam emphasize emotional lyrics and storytelling. Karaoke VCDs allowed people to actively perform those emotions, not just consume them.
While there’s limited academic literature specifically on Thai karaoke VCDs, music history and regional media studies show similar patterns across Southeast Asia:
The Philippines (videoke culture, including Roberto del Rosario’s patented “Sing-Along System”)
Vietnam and Indonesia (lyric-heavy VCD-era music videos)
China, Hong Kong, Taiwan (karaoke-first MV formats)
Japan (early laserdisc karaoke)
Thailand, however, held onto this format longer, even after other markets transitioned to HD and streaming. And many luk thung and mor lam artists still intentionally recreate this aesthetic today for nostalgia.
6. The Aesthetic of Memory
That yellowish, vintage look people associate with old Thai MVs isn’t just stylistic—it’s technical:
Analog video formats (VHS, Betacam, Video8)
Tungsten lighting
Cheap cameras
No color grading
VCD compression and aging
Soap operas, commercials, and music videos all adopted this aesthetic. Eventually, it became the norm—familiar, and even comforting.
7. Why It Hit So Hard
Across lakorn and karaoke VCDs, the same cultural logic applies:
Media should feel close, not foreign
It should be emotionally explicit
It should be repeatable, quotable, singable
In the pre-streaming era, VCDs were a cultural staple. If you missed an episode, you just bought the disc. If you loved a scene, you could replay it until the player gave out. And if you wanted to sing along, the lyrics were right there on the screen.
When Me and Thee and One Word leaned into these formats, they did more than just excite the fans—they tapped into a collective memory. By embracing the dramatic flair of classic lakorn and the nostalgic "karaoke aesthetic" of the VCD era, they bridged the gap between generations. It made Thai audiences feel seen, capturing the exact media experience they grew up with.
Hot tip for anyone with vocal cord dysfunction with an exercise trigger: find a gym with a jacob's ladder.
I swear, of all the forms of cardio I've done to deliberately put myself in a triggering situation and train my vocal folds to relax, this one worked the quickest and the best. I have my theories as to why it worked so well, but I'm not a medical professional, and I couldn't find any studies online about it.
But regardless, I've been dealing with VCD for almost 30 years, have done voice therapy twice to get it under control, and YEARS post-therapy, the jacob's ladder (combined with my regular strength training and cardio regimen) is literally The Thing that tipped the scales for me. Yesterday, I did my ultimate trigger (running) and ran for 6 miles with no walk break, increasing the pace every mile, and not a single falter from my throat. This shit worked. I need a study about this.