@at_2408: Tín hiệu vũ trụ, đi Vũng Tàu ngay thôi ❤️😍#vungtau #dulich #sea #xuhuong

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Sunday 01 March 2026 07:48:16 GMT
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ngn.phan9995
Ngôn Phan :
sao ganh chỗ mình đứng hj
2026-03-06 15:35:34
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mikacao116
Mikacao🍀 :
Tim chéo nha nàng ♥️♥️
2026-03-01 08:54:10
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canthohomestay1
Homestay giá rẻ Cần Thơ :
Gty
2026-03-01 09:21:18
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user00jmmqncie
Lê nhân :
Cho đi ké hôg
2026-03-02 04:33:54
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hieu_vlog.72
hiếu_vlog.72 :
💖
2026-03-01 08:41:17
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ngn.phan9995
Ngôn Phan :
2026-03-06 15:34:49
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For those wondering what this meme means… There’s a long-running football conspiracy theory among some Asian football fans that TV broadcasters always seem to find a way to miss the exact moment an Asian player lifts a trophy. The theory isn’t that broadcasters openly refuse to show Asian players. Rather, fans joke that whenever an Asian footballer reaches a historic moment, the director suddenly decides it’s the perfect time to show literally anything else. A crowd shot. A sponsor board. A random teammate. The manager. Someone crying in the stands. A pigeon. Anything except the actual trophy lift. The conspiracy has gained traction over the years through various clips involving Asian players in Europe, particularly from Japan and South Korea. Every time a broadcast misses a key moment, fans add it to the growing “evidence.” Most recently, supporters pointed to the UEFA Champions League celebrations after PSG’s victory, where many fans of Kang-in Lee felt the broadcast coverage didn’t adequately focus on him during parts of the trophy celebrations. Whether intentional or not, moments like these only fuel the meme and reinforce the belief among fans that the camera somehow always finds a way to look elsewhere at the worst possible moment. Of course, there’s no evidence that broadcasters are deliberately doing this. Modern trophy presentations involve dozens of cameras, multiple directors, sponsor obligations, crowd shots, and live production decisions happening in real time. But that’s exactly why the meme is funny. Because in the minds of believers, if South Korea or Japan ever won the World Cup and one of their players was about to lift the trophy for the first time in history… The broadcast director would immediately cut to: A wide shot of the stadium, A Coca-Cola ad, The assistant coach, A fan eating a hotdog, The corner flag, A seagull flying overhead Anything but the actual trophy lift. Again, this is just a football meme based on a fan conspiracy theory, not an accusation. #FootballTwitter #WorldCup #JapanFootball #SouthKoreaFootball #KangInLee
For those wondering what this meme means… There’s a long-running football conspiracy theory among some Asian football fans that TV broadcasters always seem to find a way to miss the exact moment an Asian player lifts a trophy. The theory isn’t that broadcasters openly refuse to show Asian players. Rather, fans joke that whenever an Asian footballer reaches a historic moment, the director suddenly decides it’s the perfect time to show literally anything else. A crowd shot. A sponsor board. A random teammate. The manager. Someone crying in the stands. A pigeon. Anything except the actual trophy lift. The conspiracy has gained traction over the years through various clips involving Asian players in Europe, particularly from Japan and South Korea. Every time a broadcast misses a key moment, fans add it to the growing “evidence.” Most recently, supporters pointed to the UEFA Champions League celebrations after PSG’s victory, where many fans of Kang-in Lee felt the broadcast coverage didn’t adequately focus on him during parts of the trophy celebrations. Whether intentional or not, moments like these only fuel the meme and reinforce the belief among fans that the camera somehow always finds a way to look elsewhere at the worst possible moment. Of course, there’s no evidence that broadcasters are deliberately doing this. Modern trophy presentations involve dozens of cameras, multiple directors, sponsor obligations, crowd shots, and live production decisions happening in real time. But that’s exactly why the meme is funny. Because in the minds of believers, if South Korea or Japan ever won the World Cup and one of their players was about to lift the trophy for the first time in history… The broadcast director would immediately cut to: A wide shot of the stadium, A Coca-Cola ad, The assistant coach, A fan eating a hotdog, The corner flag, A seagull flying overhead Anything but the actual trophy lift. Again, this is just a football meme based on a fan conspiracy theory, not an accusation. #FootballTwitter #WorldCup #JapanFootball #SouthKoreaFootball #KangInLee

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