Sebenarnya ayam gepuk is overpriced in Malaysia
Memang modal murah, masak pun senang.
Masak sambal, goreng ayam, potong sayur fresh, tempe tauhu. That’s all, your favourite ayam gepuk. Marketing dia nasi tambah free lol.
Nah ni ayam gepuk kat darul konoha 🇮🇩21k rupiah (RM4.60)
Siapa pegang kontrak pengawalan keselamatan di KLIA?
Pernah saya tanya tandas kat mana dlm BM & BI, dia tak faham sepatah haram pun
Inikan pula tindakan & kesediaan pabila menghadapi krisis
@PakShamsul I pernah somehow tak jumpa kawasan parking. Penat tanya guard yang jaga bawah, semua tak faham.. cakap ayam dengan itik.. english tak paham, melayu pun tak faham.. geram betul kalau ingat balik
KKM tu tak potong bajet pun dah nazak sana sini. Potong lagi berbilion ni tak tahu la macam mana. The queue gets longer, the equipments will never be replaced or fixed and god knows how much worse it can get.
Rakyat Malaysia dah start jadi mcm negara maju. Instead of buying Panadol (as a brand), consumer beli Paracetamol (as a solution).
Rentak Malaysia skrg ni dah mcm Australia pada 5-10 tahun lepas.
A shift to value-based services/products, bukan brand-based services/products.
@nefauzii Just my 2 cents, kalau awak muda dan memang terdesak tak ada wakil lain, boleh aje lah nak cakap sendiri. Tapi lenggok bahasa, intonasi suara, kena pandai main perkataan.. semua ni kena practice sebelum hari tunang. Baru lah gain more respect..
@SyedAkramin Same.. masa nak bayar zakat fitrah tu pun keluar mcm ini.. tapi disebabkan saya mmng nak bayar direct, ulang alik jugak la cari web betul.. ingat glitch sistem heheh
The research behind this is wild. Your face as a kid shaped how teachers treated you, how many friends you made, how much practice you got being social, and even how much money you earn right now. It starts before you can crawl.
Babies just hours old already prefer attractive faces. Researchers at the University of Exeter showed newborns (average age: 2 days) pairs of faces and tracked which ones they stared at longer. The babies consistently picked the faces adults rated as good-looking. The sorting starts on day one.
Teachers do it too. In a 1973 study, they were given identical student profiles with different photos attached. The teachers rated the good-looking kids as having more academic potential, paid them more attention in class, and gave more detailed help when they struggled. Same kid on paper, different face, completely different treatment.
This creates a loop that psychologists have studied for decades. When people expect you to be friendly and capable, they act warmer toward you, and because they're warm, you actually become more social in return. Researchers at the University of Minnesota proved this in 1977 with a phone experiment. Men were shown a fake photo before a call (not the actual woman on the line). The ones who thought she was attractive were friendlier. And the women on the other end, who knew nothing about any photo, became more outgoing in response. The expectation changed real behavior in real time.
Now picture this running on repeat for an entire childhood. The good-looking kid gets picked for group projects, invited to birthday parties, gets smiles from strangers at the grocery store. Each of those is a rep. Social skills work like a muscle, and you get better by doing them over and over. The kid who got fewer invitations and fewer smiles fell behind for a simple reason: less practice.
The University of Texas pulled together 919 studies on attractiveness and found the same four things every time: people across cultures agree on who is good-looking, those kids get judged more favorably, they get treated better by the adults around them, and they end up with stronger social skills. Once the loop starts, it feeds itself.
It carries into your paycheck. Economists at UT Austin found that workers rated below average in looks earn 5 to 10% less per hour than average-looking coworkers, even when education and experience are the same. Over a 40-year career, that penalty alone runs into six figures. A 2026 study in Personality and Individual Differences tracked kids rated for their looks at ages 7 and 11, then checked back at age 50. The ones rated attractive in childhood still had better social skills four decades later.
So yeah, this tweet is more right than wrong. But the real driver is practice. Being less attractive as a kid meant fewer people reaching out to you, fewer good interactions, fewer chances to build the muscle. You didn't lack a social gene. You got fewer at-bats.
kes nie dekat la dgn tempat aku.. polis tu siap spin cerita yg budak2 nie main mercun tepi jalan. padahal budak tu tgh jalan2 nak beraya. cam bongok je. nasib baik pak sedara nye pun polis.
before you tell us to berjimat cermat, cut police escorts for VIPs and eliminate fuel allowances for all MPs.
we see zero sacrifices from politicians during this crisis