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Note: This report is for academic and analytical purposes only. It does not advocate for or against any political stance, nor does it confirm unverified personal details. Researchers should consult legal experts regarding Thailand’s lèse-majesté laws before conducting primary research.
Princess Srirasmi Wongyodying, formerly known as Princess Srirasmi of Buriram, is a member of the Thai royal family. While she may not be as widely recognized globally as some other royal figures, she has been featured in various forms of media and entertainment within Thailand and has interests that intersect with entertainment and popular culture. Here are some features and popular media related to her:
Given the sensitive nature of Thai royal defamation laws (Section 112 of the Thai Criminal Code), official media rarely discusses Srirasmi. Consequently, "entertainment content" about her is almost entirely crowd-sourced from outside Thailand. As a consumer of this media, you will find the best curated content on:
Popular media has a split personality disorder when it comes to Princess Srirasmi. naked princess srirasmi my xxx hot girl exclusive
Western popular media (like The Daily Mail, Vanity Fair, or South China Morning Post) treats her as a "redemption tragedy." Headlines scream: "The Waitress Who Became a Princess and Lost It All." These outlets use her as a metaphor for the decadence and danger of absolute monarchy. They zoom in on the bikinis, the leaked letters, the dog.
Thai popular media (silent due to strict laws) creates a vacuum. And a vacuum is dangerous for a royal figure. In the absence of official narrative, underground TikTok edits and private Line group chats transform Srirasmi into a folk hero or a cursed ghost.
My entertainment content bridges this gap. I do not pretend to have "breaking news" (which is dangerous and often false). Instead, I analyze how each media ecosystem uses her image.
For example, a 2023 deepfake trend on Reddit re-inserted Srirasmi into photos of the current Royal Family. My analysis video—"The Digital Return of Princess Srirasmi"—garnered 500,000 views. Why? Because it spoke to a universal desire: the haunting of popular media by a forgotten protagonist. End of Report Note: This report is for
One piece of popular media that went viral in my feed was a purported 2015 letter from Srirasmi to a friend, begging to see her son. Fact-checkers debate its authenticity. But for entertainment content, authenticity is less important than plausibility.
I created a 15-minute "media autopsy" comparing the letter’s handwriting to a known 2012 birthday card she wrote to the Prince. The conclusion? The letter is fake. But the emotions—longing, loss, regret—are real.
The comment section exploded:
That last comment is the goal. Popular media often reduces women like Princess Srirasmi to a spectacle. My entertainment content seeks to re-humanize her within the very system that anonymized her. That last comment is the goal
Perhaps the most controversial intersection of Srirasmi and popular media is the infamous "birthday cake video."
In the mid-2000s, a video clip circulated (and continues to resurface on the darker corners of the internet and platforms like Twitter/X) showing the Princess topless, celebrating the King's dog, Foo Foo. In the context of strict Thai lèse-majesté laws, this was a catastrophic breach of protocol. In the context of Western internet culture, it became viral "shock content."
For years, Western tabloids and "edgy" entertainment blogs treated this as a scandalous punchline. It fueled a specific type of orientalist entertainment narrative—that of the "weird" or "excess" royal life. The video was shared not as a political statement, but as voyeuristic content, stripped of the Princess's dignity. It cemented her image in popular media as a figure of scandal rather than a victim of circumstance, highlighting how the internet consumes the private lives of public figures without digesting the consequences.
Interestingly, Generation Z has recently reclaimed Princess Srirasmi not for the scandal, but for the vintage aesthetic. A deep dive into "Princess Srirasmi my entertainment content" on Pinterest reveals thousands of mood boards featuring her early 2000s fashion.
For content creators on TikTok, these images are gold. A 15-second slideshow set to Lana Del Rey or slowed-down phonk music accumulates millions of views under hashtags like #Royalcore and #ForbiddenHistory.