Reporter: "Have you made a fortune?"
Chicken Cutlet Guy: "Do you think you can get fat in a day?"
Reporter: A lot of people will be contacting you, right?
Guy: Maybe some. Should I expect that or not? My current job is my profession, that's my original intention.
Reporter: Have you thought about capitalizing on this wave of popularity, like expanding your business?
Guy: Anything is possible.
Netizens: Every sentence gets a response, but nothing gets resolved.
What do you all think?
Chicken Cutlet Guy understands all too well that there are too many people in society who can't stand seeing others succeed. So how does he answer the question of whether he's made a fortune? If he answers no, a lot of netizens will say, "You sell so much every day, how could you not be rich?" If he says he is rich, a lot of netizens will be jealous and criticize him. Besides, what is the definition of being rich? How much money is considered rich? His rhetorical question about not being able to get fat in a day already tells you that even if he has made a lot of money, it's the result of hard work accumulated over time.
Similarly, the question "Should I expect that or not?" also reveals his helplessness. Because some netizens believe that no one should have commercial collaborations once they become popular, while others believe they can, this "should" question is very clever. If you say yes, a bunch of netizens will say it's just another way of monetizing popularity; if you say no, a bunch of netizens will say, "How could someone as popular as you not have any?" "Maybe some" is enough.
"Anything is possible" is even more straightforward.