The speaker appears to be a chef or a cooking enthusiast who is introducing a cooking challenge involving 6 types of shrimp. They explain that each participant will steam their own shrimp and then have it judged. The speaker also mentions that they will be using a unique ingredient, durian fruit, in their dish. They then proceed to prepare and steam their shrimp, adding various seasonings and ingredients along the way.
Throughout the video, the speaker seems to be speaking to an audience, providing commentary and explanations of their actions. They also appear to be interacting with others, possibly other participants in the challenge or viewers of the video.
The video appears to be a mix of a cooking tutorial and a competition, with the speaker providing information on how to prepare and steam shrimp, while also competing against others to create the best dish.
Here are the key facts extracted from the text:
1. The person in the video has invested in a few blue-topped hats.
2. They have three chef's sets.
3. They have six types of shrimp: crayfish, baby lobster, newly hatched Mobile Alaska giant tiger shrimp, giant freshwater prawns, lobster, and black tiger shrimp.
4. The person is making a steamed shrimp dish with the shrimp.
5. They plan to have a competition where each person makes their own steamed shrimp dish and a judge scores them.
6. The person is also making steamed durian fruit.
7. They add coconut water to the steamer.
8. The person has a private meeting with someone to discuss the shrimp.
9. They have a cantaloupe that they plan to use in the competition.
10. The person is a professional chef.
11. They have a wife who helps them with the competition.
12. The person serves the shrimp with Mu Sang's special sauce.
13. The competition has several participants, including Tom Hong and Victor.
14. The last dish is a mantis shrimp dish made by Hong Vui.
15. The judges score the dishes and give points to the participants.
16. The person uploads videos to a channel and asks viewers to subscribe and like their videos.
17. They mention that they usually get 20,000 views per video.