Lawrence El-Mansi's hilarious take on rocket sale on OpenSooq sparks social media frenzy

Published April 14th, 2024 - 11:02 GMT
Lawrence El-Mansi
Lawrence El-Mansi Instagram profile

ALBAWABA - Lawrence El-Mansi, known for his ability to find humor in everyday life, became intrigued by the current craze of rocket transactions.

Lawrence El-Mansi made light of the ridiculousness of people's fascination with buying and selling rockets in a number of humorous sketches and social media postings; this subject has been trending widely recently.

People laughed and enjoyed El-Mansi's tongue-in-cheek comments and exaggerated images of people trying to figure out how to ship rockets, which he used to make fun of the reasons people do such deals.

But what really got people talking online was El-Mansi's hilarious response to someone's attempt to sell a rocket on the website OpenSooq. El-Mansi, in his trademark sardonic and humorous style, offered a remark on the seller's boldness and inventiveness, which elicited both praise and laughter from his audience.

One of the photos that has been circulating among Jordanians on social media today allegedly shows a country resident stealing the march and transforming it into his own property.


This individual did more than just bring the Iranian vehicle to his house; he also listed it for sale on a website that specializes in selling secondhand components for 1,200 Jordanian dinars. 1693.2 USD 

In response to the sale of the Iranian march, the general population in Jordan claimed that it showed "Iran's failure in its military campaign to strike Israel." Others questioned the veracity of the image.

The widely circulated photo of "a used missile displayed for sale" was actually a Photoshopped hoax, according to the reverse engineering.

Social media activists have claimed that the sole purpose of sharing this photograph is to make people laugh.

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