Are Viral 'Pinay Gold Medalist' Video Links For Sale? Netizen Claims Zyan Cabrera Sells Private Clips Online
When a so‑called 'Pinay gold medalist' scandal goes viral, it reveals how easily a young woman's ordinary life can be mined for other people's clicks.

The girl in the grainy thumbnails is smiling.
Most days, she is just another young woman on social media — dancing in a cramped room, chatting to followers, sharing tips on skincare and body confidence. But away from the soft lighting and filters, on Reddit threads, Telegram channels and anonymous forums, that same girl has been turned into something else entirely: a 'Pinay gold medalist', an alleged Winter Olympian, and the star of a supposed leaked sex scandal.
Her name is Zyan Cabrera — known online as Jerriel Cryazee — and the story being told about her now owes less to facts than to the imaginations of strangers.
'Pinay Gold Medalist' Viral Video Links And A Weaponised Buzzword
Cabrera is, in reality, a small but steadily growing Filipino creator. She posts quick dances, lip-syncs, and approachable health and beauty advice. On Instagram, under @zyan.cabrera6, she has tens of thousands of followers and some clips hitting hundreds of thousands of views. It's modest, honest creator‑economy success — hardly the stuff of Olympic legend.
None of it has anything to do with elite sport.
Yet across Facebook, X, and especially in murkier corners of Telegram, posts breathlessly claim to host a 'Pinay Gold Medalist' or 'Jerriel Cryazee' scandal video, decorated with Olympic rings and references to the 2026 Winter Games. 'Gold medalist' is being used as bait: a magic phrase in an Olympic cycle, stuck onto a young woman's face to supercharge clicks.

Cybersecurity specialists who have examined the links say the pattern is familiar. These are phishing traps. The URLs pretend to be video hosts, but redirect to pages engineered to steal login credentials or plant malware. The scandal is the sugar on the rim; the data breach is the drink.
Crucially, there is no evidence Cabrera has ever competed in professional sport, let alone won Olympic gold. The entire athletic persona is invented — a costume draped over her image to satisfy algorithms that reward anything loosely tied to the Games.
But if the phishing scam is relatively easy to unmask, the rumours swirling underneath it are anything but straightforward.
@goldmedalist34 pretty girl Sa buong Mundo..
♬ original sound - Zyan cabrera - Zyan cabrera
Netizens Split Over Whether The 'Pinay Gold Medalist' Sells Her Own Clips
The fiercest narratives about Cabrera are not written in headlines; they live in comment sections. And those comments are, frankly, brutal.
'Di to scandal. Nagbebenta talaga yan ng content,' one Reddit user, Downtown-Health4814, declares: 'This isn't a scandal. She really does sell content.' No hedging, no proof offered — just a flat statement that reclassifies her from victim to entrepreneur in one line.
User MonsterEternal spins out the rumour a little further: 'yes, based sa rumors nagbebenta talaga yan siya, it's either na leak nung bumili o di kaya kinalat nang bf niya... o 'di kaya na hack talaga.' In English: 'yes, based on the rumours, she really is selling [content]; either the buyer leaked it, or her boyfriend spread it around... or maybe she really was hacked.' It reads like a crowd‑sourced script treatment: she sells, someone betrays, a hack lurks in the background just in case.
Others push back, hard. 'Rumors lang yan. Hindi siya nagbebenta,' counters Dry-Juggernaut-4103 — 'Those are just rumours. She's not selling [anything].' They insist the real culprit is a hacked iCloud account belonging to Cabrera's boyfriend: 'Na hack yung icloud ng bf niya. Kaya na leak lahat ng sex videos nilam...' — 'Her boyfriend's iCloud was hacked. That's why all their sex videos leaked.'
According to them, the clips have been circulating quietly for a year in private groups of IT and computer science graduates and other closed forums, only exploding into wider view because 'may gago na nag kalat ng set niya' — 'some idiot spread her whole set.'
That description — the videos passed around like tech‑bro contraband long before anyone says "scandal" out loud — will sound grimly familiar to many women.
Then there is Novel_Agency_8319, who strips away even the thin veneer of mystery: 'Nope pag tinignan mo sa telegram intimate mga sex nila ng Boypren niya... it is just her boyfrend is fond of recording their sex eto naman si girl enjoy din kasi sobrang libog yun lang yun.' Translation: 'Nope, if you look on Telegram it's just their intimate sex with her boyfriend; it's just that her boyfriend is fond of recording their sex, and the girl enjoys it too because she's very horny — that's all it is.'
To them, this isn't a commercial operation or a sophisticated leak; it's exactly what it looks like — private sex tapes between two people, recorded for mutual pleasure and never meant for broadcast.
And then comes the angriest take, from shielacruz007: 'Nahack yan gaya ng libo libong babae na may scandal sa telegram tapos binenta nung hacker.' In English: 'She was hacked, like the thousands of women who have "scandals" on Telegram and then the hacker sells them.' They argue that if Cabrera were really selling the videos herself, 'tinakpa nya na mukha nya pati yung boyfriend nyang varsity player' — 'she would have covered her face and that of her boyfriend, a varsity player' — who, they suggest, will probably be kicked off his team 'dahil sa kalat na scandal' — because the scandal has spread.
@zyancabrera.official MovieTime🍿😱 Ang Pambansang Gymnast! “Let life move louder than the noise.” –Zyan Cabrera🥇 #fyp #capcut #cry4zee #foryou #foryoupage
♬ One More Light - Linkin Park
One detail cuts through all the noise: none of these commenters claims first‑hand knowledge. Every version — the secret content seller, the betrayed girlfriend, the hacking victim — is stitched together from screenshots, second‑hand gossip and a heavy dose of projection. It is rumour arguing with rumour, laid over an undeniably real phishing campaign.
What The Comments Really Reveal
If you zoom out for a moment, the obsession with whether Cabrera 'nagbebenta talaga' — 'really sells' — almost misses the point. The market does not actually care if she did or didn't consent to any of this. Her face, her body and her sex life are already being passed around like files, with strangers deciding if she is 'sobrang libog' — 'very horny' — or dangerously naive.

The same links that promise a 'Pinay gold medalist' scandal are peddling malware. The same Telegram channels that host her alleged clips are, according to netizens, stacked with 'libo libong babae' — thousands of other women whose hacked videos have been bundled and sold. Cabrera matters here less as a person than as a product line.
The practical advice remains painfully simple: don't click the links; report the accounts. Every curious tap encourages the next phishing wave, the next iCloud break‑in, the next round of private sex tapes being turned into public punishment.
What's harder to confront is how quickly comment sections become judge, jury and storyteller for women like Cabrera. A young creator who once posted light-hearted wellness tips now finds her reputation being rewritten by people who have never met her, in languages she may not even read.
When a so‑called 'Pinay gold medalist' scandal goes viral, you can see the damage most clearly not in the thumbnails, but in those threads — where a young woman's ordinary life is pulled apart, reassembled, and sold back to the internet as entertainment.
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