Let me be more specific.
Let $T>0$ be a finite real number.
We know that if $f\in C([0,T],L^p(\mathbb{R}^N))$ is complex valued then the statement $\|1_{\{|f|>M\}}|f|\|_{L^\infty([0,T], L^p(\mathbb{R}^N))}\rightarrow 0$ as $M\rightarrow \infty$ is true by dominated convergence theorem with the dominant function $f$.
But is the same statement true for $f\in L^\infty([0,T],L^p(\mathbb{R}^N))$?
I thought it is just true with same argument. However, my teacher says it is not true. He does not let me know why it is not true.
Could I have the answer from here? Thanks in advance!
Addition: $f\in C([0,T],L^p(\mathbb{R}^N))$ means, for every $t\in [0,T]$ and every $\varepsilon>0$ there exists $\delta>0$ such that $$\|f(t)-f(s)\|_{L^p(\mathbb{R}^N)}<\varepsilon$$ for every $s\in [0,T]$ such that $|t-s|<\delta$.
Addition2 : The symbol $\{|f|>M\}$ means $\{(t,x)\in [0,T]\times \mathbb{R}^N : |f(t,x)|>M\}$