Girls massively began to publish videos where they prank their young people, sending them to the store for non-existent things with a fictitious name. The relevant videos appeared in their TikTok -accounts.
So, for example, a user with the nickname kyleandjae_ sent her boyfriend to the hypermarket for a product called Oochie Cooch 3000 and showed his reaction (the words oochie and cooch are slang names for female genital organs in English). “I asked the consultant:“ Do you have Oochie Cooch 3000 on sale? ”At first she looked at me like I’m stupid, and then she took the microphone and loudly asked the whole store:“ Guys, does anyone know we have have Oochie Cooch 3000? “Why is everyone laughing out loud?” – the young man wondered.
Another user with the nickname meetthethorpes asked a man to buy Magic Fwem Fwem Fresh 2000 (“Magic Fwem-Fwem-Fresh 2000”). “Am I an idiot? You sent me there to buy Magic Fwem Fwem Fresh 2000? They looked at me like I was a drug addict,” the guy said.
Moreover, in the video of blogger Aileen Christine, her boyfriend told how he tried to buy a product called Squeaky Clean-a Vageen-a, which translates as “squeaky clean female genital organ”: “Squeaky Clean-a Vageen I knew it didn’t exist! I went in and said: “Do you have Squeaky Clean-a Vageen-a?” First she asked what this product was for, and then laughed and asked if my girlfriend’s TikTok account. I can never trust you again.
Earlier in December, men believed in a comic video about manicure and “whined from horror. ” A user under the nickname ivonnemireyaa posted a video on her page in which she demonstrated the process of creating acrylic nails on a realistic mannequin hand: she alternately inserts oblong pieces of plastic into her fingers that go deep under the cuticle.