Humanity has hit Tok bottom.
Created in 2016 as a portal for short, humorous clips, TikTok has recently become synonymous with something far more sinister: viral internet challenges.
Pull up the video-sharing app and you’ll inevitably see opportunistic bozos risking their reputations and even bodies on camera for social media clout — like if Snapchat was created by the “Jackass” guys.
In the most notorious stunt in recent months, TikTok has become obsessed with NyQuil Chicken, which is far more deadly than when a female TikTokker wound up in the hospital after trying to style her hair with gorilla glue.
Unfortunately, the app’s eyeball-seeking algorithm makes it extremely difficult for these oft-harmful trends to be nipped in the bud before they metastasize across the internet.
To help readers know what to avoid, we’ve compiled a list of challenges so ludicrous we might want to reconsider a TikTok ban.
1. “Fairy flying”
While “fairy flying” might sound like a harmless trend, mental health professionals are concerned the videos — which show participants floating in mid-air with their heads out of the frame — could be misinterpreted as deadly. Many have compared this shocking imagery to fake “suicide-by-hanging” videos, where headless bodies are shown swaying in the air, seemingly drained of life.
Many who have participated in the challenge, which has racked up over 66 million views, achieved the sensational illusion by standing on a dresser with Crocs dangling off the back of their heels.
“The #fairyflying trend could be triggering or bring about negative emotions for people who have experienced suicidal ideation or have loved ones who’ve attempted or committed suicide,” Dr. Josh Stein, an adolescent psychiatrist for Newport Healthcare’s PrairieCare program, told The Post.
Alicia D. Akins, Ph.D., a mental health counselor specializing in teens, believes that the #fairyflying trend is especially dangerous for those already experiencing mental health problems because “we mimic what we see, watch and are shown.”
2. NyQuil Chicken or “Sleepy Chicken”
TikTok has given rise to plenty of literal recipes for disaster. Perhaps none are as hare-brained as the viral new recipe that involves basting a chicken in the cold and allergy medicine NyQuil.
Presumably invented to cure sleepiness and prevent peckishness in one fell swoop, the bird-brained trend has been circulating TikTok for months with viral videos depicting amateur chefs whipping up batches of this alternative medicine. In the clips, people can be seen marinating a chicken breast in a veritable jacuzzi of this liquid cold remedy, which contains acetaminophen, dextromethorphan HBr and doxylamine succinate.
And go figure: the FDA advised against the bird-brained creation, which they claimed was dangerous both to ingest and prepare a la methamphetamine.
“Boiling a medication can make it much more concentrated and change its properties in other ways,” the government health org explained in a warning. “It could also hurt your lungs. Put simply: Someone could take a dangerously high amount of the cough and cold medicine without even realizing it.”
3. Gorilla Glue girl
This might not be a challenge per se. However, Louisiana’s Tessica Brown undoubtedly cemented her place on TikTok stupidity’s Mount Rushmore after slathering her hair with Gorilla Glue and having to get it surgically repaired during a four-hour procedure.
Unfortunately, this cautionary tale might not stick as Brown’s adhesive mishap landed her $20,000 dollars in donations, hundreds of free hair products and even a full-time agent — not to mention an unfortunate imitator.
4. DIY vampire fangs
Speaking of Super Glue fiascos, holiday revelers went viral this past Halloween after supergluing costume vampire fangs to their teeth. The cringe-worthy clips — which, using the hashtag #VampireFangs, amassed over 9 million views — depicted various bozos struggling to remove the faux chompers after fastening them to their incisors using Super Glue, nail glue and other adhesives.
Go figure: Dentists advised against this practice, citing the fact that nail glue “is poisonous and won’t come off.”
5. Tooth filing
In the realm of toothless TikTok challenges, DIY vampire fangs pale in comparison to these amateur cosmeticians remodeling their chompers with nail files.
For the uninitiated, the challenge involved various knuckleheads attempting to fix their uneven smiles by using a nail file to sand their snack-slicers down to size. It was basically the bargain-bin equivalent of an enameloplasty — a reshaping procedure involving enamel removal that one would receive from a cosmetic dentist.
However, unlike the latter, these freelance molar makeovers sparked an outcry from the dental community.
“You’re doing irreparable damage and destruction to your teeth,” Dr. Chad Evans, co-founder of Texas-based Smile Magic Family Dental, said.
6. Face wax challenge
Full facial waxing is the hot new beauty fad with vids of the procedure collectively amassing millions of views on TikTok.
The procedure, demonstrated here by Kapsalon Freedom barbershop in the Netherlands, involves caking a patient’s face — including their eyes — with gloopy green wax as if casting a mold for the “House of Wax” horror movie. They even have wax-dipped Q-Tips stuck in their noses to extract pesky nasal hairs. When finished, the rogue beautician peels the beauty batter off the subject’s face in one piece like a slasher villain mask.
Skin experts are calling the process traumatic “for the skin, especially sensitive areas such as those found around the eyes.”
7. Erection cream pout plumper
TikTok cosmeticians redefined maintaining a stiff upper lip after trying to plump their pouts with erection cream on camera. While one influencer did succeed in fluffing his flappers to life raft proportions, he had to stop the stunt early due to the burning sensation.
Meanwhile doctors said that the hack is “utterly ridiculous and can be extremely dangerous,” adding that the “temporary” procedure could lead to adverse reactions including soreness, swelling and blisters, as well as blood pressure fluctuations and “possible heart problems.”
8. Corn cob challenge
As part of a series of viral lifehacks, enterprising TikTokkers tried to accelerate their corn consumption by eating a cob affixed to a spinning drill bit. This Loony Toons-evoking feat gained international attention after rapper Jason Derulo chipped a tooth while performing the stunt.
However, Anaconda’s cracked kernel didn’t deter him from trying to inhale 22 hamburgers a month later to commemorate reaching 22 million TikTok followers.
9. Cereal challenge
This one just seems nasty from the outset, but it also could have a potentially dangerous end result. In this test of wills, a person pours milk and cereal into the open mouth of a person lying down and then eats breakfast from the human “bowl.” Needless to say, things can get super, super messy, not to mention become a choking hazard for the volunteer vessel.
TikTok provides an extensive list of “community guidelines” that state the company does not allow “content that is excessively gruesome or shocking, especially that promotes or glorifies abject violence or suffering.” It also outlines “risky activities or other dangerous behavior” that are not allowed, including activity that “encourages, promotes, or glorifies such behavior, including amateur stunts or dangerous challenges.”
10. Skull breaker challenge
The title says it all.
This viral craze — reportedly originating in Venezuela as “rompcráneos,” or “skull breaker” — depicts three friends (we use the term loosely) jumping next to each other as the bookending buds kick the middle guy’s feet out from under him. The action sends the person crashing to the ground, landing on their back and hitting their head in the process.
Not only has the alarming trend led to injuries in Miami, New Jersey and Arizona, but Daytona Beach, Florida police have charged two high school teens with misdemeanor battery and cyberbullying following an incident there. In addition, two students in Mexico did their own version of the “skull breaker,” but reportedly used a sweater instead of their feet to trip a girl into doing a face-plant.
Doctors have unsurprisingly condemned the practice for its potential to cause “serious and life-threatening injuries,” ranging from “skull fracture to paralysis and death.”
11. Penny challenge
This shocking fad involves sliding a penny behind a partially plugged-in phone charger, as seen in multiple viral videos circulating on YouTube and TikTok.
While the prank may seem innocuous, the coin can strike the metal prongs, causing “sparks, electrical system damage, and in some cases, fire,” warned Massachusetts Fire Marshall Peter J. Ostroskey in an advisory issued last year.
Case in point: The marshal obtained a photo of a scorched outlet in Holden reportedly caused by the viral prank. In another incident, a student at Plymouth North High School allegedly started a fire after performing the challenge in what Plymouth Schools Superintendent Dr. Gary Maestas called an “irresponsible act. Fortunately, no one was injured — but the accidental arsonist was charged for the crime.
12. Benadryl challenge
This inflammatory challenge, which involves taking enough Benadryl to hallucinate and posting the footage on the video-sharing platform, resulted in the death of a 15-year-old Oklahoma girl last year.
This, along with several other near-fatal incidents, prompted pharmaceutical giant Johnson & Johnson and the FDA to issue PSAs warning teens not to abuse the antihistamines.
The latter warned, “Taking higher than recommended doses of the common over-the-counter (OTC) allergy medicine diphenhydramine (Benadryl) can lead to serious heart problems, seizures, coma or even death.”
13. ‘Cha-Cha Slide’ challenge
This ridiculous TikTok trend involved teen drivers swerving all over the road like maniacs in time with the stunt’s namesake dance anthem, first released 20 years ago by DJ Casper, a k a Mr. C The Slide Man.
Despite the obvious risks, the trend has taken TikTok by storm, reportedly causing several near-accidents by participants. “The car almost flipped,” reads the caption to a video of one TikTokker performing the stunt with friends.
TikTok warns viewers on several clips that “the action in this video could result in serious injury.”
14. Pee your pants challenge
Nothing to ward off the coronavirus doldrums like a viral video leak, right? At least that’s what one bored livestreamer thought when he heeded nature’s call on camera, inspiring scores of other lonely TikTokkers to follow suit like a Pied Pee-per.
The #peeyourpantschallenge hashtag currently quickly racked up 3.9 million views on TikTok, as well as a flurry of criticism from horrified commenters.
“People seriously need to get back to work soon . . . everybody has gone insane,” sputtered one.
15. The poop challenge
In an even sicker stunt, these parents in lockdown smeared excrement on their progeny and filmed their aghast reactions. “WTF” seemed to be the overwhelming response.
16. Verbal abuse challenge
These moms and dads crapped on their kids figuratively by calling them a “mistake” and in some instances mentioning the word “abort.”
17. Flash mob
These moms bided the lockdown in titillating fashion by exposing their breasts to their babies and recording their enticed reactions.
Called the #DropEmOutChallenge, these jokester mamas post their videos with Wheeler Walker Jr.’s song “Drop ‘Em Out” playing in the background. The country tune’s lyrics are particularly fitting for this game.
“Drop ’em out, let me see them ti - - ies,” the 2015 country song goes. “Gonna take a long look at those tig ol’ bitties.”
Seemingly from behind the camera, the moms bare it all to their hungry, breast-fed babies, filming the excited expressions.
18. The “dipping” challenge
Sauciness takes a turn for the worst courtesy of this salty social media swag.
After months of being bored in the house owing to the pandemic, in June, men voluntarily slam-dunked their junk into small containers of soy sauce in hopes of tasting the savory Asian condiment — typically used to boost the taste of sushi — on their tongues.
And it wok’d!
The tasty testes trend stemmed from a resurfaced 2013 study which found that mice can determine taste through their testicles.
Once the challenge hit digital timelines, guys everywhere were unzipping their flies and using their goodies as saucy napkins in the name of science.
19. The blackout challenge
Also known as the “passout challenge” and “the fainting game,” participants of the deadly, albeit popular blackout challenge were dared to choke themselves until they passed out for several seconds.
A 10-year-old girl in Italy tied a belt around her neck and accidentally asphyxiated herself in January. She was rushed to a hospital in Palermo where doctors ultimately pronounced her brain-dead.
TikTok encouraged users to flag any account holders engaging in the dangerous trend.
20. The “coronavirus challenge”
Crap’s got your tongue??
Ava Louise, a regular attention-seeker on Dr. Phil, took her clout-chasing to the clouds in March when she went viral for licking airplane toilet seats.
Insensitively dubbing her disgusting digital demonstration the “coronavirus challenge,” Louise, 22, caught cyberspace hell for her tone-deaf antics.
21. The silhouette challenge
Small-screen seduction hit a hard stop after perverts found a way to bring a cheeky trend to a creepy end.
Originally, hotties were taking to TikTok to show off their amazing bodies behind a red filter that covered up their private parts. But, geeky freaks found a way to remove the filter and get an eyeful of the women’s unmentionables.
PSAs warning lusty ladies about the pervy privacy breach went viral. And naturally, the sexy challenge slipped into the shadows.
22. The dry scoop challenge
The death-defying trend prompts participants to ingest a mound of undiluted supplemental energy powder. But it caused 20-year-old stripper and OnlyFans star Briatney Portillo to suffer a heart attack.
“I never thought something like this would ever happen to me. Especially because I’m so young,” Portillo told The Post.
And while she was in the middle of having the heart attack in April, first responders didn’t think she was in cardiac arrest either.
“The cops and EMTs were like, ‘Maybe it’s just anxiety because you’re about to dance,’” recalled Portillo, who’s worked as a stripper for more than a year.
Because of her age and profession, emergency medical techs initially assumed she was merely experiencing an anxiety attack sparked by the pressures of having to undress in front of strangers for money.
“But I don’t have anxiety about dancing,” she added. “At the time, I wasn’t sure what my body was going through but I knew something was way off.”
23. The eating frozen honey challenge
TikTok’s latest food fad challenge is extra crappy. Users who have been joining in on the #FrozenHoneyChallenge, which has some 90 million views, have found a not-so-sweet side effect: massive diarrhea.
The viral trend, which began with simply #FrozenHoney and now has 673 million views, involves filling a water bottle with honey and freezing it before consuming the golden concoction.
But despite millions of views on the different trending hashtags, some TikTok users have been experiencing negative side effects related to the extra-sweet snack, NBC reported. Several have claimed that the honey water has caused them to run to the bathroom with diarrhea or an overall uneasiness.
User @thenostalgiaqueen, who tried out the viral challenge, posted a video of her experiment and noted she felt sick immediately after. “I’m gonna try like a lot of it,” she said in the video before downing a huge glop and declaring it “not bad.”
But moments later, things took a turn: “I do feel a little bit sick now,” she said, noting she would not eat it again. User, @averycyrus, reported similar results, captioning her video, “Brb gotta go get my stomach pumped🤪.”
The origin of the viral trend is unknown but has since ballooned to yet another hashtag, #FrozenHoneyTrend, which has reached 170 million views.
24. The “Milk Crate” challenge
Milk does a body good but milk crates? Not so much. Perhaps the most dangerous trend to hit TikTok is the “Milk Crate Challenge,” where wannabe gymnasts pretend milk crates are a balance beam of sorts and attempt to climb a pyramid of stacked milk crates.
But instead of taking home the gold, participants often end up black and blue. The challenge was allegedly started by Kenneth Waddell on Facebook, spawning the TikTok trend that has over 17 million views.
Allegedly first showcased on Facebook by Kenneth Waddell earlier this month, videos of the wipeout-inducing trend boast over 15.3 million collective views on TikTok.
Medical experts quickly warned against attempting the ridiculously unstable challenge.
“The Milk Crate Challenge is very dangerous, and we are seeing many orthopedic injuries as a result of the falls,” Dr. Shawn Anthony, an orthopedic surgeon specializing in sports medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, told the “Today” show. “Injuries can include broken wrists, shoulder dislocations, ACL and meniscus tears, as well as life-threatening conditions like spinal cord injuries.”
Despite it’s popularity, TikTok issued a statement banning the “Milk Crate” challenge and removed millions of related videos from the platform
“TikTok prohibits content that promotes or glorifies dangerous acts, and we remove videos and redirect searches to our Community Guidelines to discourage such content,” the social media platform said. “We encourage everyone to exercise caution in their behavior whether online or off.”
Thankfully there’s no crying over spilled milk crates.
25. The TikTok bathroom challenge
The destructive stunt — dubbed both the “bathroom challenge” and the “devious lick challenge” as slang for the stealthy actions — has seen kids steal water fountains, hand sanitizer and soap dispensers, fire alarms, bathroom stall doors, hot air dryers and many other major utilities, seemingly just for the thrill of it.
Nationwide, some are taking the exploits to ruinous extremes, with the principal of Kansas’ Olathe North High School having to tell parents that several of the restrooms there were shut down because of stolen toilet seats and ripped-off stall doors, the Kansas City Star reported.
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