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Tag: TikTok

  • ‘This is what pure GREED looks like’: Las Vegas man shops at Walmart. Then he calls out manager for letting one man buy so many Pokémon cards

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    Gotta catch ’em all—apparently literally. A Las Vegas man is going viral after filming a Walmart shopper who cleared out an entire display of Pokémon cards while management allegedly just stood by and let it happen. The TikToker, fuming and filming, calls the scene “pure greed.” He accuses the manager of playing favorites as he’s denied a single pack himself.

    The video shows at least 150 packs being rung up by the cashier, but it is unclear whether more were already bagged. Meanwhile, the mystery buyer hides his face like he’s smuggling state secrets, clutching enough cards to start his own tournament.

    Do Pokémon Cards Have Resell Value? 

    In recent years, Pokémon cards have crept up on the resale market, with rare cards reaching up to six digits. While it may not be common knowledge to everyone, Mike Romano (@mromano2003) and his whopping 7,000,000 views definitely know. His one-minute clip is saturated with frenzy and fury, as he directly showcases the hundreds of items about to be rung up by the Walmart cashier.

    Mike can be heard behind the camera saying, “This is all being sold to one person. This is the manager. He didn’t ring any of these up yet, but won’t let me buy them.” The Walmart manager then interjects and says the items have been rung up, but when Mike asks if the card has been swiped, he doesn’t respond. He simply says, “Sir, you will not be able to purchase those items.” 

    Mike then says, “Zay, the main manager at this Walmart Royale Grande is letting one guy buy all these because he knows them.” Zay refutes this statement and then tells Mike he cannot record this interaction. This is where the clip ends. If the buyer was able to pay for all the packs shown in the TikTok, that means he acquired at least 1,500 cards by paying upwards of $1,500. 

    What are Scalpers?

    This is a common question that has surfaced at the same time reselling Pokémon cards became popular. A 4-year-old Reddit post on the subreddit r/PokemonTCG asks: “Someone explain the whole scalping situation to me?”

    The most upvoted response was, “In the case of Pokémon cards, the demand has grown in the last year or so (probably pandemic related, time on people’s hands, expendable income). People (scalpers) understand this and are buying all the product at retail value and selling it for a profit online or on FB. People can’t help themselves and cave on paying these inflated prices.” 

    Mike’s viewers also reference this phenomenon.  One viewer says, “Them resellers are ruining everything.” While another wrote, “Scalpers are the greediest parasites to exist. tcg scalpers are the worst.”

    One even calls Mike himself a scalper, saying, “Scalpers mad at scalpers lol.” But Mike responds, “Nah went to buy 1 box out of 100. Nice try though.”

    On the other hand, some viewers are calling out both men involved. One viewer says, “Grown men arguing over some Pokémon cards.” 

    Another laments, “Weird that the grown adults took away a fun hobby from the kids…”

    Some accuse the Walmart manager of being in on the scam. One says, “Manager is 100% getting paid.” One speculated, “Oh they 100% friends! Walmart is so gross for allowing this.”

    Did Walmart respond?

    Mike tags Walmart and Pokémon in his caption, but has yet to get a response. He does a follow-up TikTok, which already has 422,000 views, where he explains the situation more clearly and drops the Walmart location.

    He says, “It’s really hard to find Pokémon cards in Vegas. So when I heard they were doing this drop at Walmart, I got kinda excited. My friend told me they dropped and we got there in like five minutes. I asked ‘Can I have one box?’ and they said it’s all sold out. What do you mean all sold out? They say, ‘Yeah, this guy’s buying all of them.’ So he’s [the buyer] like, ‘Don’t worry man, I’ll give you some.’” 

    Mike was appeased until he asked for a box, and the buyer said he’ll only give him two tins. At this point, Mike gets frustrated and says, “I was like ‘Dude you have thousands of tins there. What are you talking about two tins? So we went back and forth and then I just decided to grab a box…I went to self-checkout and started scanning and then Zay ran over and shut my register down. So that’s where the video starts.” 

    Mike accuses the Walmart manager being in cahoots with the buyer, and reveals that he was allegedly threatened by Zay that the cops would be called on him if he continued the argument.

    @mromano2003 This is what pure GREED looks like!! #walmart #pokemon @Walmart @Pokémon Company Int’l ♬ original sound – Mike Romano

    The Mary Sue reached out to Mike via TikTok direct message and to Walmart via media contact form.

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Image of Gisselle Hernandez

    Gisselle Hernandez

    Gisselle Hernandez-Gomez is a contributing reporter to the Mary Sue. Her work has appeared in the Daily Dot, Business Insider, Fodor’s Travel and more. You can follow her on X at @GisselleHern. You can email her at [email protected].

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    Gisselle Hernandez

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  • Deputy talking to child on TikTok sent nude photos: sheriff

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    A deputy with the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office in Florida was arrested after authorities said he was inappropriately messaging a 10-year-old girl over TikTok.

    A deputy with the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office in Florida was arrested after authorities said he was inappropriately messaging a 10-year-old girl over TikTok.

    Solen Feyissa via Unsplash

    A man talking to a 10-year-old girl over TikTok, asking for and sending nude photos of himself, was identified as a Florida deputy, authorities said.

    Charlotte County sheriff’s deputy James Ford is charged with solicitation of a minor, sending harmful material to a minor, and harmful communication to a minor, Charlotte County Sheriff Bill Prummell announced in an Oct. 28 news release.

    He was arrested by the sheriff’s office Oct. 28, court documents show.

    Information on Ford’s legal representation was not immediately available.

    Ford had been messaging a girl who lives in Texas, according to an affidavit. A sergeant with the Coryell County Sheriff’s Office in Texas alerted the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office on Oct. 28 about their conversations . Coryell County is about a 145-mile drive southwest from Dallas.

    The TikTok messages were discovered after the girl’s mother began noticing her daughter was acting inappropriately and “not herself,” according to the affidavit.

    Her mother took her phone and saw she had been messaging with an adult man, the affidavit says.

    She “noticed nude photographs and videos of the child were being sent on TikTok,” the affidavit continues.

    Then the mother alerted law enforcement.

    During an investigation, the girl told a forensic examiner that she had been messaging the man, later identified as Ford, who she said asked for inappropriate photos and videos of her, according to the affidavit.

    She told the examiner she sent explicit content to him, and he also shared a nude photo of himself, the affidavit says.

    Local authorities in Texas found the images she described, as well as a photo of Ford in which his “erect penis” was seen as he stood in a shower, according to the affidavit.

    They also found several “concerning chats,” the affidavit says.

    Investigators were able to identify Ford by name and confirm he worked with the Charlotte County Sheriff’s Office in Florida, according to the affidavit.

    Ford was arrested at work Oct. 28, the affidavit says.

    In an interview, Ford ultimately acknowledged messaging the child over TikTok and asking for images of her genitals, according to the affidavit.

    He “also admitted that he asked the child to masturbate,” the affidavit says.

    At the end of the interview, according to investigators, Ford said “I (expletive) up really bad.”

    Ford was detained in the Charlotte County Jail, according to Prummell. He was put on administrative leave without pay.

    Ford made his first court appearance Oct. 29, records show. He is due in court Dec. 1 for an arraignment.

    Concerns or suspicions about child sexual exploitation can be reported to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children’s CyberTipline online or by calling 1-800-843-5678.

    If you have experienced sexual assault and need someone to talk to, call the National Sexual Assault Hotline for support at 1-800-656-4673 or visit the hotline’s online chatroom.

    Julia Marnin

    McClatchy DC

    Julia Marnin covers courts for McClatchy News, writing about criminal and civil affairs, including cases involving policing, corrections, civil liberties, fraud, and abuses of power. As a reporter on McClatchy’s National Real-Time Team, she’s also covered the COVID-19 pandemic and a variety of other topics since joining in 2021, following a fellowship with Newsweek. Born in Biloxi, Mississippi, she was raised in South Jersey and is now based in New York State.

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    Julia Marnin

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  • From TikTok to soybeans: Breaking down agenda for Trump-Xi meeting

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    President Trump is expected to sit down with China’s Xi Jinping in South Korea for trade talks shortly as he wraps up his trip to Asia. Micah McCartney, a Taipei-based journalist with Newsweek, joins CBS News to preview the meeting.

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  • White House says deal to put TikTok under US ownership could be finalized in South Korea

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    By BARBARA ORTUTAY, AP Technology Writer

    The Trump administration has been signaling that it may have finally reached a deal with China to keep TikTok running in the U.S., with the two countries finalizing it as soon as Thursday.

    President Donald Trump is visiting South Korea, where he will meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping to try to de-escalate a trade war.

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told CBS’s “Face the Nation” Sunday that the two leaders will “consummate that transaction on Thursday in Korea.”

    If it happens, the deal would mark the end of months of uncertainty about the fate of the popular video-sharing platform in the United States. After wide bipartisan majorities in Congress passed — and President Joe Biden signed — a law that would ban TikTok in the U.S. if it did not find a new owner in the place of China’s ByteDance, the platform was set to go dark on the law’s January deadline. For a several hours, it did. But on his first day in office, Trump signed an executive order to keep it running while his administration tries to reach an agreement for the sale of the company.

    Three more executive orders followed, as Trump, without a clear legal basis, continued to extend the deadline for a TikTok deal. The second was in April, when White House officials believed they were nearing a deal to spin off TikTok into a new company with U.S. ownership that fell apart after China backed out following Trump’s tariff announcement. The third came in June, then another in September, which Trump said would allow TikTok to continue operating in the United States in a way that meets national security concerns.

    Trump’s order was meant to enable an American-led group of investors to buy the app from China’s ByteDance, though the deal also requires China’s approval.

    However, TikTok deal is “not really a big thing for Xi Jinping,” said Bonnie Glaser, managing director of the German Marshall Fund’s Indo-Pacific program, during a media briefing Tuesday. “(China is) happy to let (Trump) declare that they have finally kept a deal. Whether or not that deal will protect the data of Americans is a big question going forward.”

    “A big question mark for the United States, of course, is whether this is consistent with U.S. law since there was a law passed by Congress,” Glaser said.

    About 43% of U.S. adults under the age of 30 say they regularly get news from TikTok, higher than any other social media app, including YouTube, Facebook and Instagram, according to a Pew Research Center report published in September.

    Americans are also more closely divided on what to do about TikTok than they were two years ago.

    A recent Pew Research Center survey found that about one-third of Americans said they supported a TikTok ban, down from 50% in March 2023. Roughly one-third said they would oppose a ban, and a similar percentage said they weren’t sure.

    Among those who said they supported banning the social media platform, about 8 in 10 cited concerns over users’ data security being at risk as a major factor in their decision, according to the report.

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    Associated Press

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  • Kai Trump, president’s granddaughter, will play in LPGA Tour’s Annika event next month

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    Kai Trump, President Trump’s eldest granddaughter, a high school senior and University of Miami commit, has secured a sponsor invitation to play in an LPGA Tour event Nov. 13-16.

    The 18-year-old will compete in the Annika at Pelican Golf Club in Belleair, Fla. She currently attends the Benjamin School in Palm Beach and is ranked No. 461 on the American Junior Golf Assn. rankings. She also competes on the Srixon Medalist Tour on the South Florida PGA. Her top finish was a tie for third in July.

    “My dream has been to compete with the best in the world on the LPGA Tour,” Trump said in a statement. “This event will be an incredible experience. I look forward to meeting and competing against so many of my heroes and mentors in golf as I make my LPGA Tour debut.”

    Sponsor invitations have long been used to attract attention to a tournament through a golfer who is from a well-known family or, in recent years, has a strong social media presence. Kai Trump qualifies on both counts.

    She is the oldest daughter of Donald Trump Jr. and his ex-wife, Vanessa, and has nearly 8 million followers combined on Instagram, Tiktok, YouTube and X. In addition to posting her own exploits on and off the course, she creates videos playing golf with her grandpa and chronicled their visit to the Ryder Cup.

    She also recently launched her own sports apparel and lifestyle brand, KT.

    “Kai’s broad following and reach are helping introduce golf to new audiences, especially among younger fans,” said Ricki Lasky, LPGA chief tour business and operations officer, in a statement.

    The oldest of the president’s 11 grandchildren, Kai became known nationally when she made a speech in support of her grandfather’s campaign at the 2024 Republican National Convention. Her parents divorced in 2018, and her mother has been dating Tiger Woods for about a year.

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    Steve Henson

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  • TikTok’s New AI Tools Will Make It Easier for Creators to Produce Viral Content

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    Be they viral dancers mimicking the moves of Taylor Swift, short-form comedians, or beauty bloggers, creators are the heart and soul of TikTok—and the social media company knows it.

    On Tuesday, the ByteDance-owned company rolled out a series of product updates focused on elevating the app’s creator experience. Announced during the TikTok US Creator Summit, an in-person gathering with more than 300 TikTok creators, the newest updates are set to help them share and make content more effectively, particularly with the help of artificial intelligence.

    Even as the internet is flooded with AI slop, TikTok is betting on the technology. TikTok’s latest product rollout is harnessing the power of AI for content creation, while boosting monetization along the way. 

    “At TikTok, we want to empower human creativity with AI-powered tools that make it easier to create, discover, and connect around original content,” the company said in a statement. “We can’t wait to see how these new tools inspire creators to bring even more great content to life.”

    TikTok’s recent rollout is not the company’s first dabble with artificial intelligence. Since 2024, TikTok’s AI creative suite, TikTok Symphony, has allowed businesses to generate content and avatars, and translate and dub videos by harnessing AI. Earlier this year, the app rolled out AI Alive, a feature that allows static photos to be transformed into short-form videos for user’s in-app stories.

    Still, the recent features are aiming to make creator’s lives easier—at least the creating part. Here’s what’s new.

    Harnessing AI for creation

    To help creators streamline the editing process, TikTok is introducing an AI-powered editing tool dubbed Smart Split. The new feature automatically reframes and clips long videos, as well as transcribes and captions longer content to be transformed into multiple TikTok-ready shorter videos.

    Now available globally on the TikTok Studio Web, the feature allows creators to upload videos longer than a minute for Smart Split to reframe the video vertically. Smart Split can also suggest video length and generate captions for the adapted video, which can then be directly to the app. For instance, a long video podcast can be easily trimmed down and edited into fragments that creators can then roll out.

    Sometimes the hardest part of producing content is not only publishing, but creating it too. TikTok’s AI Outline, which is now available for U.S. users over 18, sets out to help structure the creative process by helping users generate hooks, hashtags, video titles, and outlines based on prompts and trending topics from the app’s Creator Search Insights.

    Additionally, AI Outline divides a user’s video into six customizable parts in the creator’s style. The feature allows creators to lengthen or shorten a title, generate script ideas, and refine their hooks.

    Suggestions made by both new AI tools are set to abide by TikTok’s Community Guidelines, and videos produced using the features will undergo a moderation review prior to publishing on the app.

    Keeping it lucrative

    The company is updating its revenue share for creators by building on its existing subscription program—a Patreon-like setup that allows creators to build a pay-to-join community with exclusive content.

    The company’s announced update will make it possible for creators to get up to 90 percent of the subscriptions profit payouts. Creators with a subscription community will now receive 70 percent of revenue shares, while those meeting extra requirements can rack up an extra 20 percent monthly bonus.

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    María José Gutierrez Chavez

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  • These clips don’t show Hurricane Melissa in Jamaica

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    Hurricane Melissa grew to a Category 5 hurricane Oct. 27 as it neared Jamaica, but videos that social media users claim show the storm making landfall are deceiving — it wasn’t on shore yet when the videos were posted. 

    An Oct. 26 TikTok video shows footage of intense flooding, wind and property damage, and, occasionally, people screaming in English in the background. 

    “Hurricane Melissa Category 5 hits Jamaica with 160 mph winds right now,” says text on the video, which had 1.8 million views as of the afternoon of Oct. 27.

    Other users on TikTok and Threads also shared the video. 

    The Associated Press reported that Melissa could be the strongest hurricane Jamaica has experienced in decades. One advisory said the hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 160 miles per hour, as the TikTok says, but the footage in the post was taken from previous disaster events.

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    Video shows 2018 storm in Maratea, Italy

    (Screengrab from TikTok post.)

    The first clip shows high waves topping a safety wall and moving inland, but this footage isn’t from Jamaica. When doing a reverse image search, PolitiFact found the video is from a 2018 storm in the small town of Maratea, Italy. We found a newscast and a report about the storm from the Italian news outlet Potenza News24 City. Getty Images also published the same footage in 2018 about Maratea. 

    Video showing red vehicles isn’t from Jamaica

    (Screengrab from TikTok post.)

    The second clip in the TikTok that shows strong winds and two red vehicles also isn’t from Jamaica. The footage appeared in another misleading video shared in August and supposedly from Cheyenne, Wyoming. However, the earliest version of the clip online is from a June 21 TikTok post that says it was from Hurricane Erick in Ometepec, Mexico.

    Video shows storm in Veracruz, Mexico

    (Screengrab from TikTok post.)

    The clip where a palm tree falls on a gray SUV wasn’t in Jamaica either. PolitiFact found the same video shared on Facebook in May with a Spanish subtitle saying it was because of a storm in the Universidad Tecnológica del Centro de Veracruz in Veracruz, Mexico. A TikTok user also shared the footage in May, saying it was in the same Veracruz university in Mexico. 

    Video shows a storm in Oklahoma

    (Screengrab from TikTok post.)

    The footage that shows high winds and an SUV getting hit by leaves was originally shared June 5 on Facebook by Mike Morgan, Oklahoma’s News 4’s (KFOR-TV) chief meteorologist. Morgan said this was a “weaker tornado” that hit Garvin County. 

    Videos shows footage of 2018 Hurricane Michael

    (Screengrab from TikTok post.)

    The clip of strong winds and rain blowing through what looks like the entrance to a parking garage is from 2018. Dan Robinson, a storm chaser, filmed the clip during Hurricane Michael in Panama City, Florida. 

    Video shows storm in Moncalieri, Italy

    (Screengrab from TikTok post.)

    The video that shows high winds hitting a street and a white SUV parked under a roof dates back to an August 2024 Facebook post. The caption says in Italian that it is from a storm in Moncalieri, Italy, according to Google Translate. 

    Video shows flooded streets in Palermo, Italy

    (Screengrab from TikTok post.)

    The last clip of cars driving through flooded streets also isn’t from Jamaica. One of  the cars has a European Union license plate, and a reverse image search found the footage is from flooded streets in the city of Palermo, Italy, after heavy rains in June. An Italian news report shows the same video

    We rate the claim that this video shows Hurricane Melissa hitting Jamaica on Oct. 26 False.

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  • ‘First person I ever had removed’: Delta flight attendant seats passenger in exit row. She can’t believe his response when she asks this common question

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    Entitlement doesn’t fly—literally. A Delta flight attendant on TikTok is spilling the in-flight tea about the first passenger she ever kicked off a plane. A man, bitter about not being upgraded to first class, refused to verbally confirm he’d assist in an emergency from his exit-row seat—because “nodding was enough.”

    Moments later, the captain personally escorted him off the plane, and the kicker? He thought he was finally getting that first-class upgrade.

    What are Delta’s Exit Row Requirements?

    Savannah (@savannah0191) might have just been four months into her now 10-year career, but her story remains relevant today. At 918,000 views, it’s clear the tale as old as time always gathers attention–in this case, entitlement.

    Savannah begins her four-and-a-half-minute story by saying, “ A guy walks on board and starts talking to the flight attendant up front. I cannot hear what he is saying, but I can hear him because he is loud.”

    This should have been the first sign. Savannah continues, saying that the man finally gets to her row, and she greets him warmly. In turn, he rolls his eyes and says, “Ugh, here I go back with all these peasants.” Apparently, he was upset because he hadn’t received the first class upgrade he wanted.

    Why can’t he just say yes?

    Savannah shares that it was her duty to brief the passengers sitting on the exit rows. As luck would have it, Mr. Entitled Passenger was one of these people. This is where the story gets spicy. When the attendant asked the standard safety question—could he verbally confirm he’d help in an emergency?—he simply nodded his head. Of course, as per FAA rules, passengers need to verbally respond, “Yes.”

    “In the United States… all passengers seated in the exit row must be able to understand and speak English. This is one of the reasons flight attendants are required to receive a verbal yes from passengers seated in the exit row. This verbal response allows flight attendants to determine whether or not a passenger can understand what the flight attendant is saying and can articulate a logical response,” it stated.

    Savannah’s passenger refused to say “yes.” She asks him again, and he gets upset and insists a head nod was good enough. Big mistake. Savannah simply walks to the Delta captain and asks him to remove the rude passenger. Minutes later, the captain personally comes to escort the passenger off the plane. In a plot twist straight out of karma’s playbook, the man thought he was finally getting his first-class upgrade. Spoiler: he wasn’t. The gate agent gets him off the plane and the flight is on its way shortly after. 

    ‘Why Can’t People Just Be Kind?’

    As the TikTok keeps reaching more For You Pages, viewers swarm in the comments to laugh at the passenger’s karma. 

    One viewer says, “A classic FAFO ([expletive] around and find out) moment.” Another says, “He got upgraded alright!”

    Some people are just baffled at the absurdity of the situation. One viewer says, “All he had to do was say ‘yes’…i’ll never understand people.” 

    Another shares, “He couldn’t be respectful enough to follow your instructions, idk why he thought the captain of all ppl would be upgrading his seat.”

    A logical viewer shares, “In the event of an emergency you would have had zero confidence in his cooperation. 100% correct call.”

    Lastly, this viewer’s comment sums it up: “Flight attendants keep us safe, keep things running efficiently, AND they give us snacks. They deserve literally all of the respect.”

    @savannah0191

    the first ever person I had removed ?

    ♬ original sound – Savannah

    The Mary Sue reached out to Savannah via TikTok direct message and to Delta via media contact form.

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Image of Gisselle Hernandez

    Gisselle Hernandez

    Gisselle Hernandez-Gomez is a contributing reporter to the Mary Sue. Her work has appeared in the Daily Dot, Business Insider, Fodor’s Travel and more. You can follow her on X at @GisselleHern. You can email her at [email protected].

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    Gisselle Hernandez

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  • What does 6-7 mean and why is it being banned? The meme, explained

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    Six seven, 6-7!

    If you’ve been anywhere near the internet or a member of Generation Alpha in the past few weeks then you’ll be all too familiar with the phrase, but what does 6-7 mean and why is it a thing?

    If you, like us, have been protecting your peace though now find yourself needing these answers as a matter of urgency so you can seem tuned in among the younger members of your family then look no further. Stay with us as we attempt to explain what 6-7 means.

    Ah, 2025.

    What does 6-7 mean?

    The phrase six seven (6-7) is a now viral internet meme and term that has been doing the rounds after having gained insane levels of popularity amongst Generation Alpha.

    But what does 6-7 mean, really? And where did it even come from?

    Well, essentially, the term ‘6-7’ originated from rapper Skrilla’s song ‘Doot Doot (6 7)’ where he repeatedly says ‘6 7’ in his lyrics.

    Sections of the song with this sound bite quickly gained traction on TikTok after users began sharing edits of basketball player LaMelo Ball who (would you believe it), is 6’7″ in height.

    However, the original context of the song is a reference to 67th Street in Philadelphia and a nod to police codes, with 10-67 being a report of death.

    Since then, though, it’s fair to say that the 6 7 meme has taken on a life of its own, now being littered across the internet and having even been referenced on a South Park episode.

    In general, there’s no ‘real’ 6 7 meaning, with it instead being used as a bit of a nothing term like ‘skibidi’ might be.

    And in case you were wondering, yes it would certainly seem that we have in fact reached peak brain rot.

    Now very much an inside joke, though it doesn’t technically mean anything, it can be used in any and every context that you so wish. So with that we say go forth and 6 7.

    Who started 6-7?

    As above, six seven as a phrase started picking up with the release of Skrilla’s track and several TikToks that were made with the song after.

    However, what really put 6-7 on the map, if you will, was this video of the ‘6-7 kid’ who was seen screeching the term at a basketball game. Please see below.

    Since then, this kid has gone on to make 6-7 his entire brand and honestly, we can’t blame him.

    6-7 meme bans

    Yes, we’re actually at the point where ‘6-7’ as a phrase has had to be banned in certain classrooms because it’s proven so disruptive.

    Tbh, this is mostly due to the fact that kids are shouting this out randomly whilst gesturing with an accompanying ‘juggling’ hand gesture rather than it being particularly problematic as a phrase itself, though we can definitely appreciate how this would get annoying very quickly.

    And while you wouldn’t necessarily think it would come up that often in class, we ask that you spare a moment’s thought for maths teachers or any form tutor taking registration head count. Truly, 6-7 is all around us if you look hard enough for it.

    Speaking to Today.com, exasperated teacher Adria Laplander said “I’ve been teaching for 20 years and I’ve dealt with all sorts of slang – nothing has driven me crazier than this one.”

    In fact, she’s so over it that she even made her own TikTok video to explain her form of punishment for any student who makes the reference during class.

    “We are not saying the words, ‘67’ anymore. If you do, you have to write a 67-word essay about what the word ‘67’ means,” Laplander said. “If you do it again, another 67-word essay. After five times, if you’re still saying, ‘67’ in this classroom, your essay is going to bop up to 670 words.”

    More than fair enough.

    So there you have it, the 6-7 meme in all its glory. That’s enough internet for today.

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    Lian Brooks

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  • ‘I thought you’re supposed to have your card out’: Woman says she got turned away from bar for seeming too eager to order

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    Apparently, being too ready to order is now a crime. A woman on TikTok is going viral after sharing how she got turned away from a bar—not for being rude, drunk, or causing a scene—but for having her card out while waiting to order. Yep, according to the bartender, tapping your Visa means you’re “too eager,” and therefore, unworthy of service.

    The woman, Rae (@raeeraeebaee), says she was stunned and stepped away to cool off. Then came back later, hoping for a normal interaction—only for a new bartender to shut her down too immediately. Even a random guy who tried to order a drink for her got rejected when he admitted who it was for. So apparently, in this bar, the only thing less acceptable than bad behavior is enthusiasm.

    What’s Typical Bar Culture?

    A simple night out with friends took a bizarre turn for Rae after she apparently broke an unspoken bar rule: being too efficient when trying to order. In her viral TikTok, now at 215,000 views, Rae recounts her experience. She says she walked up to the counter, card in hand, and tapped it lightly on the bar, waiting for the bartender’s attention. Instead of a cocktail, she got a lecture. The bartender snapped that “no one is going to serve you in this bar when you’re waving your card around,” leaving her stunned and embarrassed. 

    Hoping to shake it off, she stepped outside, regrouped, and returned later. Still, a different bartender also refused to serve her. Even a good Samaritan who tried to order a drink on her behalf got rejected. She says, “So not only was I unable to get a drink, but the poor man rooting for me also wasn’t able to get a drink.”

    Rae, equal parts confused and exasperated, joked that maybe the bar was running some kind of Zen patience test and she had clearly failed.

    “I genuinely was just trying to have fun with my friends,” she said. Rae was baffled that enthusiasm and a little too much readiness were apparently grounds for banishment.

    Bars have recently come under fire for reasons like forcing patrons to pay 20% gratuity. Another time, an airport bar recently went viral since its espresso martini was just Folgers and Vodka in a cup. 

    The Viewers Chime In

    Rae’s TikTok currently has over 800 comments, but the verdict is still undecided. On one hand, there are many viewers siding with Rae and saying the situation was purely unjust. 

    One viewer says, “Holding a card or cash to show you’re ready is aggressively normal.” While another backs them up and says, “I thought you’re supposed to have your card out ready to order.”

    Some viewers choose the side of the bartenders. “Something tells me the tapping was more rude than you may think it comes across,” one wrote. “Impatience def comes off as rude so maybe consider how you treat others. bartenders were matching YOUR vibe.”

    There’s also a discourse on bartenders as a whole. One viewer shares, “Idc what anyone says. Bar tenders are quite literally the worst human beings alive. They’re always rude and u can NEVER get their attention. and once you do they always give u attitude and then get upset when they don’t get tipped.”

    Another says, “Yet some bartenders will give you attitude if you DONT have your card out and ready ……” 

    Lastly, a bartender chimes in and gives their opinion on the entire thing. “Bartender 17 years here, yes the tapping of the card is annoying because most times a good bartender has a flow and knows who came to the bar first,” they said. “Tapping your card won’t make them come to you faster, if anything the lack of patience will annoy them. BUT it’s not ‘you can’t have a drink’ worthy.”

    @raeeraeebaee

    Got canceled again

    ♬ original sound – raeeraeebaee

    The Mary Sue reached out to the creator via TikTok direct message.

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Gisselle Hernandez

    Gisselle Hernandez-Gomez is a contributing reporter to the Mary Sue. Her work has appeared in the Daily Dot, Business Insider, Fodor’s Travel and more. You can follow her on X at @GisselleHern. You can email her at [email protected].

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    Gisselle Hernandez

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  • Trump’s TikTok Deal Will Supposedly Close on Thursday

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    U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been in Malaysia for two days engaging in trade negotiations with representatives from China. Apparently it’s been, as Bessent put it in a Sunday appearance on CBS’s Face the Nation, “a very good two days”—so good, he claims, that the deal to give an American company control of TikTok is all hashed out and ready to be sealed when presidents Trump and Xi meet in South Korea next week.

    In fact, Bessent says the details were negotiated in Madrid, last month when he met with Chinese negotiators while on a trip to Spain and the UK. That sheds a tiny bit of light on what Trump meant when he posted a confusing statement on Truth Social about the TikTok deal on September 19. “The call was a very good one, we will be speaking again by phone, appreciate the TikTok approval, and both look forward to meeting at APEC!”

    What, exactly, did “the TikTok approval” mean? Perhaps this deal.

    A de jure ban on TikTok was passed in spring of last year, and theoretically went into effect this past January. President Trump has repeatedly delayed enforcement of the ban, which could mean measures like forcing app stores to take it down or blocking its use, instead slowly chipping away at negotiations to bring it under U.S. control.

    And rumor has it the U.S. is very much going to be in control of this new version of TikTok. It sounds as if Trump and China have worked out a deal to spin off a separate app for U.S. customers, and allow this new U.S. version to be controlled by a patchwork of U.S.-based investors, all while allowing the China-based parent company, ByteDance, to possess the coveted and highly addictive TikTok algorithm as they license it to the U.S. spinoff.

    That consortium of new owners is said to involve the Murdoch family, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, and Dell Technologies CEO Michael Dell.

    Bessent was light on details other than that. “My remit was to get the Chinese to agree to approve the transaction, and I believe we successfully accomplished that over the past two days,” he said.

     

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    Mike Pearl

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  • ‘You should follow her home, buddy’: Woman puts her hand on man’s airplane seat. Then he touches it

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    No one wants their space invaded in an already cramped airplane seat. So, fellow passengers praise one man’s hilarious response to a woman putting her hand on his headrest.

    In a video with over 21.3 million views, TikToker Desingerica (@dragomirdespic_design) shows an older woman sitting behind him, gripping the top of his airplane seat. He glances up at her hand.

    What he does next shocks viewers.

    How did he deal with the woman’s hand on his airplane seat?

    In the background, he plays the romantic song “Perfect” by Ed Sheeran.

    Then, he reaches up and strokes the woman’s hand lovingly. She jumps back and quickly pulls her hand away, glancing up at the TikToker with an embarrassed expression. She crosses her arms.

    The TikToker then pans down and makes a sarcastic, bashful expression. His travel partner, sitting next to hi,m holds back laughter and covers his face with his hand.

    What did viewers think of his reaction?

    On subreddits like r/AmIOverreacting, airline passengers share how they escalate issues of personal space invasion. Many suggest calling a flight attendant or confronting the passenger in their space.

    However, commenters on the TikToker’s video praise his clever way of conveying that the woman was in his bubble.

    “She was in your personal space so you got personal,” one writes.

    “Sometimes violence doesn’t solve problem,” another says.

    “Hahahahaha I’m going to remember that move next time someone does that on a plane,” a third adds.

    “I’m so glad you did something (and something silly!) instead of just posting rage bait,” a fourth viewer says.

    Even flight attendants co-sign his hilarious way of handling the situation.

    “As a flight attendant, thanks for HANDling this with grace and humor,” one viewer comments.

    “I’m a flight attendant and I approve this message,” a second remarks.

    Others share their own awkward encounters with passengers who invaded their personal space.

    “One time a girl in front of me draped her long hair over the seat covering my TV and food tray. I braided it,” a commenter shares.

    “This creased me! on our first family flight to Spain a few weeks ago my little girl was freaked out by a hand grabbing the side of her chair, I put my jumper there but should have grabbed it instead,” another writes.

    “Wet your finger and pretend to lick em,” a third jokes.

    @dragomirdespic_design ♬ Perfect – Ed Sheeran

    The Mary Sue reached out to Desingerica via Instagram direct message for further comment.

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    Rebekah Harding

    Rebekah Harding is a reporter and content strategist based in Philadelphia. You can contact her at rebekahjonesharding.com.

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  • 10/26: Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan

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    This week on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan, amid President Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s trip to Asia, Bessent joins to discuss the Chinese tariffs, the TikTok deal and the government shutdown at home. Plus. House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries joins to discuss the government shutdown.

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  • Trump and Xi will ‘consummate’ TikTok deal on Thursday, treasury secretary says | TechCrunch

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    The United States and China are ready to move forward on a TikTok deal, according to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.

    Bessent had already said last month that the two countries reached a “framework” on a deal during discussions in Madrid, and President Donald Trump subsequently signed an executive order to facilitate the transaction.

    In a Sunday morning appearance on CBS’ Face the Nation, Bessent said the U.S. and China have reached “a final deal on TikTok.”

    “We reached one in Madrid, and I believe that as of today, all the details are ironed out, and that will be for the two leaders to consummate that transaction on Thursday in Korea,” Bessent said. He declined to discuss the details of the agreement, but added, “My remit was to get the Chinese to agree to approve the transaction, and I believe we successfully accomplished that over the past two days.”

    Trump has repeatedly extended the deadline of a law that requires TikTok’s owner ByteDance to sell the app or see it banned in the United States. 

    Under the terms of his executive order, TikTok’s U.S. operations — including its recommendation algorithm, source code, and content moderation — will come under the control of a new board of directors, with Oracle becoming responsible for security operations.

    Oracle (led by Trump ally Larry Ellison), Fox Corp (owner of Fox News), Andreessen Horowitz, and Silver Lake Management have been reported as investors in the new joint venture, with Fox’s participation seemingly confirmed by Trump.

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    Bessent made today’s comments from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, where Chinese and American trade negotiators also said they had reached a framework for an agreement over tariffs and other trade issues.

    U.S. trade negotiator Jamieson Greer told reporters that rare earth minerals were covered in the discussion, though he did not specify how. (Chinese has said it will tighten export controls on those minerals, which are critical to the manufacture of semiconductors and other tech products.)

    “We talked about extending the truce, we talked about rare earths, of course, we talked about all kinds of topics,” Greer said.

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    Anthony Ha

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  • ‘I didn’t know you can bargain at TJ Maxx’: California HomeGoods customer finds ornate $500 chair on clearance for $350. Then she calls a manager and gets another $100 off

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    When customers spot an expensive item that catches their eye, the most common response is to ignore it reluctantly. But how far would you go to snag it without breaking the bank? After a $350 HomeGoods Gothic throne chair captured this California-based woman’s heart, she showed that initiative and kindness can pay off. 

    The video features TikTok creator Nikki (@nikkitalktictok) wandering through her local HomeGoods.

    “Guys, I’m shaking right now. I’m at HomeGoods, and there’s a chair here that I want. It was over $500,” she tells over 318,000 views. “It’s now on clearance for $350. I think I’m gonna try to get them down another $100.”

    Then, she turns the camera to unveil the chair that has her smitten. “Look how beautiful it is,” the content creator says, revealing the viral Gothic Throne Chair: a tall, black, ornate chair with a wingback. As soon as she sits in it, she falls deeper in love with it. “It’s mine,” she proclaims.

    “I’m trying to find someone who works here,” she states. During her search for an employee, Nikki stumbles into one.

    “Hi. There’s a chair back there, and it’s in the clearance section. Do you know if in time, it’s gonna go down more, or is that the ending price for it?” she asks politely to the worker off-camera.” I can show you which one it is.”

    The worker responds, “I don’t know. I can check with the manager.” Shortly thereafter, a manager named Merbot gets involved. Throughout the interaction, Nikki is friendly and kind. “Do you have a TJX card?” Merbot asks. “No, I don’t. If I sign up for a TJX card, is it cheaper?” Nikki replies. “It’s gonna give you a lot cheaper,” the manager says. “ 10% is gonna be like, $35 off.”

    Did she get the chair?

    However, Nikki didn’t even have to barter or sign up, according to her overlay text.

    “I’m gonna go ahead and give you a $100 discount,” the manager says. “I will reduce the price. But it’s good to sign so you can get that hundred. Do you have your ID?” 

    Agreeing, the content creator follows the manager to the cash register, where she applies for the card and successfully obtains the chair. “Thank you so much. You made me so happy,” she says with a smile. “We got it.” Afterward, the employees load the chair onto a cart and push it outside for her brother to pick up. Eventually, it’s all strapped in to the back of his truck and ready to go.

    Unfortunately, Nikki did encounter an obstacle during delivery. “So, we got it home. There’s just one problem: it won’t fit down the hallway,” she says, standing in her living room. “We’re gonna have to take out my windows and put it through the window.”

    What did viewers think of the HomeGoods discount?

    Viewers were divided in the comments section on whether Nikki received a good deal. Many applauded her for scoring $100 off the chair of her dreams.

    “World’s best negotiator! Well done,” one viewer praised.

    “Love it. You never know unless you ask. And with kindness,” another stated.

    “Wait, I didn’t know you can bargain at TJ Maxx,” a third said.

    Meanwhile, others were not as thrilled, believing she was tricked into signing up for a credit card by the HomeGoods manager. 

    “Shouldn’t sign up for the TJ card. its a credit card you don’t want. not worth the $100 discount,” one commenter remarked.

    “They always have to try to scam you with the credit card. I hope you got approved because if you don’t, your credit score goes down. Also if you’re not gonna use it, you should cancel it,” second echoed.

    How the TJX card works

    According to HomeGoods’ website, this is a rewards credit card that earns 5% back in rewards when used at any HomeGoods location or family store, with no annual fee. When a customer signs up, they will receive 10% off their first in-store item. Other perks include free shipping offers, entering a sweepstakes to win a $100 gift card, and access to digital rewards within 2 days of purchase. Since viewers worried about Nikki’s credit score being affected by applying, customers can check through prequalify. This allows customers to see if they are eligible without hurting their credit score. From there, they can decide to accept the credit card.

    @nikkitalktictok THE ULTIMATE HOME GOODS FIND!!! ??? #Spookychair #homegoods #blackchair #draculachair #vampirechair ♬ Halloween ・ cute horror song – PeriTune

    The Mary Sue reached out to Nikki via TikTok comment and direct message as well as HomeGoods via press email.

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Melody Heald

    Melody Heald is a culture writer. Her work can be found in Glitter Magazine, BUST Magazine, The Daily Dot, and more. You can email her at: [email protected]

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    Melody Heald

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  • TikTok robot star Rizzbot gave me the middle finger | TechCrunch

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    A couple of Thursdays ago, I awoke at nearly 4:30 a.m. to a dizzying Instagram DM.  

    Rizzbot, a kid-size humanoid robot that’s made by Unitree Robotics and has a massive social media following — more than 1 million TikTok followers and more than half a million followers on Instagram — had sent me a photo: he was flipping me off. 

    No words. No explanation. Just a robot with its middle finger raised.  

    Although I was shocked, a sinking feeling meant that I could guess why. A few weeks ago, Rizzbot — or the person who runs its Instagram account — and I chatted about a possible story. I found the account interesting: a humanoid walking the streets of Austin wearing Nike dunks and a cowboy hat. It’s known for roasting, but also flirting and having a good time. The name Rizz comes from the Gen Z slang word rizz for charisma. 

    I was intrigued by the rising popularity of the account. People are usually uncomfortable with humanoids. There are privacy concerns and job displacement fears. Online, people sling slurs at them, most notably calling them “clankers.” In the robotics world, meanwhile, experts are debating what they will be best suited to do.  

    I saw Rizzbot as a role model, making people feel comfortable interacting with a humanoid. 

    Rizzbot agreed to an interview, so I started reaching out to experts to discuss the future of humanoids in preparation for a story. Two weeks after my initial DM with Rizzbot, I told it I would finally send it some interview questions on the following Monday or Tuesday.  

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    But life happened, and I missed my own deadline. I was finally prepared to send the questions first thing Thursday a.m., and I thought, no big deal.  

    Too late. In the wee hours of Wednesday night, Rizzbot sent that photo. Message clear: You broke your word, so eff off. 

    I didn’t give up. I apologized to the robot (or to its human?) for the delay and promised I would send the questions first thing during office hours. But when I tried a few hours later, I was met with “user not found.”

    The robot had blocked me.  

    Did I trigger a fail-safe? 

    My friends thought it was hilarious that I was flipped off and blocked by Rizzbot, since for weeks, all I spoke about was how excited I was to do this story.  

    “LOL Rizzbot roasted you,” one friend texted me.  

    “YOU ARE BEEFING WITH A ROBOT LOLOLOL,” another said. I reached out to Rizzbot on TikTok, a move one friend called desperate. But what else could I do? I had pitched the story to my editor, spent hours researching, and — despite this beef — Rizzbot would still be interesting to TechCrunch’s tech-loving readers. 

    While my friends were laughing, I entered a state of gloom. Not only was my story dead, but I was also now the girl who got blocked by a dancing robot.  

    The photo I received at 4:04AM ET (we blurred the background)

    My colleague Amanda Silberling offered to help me. She reached out to the Rizzbot account to ask why I was blocked. Rizzbot gave a curt response: “Rizzbot blocks like he rizzes — smooth, confident, and with zero remorse.” It then sent her the same middle finger photo it sent me. I thought: Wow, I wasn’t even special enough for a unique flip off.

    But then, one friend offered a terrifying thought I hadn’t even considered. “It wasn’t a human response. I’m scared for you.” It seems I had already made my first robot enemy, and the AI revolution has only just begun.  

    Or did I? Was I really beefing with a human? 

    I found out that Rizzbot’s name is actually Jake the Robot.  

    Its owner is an anonymous YouTuber and biochemist, according to reports. The robot itself is a standard Unitree G1 Model — they’re made in Hangzhou, China — and anyone can buy one for $16,000 to over $70,000.  

    Rizzbot was trained by Kyle Morgenstein, a PhD student at UT Austin’s robotic laboratory. He worked alongside a team for around three weeks, teaching the robot how to dance and move its limbs. While much of the robot’s behavior is pre-programmed, it’s operated by a remote control, with its true owner, apparently not Morgenstein, nearby commanding it.  

    If I had to guess how the tech behind the robot works — after talking with Malte F. Jung, an associate professor at Cornell University who studied information sciences — someone triggers the robot’s behaviors, and a picture is taken of whoever is interacting with the robot, run through ChatGPT or some other LLM, and a text-to-speech function is then used to roast or flirt with the person.  

    “The robot turns the script around of people abusing robots,” Jung told me. “Now the robot gets to abuse people. The product here is the performance.”  

    Morgenstein told other outlets that the actual owner of Rizzbot just likes to entertain people, likes to show the joy that humanoids are capable of bringing. 

    It’s unclear who runs the Rizzbot social accounts, though when Rizzbot sent that photo to Silberling, it also sent an error message — probably an accident — about being out of GPU memory. The message indicated that an AI agent is probably involved in running that account and is maybe auto-generating DM responses. It also indicated that Rizzbot only has 48GB of memory.  

    “What makes you confident it was ever a person?” my coder friend asked me about the Instagram account manager. 

    In the age of AI, someone capable of training a robot is likely capable of connecting an LLM to Instagram DMs. My block could even have been a fail-safe, my coder friend said, meaning I automatically triggered it myself by DM’ing in the early hours — even if it was a reply.  

    But there are some clues that a human is involved in running Rizzbot’s social media: There were typos in its initial DM reply to me when I first asked for an interview. 

    Still, unless Rizzbot tells me if his social media manager is another bot (which seems unlikely given our beef), I will likely never know. Maybe it doesn’t matter. 

    “If they got $50,000 for a bot and a couple thousand for a 48GB memory machine, I wouldn’t put anything past ‘em,” my coder friend pointed out. “They’re clearly committed to the bit.”  

    It’s still robot brain rot 

    Rizzbot’s TikTok page alone has racked up more than 45 million views. One video shows Rizzbot chasing people in the streets, while another sees it running into a pole and falling in the middle of the street. A viral video, presumably altered by AI, shows Rizzbot being run over by a car.  

    “It seems hilarious, honestly,” one founder friend told me, calling the viral videos “robot brain rot.” He said the AI is rudimentary, but the robot’s premise is a “funny intermingling” of internet dank — or absurdist — humor, and the lightheartedness that much of social media is missing these days. “It interacts with people in a novel way.” 

    My Rizzbot rabbit hole still had me thinking, though, about the role of humanoids in our society. Every sci-fi movie I’ve ever watched — from “Blade Runner” to “I, Robot” came flooding back to me. How scared should I be now that I’ve made my first humanoid enemy?  

    “Performance seems to be really the big use case for these kinds of robots,” Jung told me, adding that Rizzbot was “like a modern version of street performance with a hand puppet.”  

    “Often, hand puppets are snarky,” he continued.  

    Aside from Rizzbot, he mentioned the Spring Festival performance in China, where humanoids performed folk dance alongside humans, and in San Francisco, meanwhile, people head to the boxing ring to watch robots exchange jabs.  

    “Robots will become the primary mass market entertainers, show performers, dancers, singers, comedians, and companions,” Dima Gazda, the founder of the robotics company Esper Bionics, told me, adding that humans will become niche, top talent. “As robots gain grace and emotional intelligence, they’ll blend into performances and interactive experiences better than humans.”  

    Luckily, right now, dancing robots seem hard to scale en masse, according to Jen Apicella, executive director at the Pittsburgh Robotics Network. So I don’t have to worry about this beef escalating to, say, a legion of dancing, rizzing robots physically showing up at my doorstep. Not that such a thought crossed my mind. 

    It’s now been over a week since I was blocked, and I find myself reminiscing on the joy I found watching Rizzbot chase people in the streets. My favorite video showed a woman twerking on Rizzbot. A crowd formed around the spectacle; people seemed genuinely entertained, itching, perhaps, for their own moment to twerk on a robot.  

    I always joked to my friends that I wanted to keep robots on my side in case the revolution came. But even as I wrote this article, I found myself almost in another AI beef — this time with Meta AI, which I had never used before. I accidentally started a conversation with Meta AI while looking for my old conversations with Rizzbot on Instagram.   

    Meta’s bot replied, “Yoo, what’s good fam? You callin’ me Rizzbot? 🤣 What’s poppin’?”   

    I decided it was time to log off.

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    Dominic-Madori Davis

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  • DC Man Sues Over His Arrest for Playing Darth Vader Music at National Guard

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    A Washington D.C. man was arrested last month for following National Guard troops around while playing “The Imperial March,” Darth Vader’s theme song in the Star Wars films. But now that man is suing, with the help of the ACLU, because he says his First and Fourth Amendment rights were violated while he engaged in peaceful protest.

    Sam O’Hara, 35, was walking in the Logan Circle neighborhood of D.C. on Sept. 11 when he spotted National Guard troops patrolling the area. O’Hara started playing “The Imperial March” from his phone while walking behind them and started filming it for his TikTok account. But “in less than two minutes,” according to the lawsuit, Ohio National Guard member Sgt. Devon Beck turned around and threatened to call the local cops to “handle” him if O’Hara didn’t stop.

    O’Hara didn’t stop, so that’s what Beck did. He called the Metropolitan Police Department, who came and put O’Hara in handcuffs. He remained “tightly handcuffed” for about 15-20 minutes, according to the suit.

    The four MPD officers who made the arrest, Tiffany Brown, JM Campbell, Edward Reyes-Benigno, and Alfonso Lopez Martinez, are all named in the lawsuit, which was filed with help from the DC chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).

    O’Hara has “experienced significant anxiety around law enforcement and feels less safe in his neighborhood,” according to the suit, and the “overly tight handcuffs” reportedly left marks on his wrists. He also had pain in his arms and shoulders the next morning, according to the suit. O’Hara has had two surgeries on his left shoulder since 2023.

    The suit includes some jokes about Star Wars, which was probably to be expected:

    The law might have tolerated government conduct of this sort a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away. But in the here and now, the First Amendment bars government officials from shutting down peaceful protests, and the Fourth Amendment (along with the District’s prohibition on false arrest) bars groundless seizures.

    President Donald Trump has sent a surge of federal agents to cities that he considers to be Democratic and has seen mixed success sending National Guard troops to cities like Portland and Chicago. Judges have flip flopped on whether Trump is allowed to do that, with some finding that he can with others finding he can’t as the cases make their way up the ladder to higher courts. As of this writing, Trump has not been allowed to deploy troops to Portland and Chicago.

    But there’s very little question that Trump has the ability to deploy the National Guard to Washington D.C. because it’s not a state. The president has incredible powers to do many things in D.C. that he really can’t do elsewhere. But the free speech protections of the First Amendment, as well as the protections from unreasonable search and seizure in the Fourth Amendment, still apply to the entire country—even in D.C.

    Curiously, when Gizmodo went to find the videos that O’Hara has posted to TikTok in order to embed them in this post, we found that the video from Sept. 11 had been slapped with the warning: “This post may not be comfortable for some audiences. Log in to make the most of your experience.”

    There’s nothing graphic about the video and it’s unclear why TikTok wouldn’t allow the video to be embedded, but the local TV news outlet WUSA9 has a video that also shows you what happened, including O’Hara’s arrest.

    O’Hara hasn’t stopped filming National Guard troops around D.C. since his arrest. There are plenty of videos at his account @freedc20009.

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    Matt Novak

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  • ‘This is dog food that they’re serving’: Woman buys $20 burger patties from Walmart. Then she opens the package

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    A Canadian Walmart customer says she learned the hard way not to trust what she sees on food packaging, especially when it comes to frozen meat.

    After spending $20 on a box of beef patties from the chain, she says what she found inside had her ready to swear off frozen burgers for good.

    What’s Wrong With These Walmart Patties?

    In a recent TikTok, Katrina (@katrinaelstubgmail.com2) pulls out a box of Sirloin & Prime Rib Beef Burgers, a product sold exclusively at Walmart Canada.

    “So I bought these yesterday,” she begins, filming the box sitting on the counter. The image on the front shows a thick, juicy burger. But what she pulls from inside looks nothing like it.

    “It ain’t your [expletive] finest. It is [expletive] disgusting,” she says. “This is dog food that they’re serving, and it cost me $20.”

    The patties are packed in a clear plastic bag inside the box. One looks fully intact but dull brown in color, while the other appears broken or partially eaten, though it’s unclear whether it came that way or broke apart during handling.

    “I’m even sending them this; like what the [expletive] is that?” she says.

    In her caption, she writes, “Never again. Put that [expletive] in the dog food aisle.”

    Why Are the Patties Brown?

    The patties are sold raw and frozen, which may explain their appearance. According to Wilson Farm Meats, it’s actually common for beef to turn brown in the freezer.

    This happens because of a protein called myoglobin. When it’s exposed to oxygen, myoglobin gives beef its bright red color. Once that exposure is reduced, like when the meat is frozen, myoglobin darkens, turning brown or gray.

    The shift in color doesn’t always mean the meat has spoiled. But when paired with a broken patty and poor presentation, it’s easy to see why a shopper might second-guess what’s in the box.

    Despite Katrina’s review, the product has a strong 4.5-star rating from over 600 buyers on Walmart’s Canadian website. We’ve reached out to Walmart for comment.

    In the comments, some viewers say they’ve had similar experiences.

    “Only buy Angus,” one person writes. “Sirloin is dog meat.”

    Katrina replies, “After eating that [expletive] burger, I think all box meat is dog meat now. I will never eat a patty, whether it be chicken or beef, ever again. It was a first and it’s a last.”

    Another person shares, “Yes, tried this as well and the ribs threw it all away.”

    @katrinaelstubgmail.com2

    Never again put that shit in the dog food isle

    ♬ original sound – Kitty6969

    She says she did the same. “I took mine back and got the 20 bucks back. I even gave them the pieces I cooked and showed them what it looked like,” Katrina writes. She allegedly told the worker, “‘This needs to be in the dog food aisle, not the humans aisle.’”

    One commenter recommends skipping boxed patties altogether: “Pay a little extra and get something from your local butcher. Personally, I would never put that [expletive] in my mouth.”

    The Mary Sue has reached out to Katrina via TikTok messages for more information.

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Ljeonida Mulabazi

    Ljeonida is a reporter and writer with a degree in journalism and communications from the University of Tirana in her native Albania. She has a particular interest in all things digital marketing; she considers herself a copywriter, content producer, SEO specialist, and passionate marketer. Ljeonida is based in Tbilisi, Georgia, and her work can also be found at the Daily Dot.

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  • EU charges Meta and TikTok over failures to tackle illegal content

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    The European Commission has found that Meta and TikTok had violated rules under the Digital Services Act (DSA) and is now giving them the chance to comply if they don’t want to be fined up to 6 percent of their total worldwide annual turnover. According to the Commission, Facebook, Instagram and TikTok have “put in place burdensome procedures and tools” for researchers who want to request access to public data. This means they’re stuck with incomplete or unreliable information if they want to do research on topics like how minors are exposed to illegal or harmful content online. “Allowing researchers access to platforms’ data is an essential transparency obligation under the DSA,” the Commission wrote.

    In addition, the Commission is charging Meta over the lack of a user-friendly mechanism that would allow users to easily report posts with illegal content, such as child sexual abuse materials. The Commission explained that Facebook and Instagram use mechanisms that require several steps to be able to flag posts, and they use dark interface designs that make reporting confusing and dissuading. All those factors are in breach of DSA rules that require online platforms to give EU users easy-to-use mechanisms to be able to report illegal content.

    Under the DSA, users must also be able to challenge social networks’ decisions to remove their posts or suspend their accounts. The Commission found that neither Facebook nor Instagram allow users to explain their sides or provide evidence to substantiate their appeals, which limits the effectiveness of the appeal process.

    Meta and TikTok will be able to examine the Commission’s investigation files and to reply in writing about its findings. They’ll also have the opportunity to implement changes to comply with DSA rules, and it’s only if the Commission decides they’re non-compliant that they can be fined up to 6 percent of their global annual turnover. Meta disagreed that it had breached DSA rules, according to Financial Times. “In the European Union, we have introduced changes to our content reporting options, appeals process, and data access tools since the DSA came into force and are confident that these solutions match what is required under the law in the EU,” it said in a statement. Meanwhile, TikTok said it was reviewing the Commission’s findings but that “requirements to ease data safeguards place the DSA and GDPR in direct tension.” It’s asking regulators for guidance on “how these obligations should be reconciled.”

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  • ‘There are tell-tale signs’: Minnesota Wedding planner says this one thing a groom does predicts marriage will fail

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    Every wedding planner has seen some messy relationships, but one Minnesota TikToker claims she can predict which marriages are doomed from the moment they start planning. Birdie (@birdie1216), known for spilling insider tea from years of coordinating “I do’s” and “don’t you dares,” says she can spot a cursed marriage before the vows are even exchanged.

    Apparently, there are five dead giveaways that a groom’s heart (or head) isn’t in it. She’s talking about the fiancés that mock the wedding, ignore bachelor party boundaries, and can’t care less about planning. Or—worst of all—had to be talked into proposing. In other words, if he’s rolling his eyes now, just wait until the honeymoon’s over.

    What are the Biggest Red Flags in a Marriage? 

    The Mary Sue has covered Birdie before when she went viral with a whopping 3.8 million views on a TikTok. In it, she stated, “I can tell if they will divorce before a marriage happens.”

    Since it seems the topic lit up a flame on TikTok, Birdie has returned with a new series: “How to tell a marriage is going to fail.” She previously did a ‘Bride’ edition for this series and now her ‘Groom’ clip is quickly gaining traction and already has up to 225,000 views.

    Birdie’s 5 signs might sound obvious, but she explains exactly why this means the man in a tux is hiding a giant red flag. First, she mentions, “The first sign is if the groom isn’t interested at all. I don’t mean that they’re not the main planner… I mean, they’re like ‘I don’t care.’” 

    The next two signs are straightforward: if he is disrespectful to anyone in the bride’s wedding party. Or if he doesn’t respect the bachelor party boundaries. The last two are arguably the most important. Birdie says, “Making dismissive comments about the wedding, like ‘whatever,’ ‘I don’t care,’ and ‘let’s get it done.” 

    Lastly and most importantly, she reveals, “If it was any kind of a push for them to propose. So, every girl deserves to be proposed to in a traditional, surprising way, and if he had to be pushed to do it, or didn’t do it all, if it was more like a business discussion, that marriage isn’t going to work out.” As she says in her text overlay, ‘The marriage could fail if the groom does any of these.’

    What Other Red Flags Should We Know Of?

    Birdie opened quite the dam holding back other red flags TikTok users know or even personally experienced. One red flag a viewer shared was, “The groom allows his mother to take control of wedding planning.”

    Interestingly enough, that’s a whole other can of worms to begin with. The Mary Sue has covered horror stories concerning weddings and mothers-in-law. For example, the time one wanted to wear a bridal gown to her son’s wedding. Or the time a soon-to-be mother-in-law bought a ‘light pink’ dress that obviously looked matrimonial.

    Another viewer shares, “If one person has to give the other an ultimatum in order to get engaged/married.” While another asks, “What about a groom that doesn’t want to talk about the wedding or plan it at all after he proposes.”

    There were a few disagreements because of cultural differences. One viewer shares, “That last one is interesting because in my family, and I suspect in the French culture in general, engagements were never big surprises before we got influenced by the American culture. A couple would discuss getting married and would plan a dinner so their families could meet, but not a lot was left as a one-sided surprise.”

    @birdie1216 Signs your marriage will fail before the wedding – groom edition #wedding #weddingplanning #bridetok #groom ♬ original sound – Birdie

    Either way, all these points need some good analysis before jumping the broom.

    The Mary Sue reached out to the creator via email.

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    Gisselle Hernandez

    Gisselle Hernandez-Gomez is a contributing reporter to the Mary Sue. Her work has appeared in the Daily Dot, Business Insider, Fodor’s Travel and more. You can follow her on X at @GisselleHern. You can email her at [email protected].

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    Gisselle Hernandez

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