Tag Archives: viral videos

Indonesia: Warning issued over ‘dragon’s breath’ viral video trend



CNN
 — 

Indonesia is warning people against consuming liquid nitrogen after more than 20 children were harmed eating a street snack known as “dragon’s breath” that’s at the center of a dangerous new viral video trend.

The children suffered burns to their skin, severe stomach pains and food poisoning after consuming the colorful candies, according to Indonesia’s Ministry of Health, which is urging parents, teachers and local health authorities to be vigilant.

The candies are dipped in liquid nitrogen to create a vapor effect when eaten. They are popular with children, dozens of whom have uploaded clips to short-form video app TikTok showing them blowing the fumes out of their mouths, noses and ears. One video showing the preparation of the snack by a street vendor has been viewed close to 10 million times.

Around 25 children have been hurt consuming the candies, including two who were hospitalized, said the ministry’s director general Maxi Rein Rondonuwu. No deaths have been reported.

Using liquid nitrogen in food preparation is not illegal. Top chefs often use the vapors to create theatrical effects when serving dishes. It is clear, colorless and odorless, and commonly used in medical settings and as an ingredient to freeze food.

However, when not used properly, it can be hazardous.

”Liquid nitrogen is not only dangerous when consumed, it can cause severe breathing difficulties from nitrogen fumes that are inhaled over a long time,” Maxi said.

The first case was reported in July 2022, according to the ministry, when a child from a village in the Ponorogo Regency in East Java suffered cold burns on his skin after eating the snack.

More cases were reported in November and December, including a 4-year-old boy who was admitted to hospital in the capital Jakarta with severe stomach pain.

“Schools must educate children in the community about the dangers of liquid nitrogen in food (to) prevent more cases of severe food poisoning,” Maxi said.

– Source:
HLN
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New liquid nitrogen cereal sparks controversy

In 2018, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued safety alerts warning that serious injury could result from eating foods like ice cream, cereal or cocktails prepared with liquid nitrogen.

“Injuries have occurred from handling or eating products prepared by adding liquid nitrogen immediately before consumption, even after the liquid nitrogen has fully evaporated due to the extremely low temperature of the food,” the FDA said.

“This is a hazardous chemical compound,” said Clarence Yeo, a Singapore-based doctor. “It irritates the stomach and can cause burns in the mouth and esophagus. Children would be especially sensitive to (its effects) if it is eaten in large amounts.”

Yeo warned he “wouldn’t advise anyone to eat it.”

“You could end up in hospital and the worst case scenario could be organ damage,” he said.

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TikTok star famous for eating nostalgic food dead at 33

A TikToker famous for eating strange and nostalgic food has reportedly died at age 33.

Taylor, who posted using the username @Wafffler69 on TikTok, is believed to have suffered a fatal heart attack on Wednesday, according to his brother, Clayton.

The influencer — whose full name is Taylor Claydorm, according to the Sun — amassed a loyal following on the video-sharing app, with over 1.7 million followers and 32.8 million likes of him eating bizarre foods, such as canned cheeseburgers and expired novelty foods.

Clayton told TMZ that Taylor died after being rushed to a hospital in Louisiana. He had reportedly been experiencing some discomfort and initially called his mother before calling an ambulance when he began to feel worse, according to TMZ.

A TikTok video released by Taylor’s brother said he passed away at approximately 10 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 11, from a “presumed heart attack.”

“He was rushed to the hospital and about an hour, hour-and-a-half later he passed away,” according to Clayton.

TikTok star @Wafffler69 has died from a presumed heart attack at age 33.
TikTok / wafffler69
The TikToker was known for his food videos, in which he tested bizarre and nostalgic food.
TikTok / wafffler69

In the clip, Clayton asked people to keep viewing Taylor’s videos to “keep his legacy alive.”

“He loved making people happy,” he added about Taylor, who cross-posted content to YouTube and Instagram.

Taylor’s final video was posted to TikTok on Wednesday, the day he died, and depicted him dunking a Big Fruit Loop in a bowl of milk.

The video has already amassed more than 1 million views.



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Olivia Wilde begs Shia LaBeouf to stay on movie in video

Olivia Wilde begged Shia LaBeouf to stay on “Don’t Worry Darling” in a video that leaked Friday, just two days after the director claimed she had fired the movie’s former lead.

An admittedly “sweaty” Wilde, 38, spoke while driving in the 2020 selfie video, explaining to LaBeouf, 36, that she had just been riding a horse.

“I wanted to reach out because I feel like I’m not ready to give up on this yet,” she said. “I, too, am heartbroken, and I want to figure this out.”

The “Booksmart” director went on to hint at a disagreement between LaBeouf and the film’s lead actress, Florence Pugh.

“I think this might be a bit of a wake-up call for Miss Flo, and I want to know if you’re open to giving this a shot with me, with us,” she said.

A video leaked of Olivia Wilde begging Shia LaBeouf to stay on “Don’t Worry Darling.”
Getty; Universal

“If she really commits, if she really puts her mind and heart into it at this point, and if you guys can make peace — and I respect your point of view, I respect hers — but if you guys can do it, what do you think?” Wilde continued.

The director told LaBeouf she was “not ready to give up” in the 2020 video.

The “House” alum concluded by repeatedly asking the actor whether there was “hope,” requesting that he “let [her] know” his decision.



The footage went viral after LaBeouf clapped back at claims he was fired from the movie.

Getty Images



The footage went viral after LaBeouf clapped back at claims he was fired from the movie.

Getty Images

Up Next

The “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star initially supported Beauvais…

The leaked footage comes after Wilde told Variety that the “Even Stevens” alum was axed from the project and replaced by her now-boyfriend, Harry Styles, to keep other cast members “safe” from his “combative energy.”

LaBeouf clapped back at her allegations in an email to Variety Thursday and also sent the magazine screenshots of texts Wilde allegedly messaged him in August 2020 after he expressed a desire to quit.



Harry Styles took over the lead role opposite Florence Pugh.

Universal



Harry Styles took over the lead role opposite Florence Pugh.

Universal

Up Next

The “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star initially supported Beauvais…

“Doesn’t feel good to say no to someone, and I respect your honesty,” Wilde purportedly wrote in one text. “I’m gutted because it could have been something special.”

LaBeouf claimed that he “officially” quit the day after he received that message, which was reportedly sent on Aug. 16.

Wilde is now dating the former One Direction member.
GC Images

Now, the former Disney Channel star is asking Wilde to correct her previous allegations, writing in the email published Friday that the “O.C.” alum has made it “harder” for him to “crawl out of the hole” he dug amid previous scandals.

The “Honeyboy” star, who was accused of abuse in 2021 and has since sought treatment, explained, “This situation with your film and my ‘firing’ will never have a court date with which to deal with the facts. If lies are repeated enough in the public they become truth.

“Firing me never took place, Olivia,” LaBeouf continued. “And while I fully understand the attractiveness of pushing that story because of the current social landscape, the social currency that brings. It is not the truth.”

“Don’t Worry Darling” hits theaters Sept. 23.



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Woman with monkeypox slams shocking sex ‘misinformation’

A Georgia woman diagnosed with monkeypox said she didn’t contract the “painful” virus via sex — and is using TikTok to fight “misinformation” about the disease.

Camille Seaton, 20, began feeling unwell partway through July and rushed to a hospital when she noticed blisters breaking out on her face.

The young mother was subsequently stunned when she tested positive for the virus — declared a public health emergency in the United States earlier this month.

Monkeypox, which is spreading across the US following an outbreak in Europe this spring, is primarily impacting gay and bisexual men, who account for about 98% of patients, according to NYU biologist Joseph Osmundson.

Seaton — who is the first female to be officially diagnosed in the Peach State — works as a gas station attendant and said she believes she contracted the virus while handling “dirty money” at her job, according to a now-viral video with more than a million views.

Camille Seaton, 20, has gone viral on TikTok after detailing her battle with monkeypox. The young mom says she believed she contracted the virus while working in a gas station.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

The mom spent more than two weeks isolated at her townhouse, with her 3-year-old daughter being cared for by other family members.

Seaton additionally told the publication that her monkeypox symptoms were serious, saying: “I was in pain literally all of the time.”

“It was itching. It was joint pain. It was excruciating headaches. It was fainting. You have to go through so much before you even start the healing process,” she added.

At home alone, Seaton turned to social media to fight misinformation about the virus, sharing TikTok clips.

The mom spent more than two weeks isolated at her townhouse, with her 3-year-old daughter being cared for by other family members.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

In the viral video, Seaton states: “I’m here to tell you again that sex is not the only way to contract this virus. Yes, it’s mostly been men who have gotten it – I’m only the first woman to have gotten it in the state of Georgia – but all people are different.”

“This is no joke,” she further warned. “Wash your hands, wear masks, stop touching people, wear gloves.”

She continued: “The virus isn’t airborne but it might as well be. You can catch it from sitting in a confined space with somebody that has it – a car, a plane, a room.”

Monkeypox outbreak: Where the US stands now

Health agencies in the US have counted at least 6,600 cases of suspected monkeypox — with another 1,000 cases expected to be added next week, according to epidemiological forecasters. Among the nation’s illness epicenters, New York City is battling more than 1,400 cases following an outbreak in June.

At the same time, the World Health Organization is reporting over 26,000 cases of the disease.

Exactly how and why the once “rare and unusual” virus has cropped up, and subsequently spread across continents, remains a mystery.

Dr. John Whyte, chief medical officer of WebMD, told The Post that doctors “are still learning about it,” but reassured patients of their worst fears. “We haven’t known [the current outbreak] to be fatal. And that’s a good thing,” Whyte said.

The virus, which is spreading across the US following an outbreak in Europe, is primarily impacting gay and bisexual men — with Seaton the first female to be officially diagnosed in the Peach State.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif
“I’m here to tell you again that sex is not the only way to contract this virus:” Seaton’s videos tackle misconceptions about the virus.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

Meanwhile, after Seaton posted her now-viral video, many people took to the comments section of the clip thanking Seaton for raising awareness about the misconceptions surrounding monkeypox.

“I’m so sorry this happened to you. We do have to be more careful. Thank you so much for sharing your journey & educating people re: your experience,” one stated.

The young mom has now beaten the virus, according to an Insider report. She has reunited with her daughter and has returned to work.

While women make up a very small number of people contracting monkeypox, Seaton is not the first female to document her battle with the virus on TikTok.

“Wash your hands, wear masks, stop touching people, wear gloves:” Seaton urged viewers to improve their hygiene practices.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

A New Yorker named Lou has also spoken out on the social media site, similarly saying the virus was extremely painful.

She expressed pain to the point where she said she could only drink “protein drinks” and that it was difficult to talk. “I can’t eat. I can’t brush my teeth. I can barely talk,” she said.

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Headlice assassin kills millions of squirming lice in gross clip

Now, this is sure to louse up your day.

Rachel Maroun, a hairdresser, is causing social media’s skin to crawl with a series of viral videos featuring the heads of her clients who are suffering from wildly gross lice infestations. 

“This is your sign to check your hair for lice,” warns Maroun, 21, from Sydney, Australia, in a trending TikTok. 

In the clip, which fetched over 9.9 million views, the professional de-bugger gives her over 3.8 million followers a stomach-churning glimpse at the millions of tiny eggs and lice squirming around in an unidentified brunette’s tresses. 

Maroun — whose delousing videos have previously scored over 97.5 million views — then carefully removes the wingless, bloodsucking vermin, using a special comb and cream, and wipes the parasites out of the comb onto a white paper towel. 

Professional head lice technician Rachel Maroun goes viral with video series of customers suffering from wild lice infestations.
NYPost Composite

At the end of the cringe-worthy clip, the bug-buster zooms in on herself squishing the larger lice to death.

In a separate share, with over 13.5 million views, Maroun treats an unnamed client whose family was unable to exterminate her lice outbreak because they were all infected with COVID and in varying stages of isolation.

“The family of the client were left inside with very little materials to treat the lice at home,” Maroun explained to NeedToKnow, noting her customer’s extremely long hair. “[They were] relying on chemical shampoos and cheap lice combs that had no effect on the super lice case they were struggling with.”

And due to the family’s lack of resources, the lice gained total control over the poor woman’s head. 

One of Maroun’s clients was afflicted with a massive case of lice while her family suffered in isolation with COVID.
Jam Press Vid/@trashywashyy

“The worst thing to do when you have lice is give them time as lice multiply way too fast and become uncontrollable very quickly,” said Maroun, who wears a bonnet or protective hair gel to reduce her risk of contracting lice from patrons. 

Annihilating the army of unwanted creepy crawlies took the skilled hairstylist a full day.   

But she claims her patient felt immediate relief after the first few swipes of her handheld rake. 

“The client was thrilled from the moment I finished our first section of combing,” said Maroun. 

Maroun says her client felt a major weight lifted after she began combing the lice out of her hair.
Jam Press Vid/@trashywashyy

“She said she felt a ‘massive weight’ lifted from her hair, and I don’t blame her considering I combed out an entire family of head lice,” added the bloodsucker bomber. 

“She was extremely patient and very happy to have a thorough comb through provided after all that time of struggling.”

However, while the client was giddy about getting cleansed, online audiences were sickened by the disgusting scene.   

“Why did my head start to get itchy when I watched this,” a nauseated viewer commented on TikTok. 

“My therapist is making me watch this to try and get over my INSANE fear,” penned another. 

Maroun often wears a bonnet or specialized hair gel to protect herself from contracting lice from her clients.
Jam Press/@trashywashyy

“I would shave my hair,” added an equally grossed-out onlooker, which was followed by, “My head IS ITCHY,” from another user.

But, despite the digital buzz her pest-centric posts create, Maroun gives her clients clear instructions on how to eliminate once and for all.

 “Following the appointment, I instructed her on how to keep the lice away, giving her a longer period of lice-free bliss,” she said. 

“I checked up with her one-week post-treatment to hear she was completely symptom-free and happy.”

Read original article here

NYC workers wait 90 minutes in line for Cava’s trendy lunch

The Midtown lunch rush is back.

On a sweltering summer weekday in Midtown Manhattan, where, supposedly, nobody works anymore, a fashionable crowd lined up on the sidewalk in front of Mediterranean fast-casual eatery Cava.

The Broadway and 38th Street location of the Greek-inspired chain has been hailed, jokingly, as “the hardest club to get into in all of Manhattan,” in a now-viral TikTok posted by Big Apple influencer @HannahSueWilson. 

Remember the pandemic? Remember when Midtown restaurants were on their last legs? Tell that to the trendy lunchers waiting up to 90 minutes in a line-out-the-door situation for their lemon chicken bowls.

“I’ve stood in line for as long as an hour and a half to get food here. It’s good and it’s healthy,” Kathleen Miszkiewicz, 25, told The Post, sweating under the beaming sun.

Customers have waited in line for as long as 90 minutes at Cava on Broadway and 38th in Manhattan, hoping to place an order for one of the chain’s hearty Mediterranean bowls.
Robert Miller
Cava on Broadway has been deemed the “hardest club to get into in all Manhattan” owing to its notoriously long lunch lines.
Robert Miller

Cava first launched back in the 2010s in Rockville, Maryland, and the brand has now become commonplace in the Washington, DC, area. Lately, however, more recently opened branches in Manhattan have become something like the post-pandemic answer to Chipotle, or the various $20 chopped-salad joints.

In the TikTok clip, which has garnered more than 1.1 million views, a horde of sustenance-seekers are shown sacrificing their hourlong lunch breaks while waiting to be served $13 veggie, protein and grain blends. 

So popular are Cava’s build-your-own bowls, with options like falafel, spicy lamb meatballs and roasted vegetables, as well as an array of delicious dips, that those hoping to procure lunch from the not-so-fast food chain often attempt to beat the rush by pre-ordering via Cava’s app or website. Miszkiewicz, who ordered ahead with her two colleagues, found those efforts foiled.

Fans of the Greek-inspired food say they don’t mind waiting in long lines because the restaurant offers a healthy, inexpensive alternative to the greasy hot dog and pizza joints in Midtown.
Robert Miller

“We pre-ordered our food [online] at 11:30 a.m. for pick-up at 12 p.m. Now it’s 12:30, and we still have to wait,” the business consultant said. “It’s annoying, but the food’s worth it.”

The restaurant’s bewildering popularity makes a strong case for the return of the city’s power lunch hour, which took a steep nosedive in 2020 and 2021 while most of the workforce worked (and ate) at home. 

But the Broadway Cava’s general manager, Yasmairi Mercedes, said her store has seen a boom in patronage since more jobholders were required to return to their offices, many on a hybrid schedule, earlier this year. 

“It’s really nice to see how the business has grown since the pandemic,” Mercedes, 21, told The Post as customers squeezed through the door. “We’re actually making more money now than we were pre-pandemic.”

Other locations, such as the Cava on 42nd Street near Bryant Park and the one on Madison Avenue at 40th Street, are commanding crowds of peckish midday patrons, too.

And as nine-to-fivers continue readapting to their brick-and-mortar work lives, many are using every minute of their afternoon recess to eat, drink and perhaps even make a love connection. 

“I wish,” said Cava frequenters and fashion retail co-workers Emily Seitz and Jill Folger, both 26, when asked if they’d ever flirted with a fellow corporate hottie on Cava’s nightclub-like line. 

Sweltering summer temperatures haven’t dampened enthusiasm for the Cava branch at Broadway and 38th Street in the Garment District.
Robert Miller

The work besties, who pre-ordered their take-out, waited 15 minutes as part of the pick-up throng. 

Still, most seem satisfied just to gain entry and score some good afternoon nosh. 

“The line is almost always really long,” Mani, 35, who works in construction and asked not to share her last name, told The Post. In the past, she has waited more than 45 minutes for her usual habanero chicken bowl, leaving her with only 15 minutes to feast. 

In buzzer-beater cases like that, Mani said, laughing, “I just run back to my office and eat real quick.” 

Similarly, software pro David Carmichael, 29, told The Post that he usually doesn’t mind letting the minutes tick by as he waits for a falafel and feta bowl.

The restaurant’s general manager said her location is raking in more money now than it did before the nationwide COVID-19 outbreak.
Robert Miller

But even he has his limits. “Whenever I see the line out the door, I walk away,” he said.

Such was the case for Loren Fass, 33, and her workmates, who all took one look at Cava’s intense line and immediately opted to eat elsewhere. 

“It’s long, and we have to get back [to work],” groaned Fass, a staffer at a women’s intimates wholesaler in Midtown. 

Others were similarly deterred by the Cava mob.

Despite the joint’s club-like line, most regular customers confessed that they haven’t romantically mixed and mingled with any other corporate cuties while waiting.
Robert Miller

“I’m not a wait-in-line person,” said Meagan Neville, 37, who stopped by with her fashion industry co-worker Margaret Derby, 30. 

“It’s good food,” said Derby. “But the TikTok nightclub [aspect] isn’t for me.”



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My tanning addiction left me with a hole in my head

A London mother of three revealed Wednesday that she had a hole on the top of her head as a result of skin cancer caused by her addiction to a tanning bed.

Nickie Murtagh — who started going to a tanning salon when she was in her 20s — would visit the tanning bed at least twice a week. But she first noticed something was off in 2016 when she detected a spot in the part of her hair that did not heal, according to Jam Press.

“I visited my GP [general practitioner] twice and was told both times that it was a cosmetic issue and that it was only a cyst,” said the now-37-year-old.

“They said that if I wanted it [removed] it would be by a private appointment.”

However, her condition did not improve. By February 2018, the lump had grown, but the doctor kept insisting that it was a cyst.

Murtagh visited a dermatologist who immediately raised concerns and ordered a biopsy. In May, it was revealed that the “cyst” was actually cancer.

Nickie Murtagh (second from left) and her husband didn’t tell their kids that their mom had cancer.
Jam Press/Nickie Murtagh
Several of Murtagh’s doctors insisted that the wound was cosmetic and would heal.
Jam Press/Nickie Murtagh
Nickie Murtagh first realized there was an issue when the “cyst” would not heal.

“I work at the Royal Marsden Hospital, so I’ve seen lots of cancer, but that word sends chills,” Murtagh said.

“We didn’t want to even tell the kids as we knew they wouldn’t be able to see past that word.”

In December of the same year, Murtagh managed to remove the growth and receive a skin graft.

Nickie Murtagh was diagnosed with skin cancer as well as a condition called melasma.
Jam Press/Nickie Murtagh

“I was awake during the whole process, and it was the worst thing I’ve ever experienced in my life,” lamented Murtagh.

Doctors managed to remove the cancer as well as attempted to repair the damage to her face and hair. However, Murtagh is still not symptom-free. She also has a skin condition called melasma, which is characterized by brown or blue-gray patches or freckle-like spots on the face. Whenever she goes into the sun, the spots reappear.

“I don’t like how I look now – but that’s my battle scars and forever reminder that I have my life so will do everything I can to help push this horrid cancer awareness.”

Due to her condition, Nickie Murtagh will have mottled skin and the condition will come back every time she goes into the sun.
Jam Press Vid/Nickie Murtagh

Murtagh documented her journey on TikTok in an effort to raise awareness of skin cancer with several of her followers calling her brave.

“You’re amazing girly thank you for posting this video really opened up my eyes I’m throwing out my tanning lotion and giving up now,” commented one user.

“I was literally thinking how pale I am and never used a sunbed but wanted to, thank you for changing my mind!” another said.

Murtagh has also faced backlash over her videos with some people calling her vain and reminding her that what happened was her fault.

“Some people remind me that I did it to myself, that I’m vain, and that I deserve it,” said Murtagh.

“I’m lucky that I’m only scarred and I still have my life, so I will use it as best I can to save people’s skin and lives too.”

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We moved our family of six into a shed after we lost our jobs

It’s a sheddy life — but mom-of-four Jessica Taylor wouldn’t have it any other way. 

In June 2020, after facing financial difficulties due to the pandemic, she and her husband, Lath, decided to shed the comforts of their three-bedroom, two-bathroom home in northwest Arkansas. The family of six moved into a 500-square-foot toolshed. Friends thought it was a very bizarre way to downsize.

“One of the things people find really weird about us living in a shed is that we use a composting bathroom rather than a traditional toilet,” Taylor, 30, who now resides in a lofted shed in western Tennessee, told The Post. 

“It’s a bucket system,” the former bartender-turned-home-schooler (or shed-schooler) explained of her hut’s outhouse. “And [when] you [urinate or defecate], you cover it with wood chips each time. After two days, whether the bucket is full or not, we dump [the waste] into a composting bin in the woods, and then after a couple of years, [the waste] turns into soil for ornamental plants.“

In the face of money problems brought on by the pandemic, Taylor and her husband moved their family of six into a toolshed.
Jessica Taylor

But indoor plumbing is one of the very few amenities the family’s lodge is missing. 

“The shed is two stories and has electricity, running water, a heat/cooling system, a 65-inch flat-screen television, a stainless steel refrigerator, an electric stove and foldout futons that we use as beds,” said Taylor, who’s shared clips of the chic shack with her more than 66,700 social media followers. 

After buying the wooden workshop for $6,000 at a roadside hardware stand, she and Lath, 42, invested another $7,000 in renovations, which included adding a staircase that leads to its lofted area, privacy walls and an outdoor porch. 

The parents used monies from their tax returns, stimulus checks and unemployment to fund their housing project. 

They also invested in a $4,000 well, which supplies them with water for drinking, cleaning and showering. (The family uses a long, retractable faucet that extends from their kitchenette to outside the shed, where they shower under the cover of trees.) 

Taylor’s husband added a staircase, privacy walls, an outdoor porch and a second shed to their tiny home, which is stationed on an acre of her mom’s west Tennessee property.
Jessica Taylor

Their brood, with kids ranging in age from 3 to 9, is part of the growing number of folks ditching their sprawling, oft-expensive digs to live in outdoor storage units that typically house gardening equipment or sporting goods. It’s a no-frills take on the tiny house movement, with a dash of #VanLife for those looking for cozy, economical simplicity. On TikTok, shed dwellers have stamped videos of their hovels-turned-homes with the hashtag #ShedLife over 22.2 million times. 

“More and more people are breaking free from the mindset that you have to have the big expensive, fancy house to feel like they’re making it,” said Taylor of the allure of shed life. “There’s value in living modestly. We’re able to spend more time together gardening and enjoying nature rather than working to afford lavish accommodations.”

The Taylors spent $6,000 on the shed and another $11,000 renovating the space to make it comfortable for six people.
Jessica Taylor

Fellow shed-living trendsetters Nick and Meghan Lucid recently went viral for sharing how they converted an 860-square-foot Tuff shed from Home Depot into a lavish two-level estate, complete with one bedroom, a finished bathroom, a laundry room and a walk-in closet. Footage of their revamped cottage has scored over 2 million views. 

Like the Taylors, the couple downsized for financial reasons brought on by COVID.

“Right after the pandemic hit, me and Lath lost our jobs at a restaurant where we’d worked for years,” Taylor explained to The Post. “Before that, we were renting a big $1,100 brick house in Arkansas, but we just couldn’t afford it and our other household bills anymore.”

Taylor credits #ShedLife with helping her family get out of debt and granting her the opportunity of becoming a stay-at-home mom.
Jessica Taylor

After moving eight hours away and relocating onto her mom’s 6-acre property, where they’ve stationed their shed rent-free, the family’s monthly overhead has been reduced from more than $2,000 to a measly $400.

“Since we moved into the shed, we’ve become really financially stable, and we’re getting close to being debt-free,” said Taylor, adding that the cost-effective move has also allowed her to become a stay-at-home mom. Reducing their monthly expenses even allowed them to buy an $11,000 garden shed to use as a second home. 

“The kids love [our new lifestyle] because we’re able to spend more quality time together than when I was working,” said Taylor. “It’s been really great.”

And #ShedLife isn’t just for families. 

Millennial and Gen Z economists are now investing in sheds rather than apartments in order to save money and live close to home.
Mia Puhakka

Mia Puhakka, 17, bypassed the stress of first-time apartment-hunting by setting up camp in her parents’ backyards. 

“My mom and dad like having me at home, so I don’t pay rent [while I’m living in the shed],” Puhakka, a part-time office assistant from Ontario, Canada, told The Post. Clips of her humble abode have garnered upward of 1.3 million views.  

Her family purchased and renovated the 12-foot-by-24-foot structure for about $9,300 from shed-dealers Old Hickory Buildings in 2019. Puhakka has since decked out the space with finished cedar and birch floors and walls, a mounted flat-screen television and a working fireplace. 

And when she needs to use the restroom, she commutes a few feet to mom and dad’s. It’s a perfect setup for someone on the verge of adulthood.

“I get my own space without having to pay for an apartment or a house, and I don’t pay for Wi-Fi or electricity because my shed is just connected to my [parents’] house,” said Puhakka.

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‘What’s monkeypox?’ Woman with ‘insane rash’ turned away for testing

A woman went viral for describing the lengths she went to — including calling the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — to figure out whether or not she has monkeypox.

In a TikTok video with the name Halle, a woman said that she woke up Sunday with an “insane rash” on her forehead and chest.

When she went to an Urgent Care facility the next day, she was told she has methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, an infection caused by a bacterium. Wanting to confirm this diagnosis, she asked to be tested.

Halle said she was given an antibiotic and sent on her way after being told to see her primary care provider immediately.

Her doctor told her it was just a rash and gave her another antibiotic.

“In my mind, I know it’s not just a rash,” she says in the video. “I can tell something’s wrong.”

After little luck with two antibiotics she called Urgent Care back asking to get tested for monkeypox — and was told they don’t test for it.

After seeing three doctors, Halle still could not get a monkeypox test.
Getty Images/iStockphoto

She sought a third opinion from another doctor, who called in back up, and they both declared that they didn’t know what was wrong with her and sent her back to work.

She mentioned possibly having monkeypox and they told her, “What’s monkeypox?”

Forty-five minutes later Halle got a call telling her that the doctors think she has monkeypox and to go see a dermatologist.

However, the dermatologist told her, “We’re canceling your appointment. We’re not dealing with that.”

The office instructed her to call the CDC instead.

But the CDC only continued to make Halle play doctor-roulette.

“The CDC has no idea what they’re doing, nobody’s educated (not even doctors) and doctors will refuse to see you,” she said.

Halle said the CDC has no idea what they’re doing.
TikTok/@GNCordova

The TikTok was reposted on Twitter and now has over 35,000 retweets along with over 127,000 likes.

The comments section was flooded with confused people wondering why history was repeating itself.

“WHY is this happening AGAIN?? We just went through this exact same confusion with the pandemic. Why are health providers not informed & vigilant about potential monkeypox cases coming in? Why are we not pumping out the vaccine while we can? There’s already 2,000+ cases in the U.S.,” one person responded.

As of Monday, the CDC confirmed 1,972 cases of monkeypox in the country. And the CDC has been slammed before for its “lackluster job.”

Some even questioned how the health care system in the US is functioning.

“As a former admin you should know doctors completely blow off patients all the time and send them home saying ‘nothing is wrong with them’ and then end up being very wrong. also misdiagnose ppl all the time,” another person commented.

It is unclear if Halle has been tested and her last update stated, “my doctor just told me it’s confirmed state has my samples; waiting for their call.”



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Trapped whale splashes to freedom after dramatic rescue

It was a whale of a rescue tale.

Dramatic video shows a trapped whale splashing its way to freedom after a Norwegian coast guard crew cuts the monster-sized mammal loose from ropes.

“Are you holding my feet?” a crew member says in Norwegian, as he cautiously leans over the side of the ship KV Bison to cut ropes tangled around the massive whale’s tail and an orange buoy.

The video was shot in the Barents Sea during a 10-to-15 minute rescue on Wednesday, a coast guard official told Reuters. It was posted to the coast guard’s Twitter account a day later.

“We could see the whale was exhausted, it was completely still,” Lt. Captain Raymond Isehaug told the news service Friday in a phone interview from the vessel.

“We approached it very slowly so as not to stress it… It was scared and was behaving aggressively.”

Breathtaking footage shows a stressed whale approaching a Norwegian coast guard crew.
Norwegian Coast Guard via Storyful
The whale is seen splashing thunderously after Norwegian coast guard members cut the rope.
Norwegian Coast Guard via Storyful

He briefly thought about sending divers into the water to cut the rope under the temperamental whale, which appears to be a humpback — but he decided against it because of its agitated state.

Once free, the whale flips its tail and smacks the surface of the water as it dives below before emerging for one last splash that sets the boat rocking, the video shows.

With Post wires



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