Our sympathies are with the Tide social media manager.
As teens participate, pretend to participate, and talk about participating in the Tide Pod Challenge, the official Tide Twitter account has assumed the unofficial role of emergency services referral center.
In the past few days, @Tide has responded to five people claiming to have ingested Tide Pods. Tide Pods, of course, are not safe for consumption, despite looking extremely delicious and starring in a wildly popular meme.
Tweet may have been deleted
For the most part, the brand is recommending that people contact a medical professional or the Poison Control Center. In cases where the victim's mouth is burning, it has suggested drinking a glass of milk or water. (For the record, milk is not an antidote for poison, and it might not help at all -- always contact the Poison Control Center for advice in case of emergency.)
Tweet may have been deleted
It's possible that not all of these people have actually put Tide Pods in their mouths. In fact, a few of them seem like they're playing pranks ... which comes with the dark, dangerous terrain of meme-world, we assume.
Still, it's safe to assume that directing people to Poison Control was not what this social media manager signed up for. So, to make their life easier, we recommend simply not eating Tide Pods.
Tweet may have been deleted
If you believe you have been poisoned, please contact the American Association of Poison Control Centers hotline at (800) 222-1222.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Tide's Twitter account responds to people who say they ate Tide Pods-寸地尺天网
sitemap
文章
146
浏览
763
获赞
39154
What to expect at WWDC 2020: Plenty of new features across all Apple devices
On June 22, Apple will hold is annual World Wide Developers Conference (WWDC). But rather than gatheNew Twitter feature lets you watch Tesla stock crater
If you need more ways to see stocks and cryptocurrencies plummet on a daily basis, Twitter's got youYouTube bans Pornhub's channel for 'multiple violations'
Pornhub's YouTube channel has been banned for "multiple violations" of YouTube's Community GuidelineTelehealth startup Cerebral had a HIPAA
Startups are notoriously bad at keeping our data safe. Cerebral — a telehealth startup that laAOC calls out Kushner: ‘What's next, putting nuclear codes in Instagram DMs?’
It's a cold day in government hell when Instagram DMs get a shoutout at a House Oversight CommitteeMeta has massive plans for VR, despite users not being that into it
Meta is planning to launch a new version of its Quest virtual reality headset this year, followed byCES 2023: Garmin's LTE dash camera is always on
Garmin dropped a new dash cam at CES 2023 that's always connected via LTE, meaning users can check tElon Musk says Twitter will give 'amnesty' to suspended accounts from next week
If Twitter seems like a garbage fire right now, just wait. CEO Elon Musk has announced a blanket parThe FBI must be stoked about Zoom's encryption policy
Zoom has big privacy plans — for its paying customers, that is.After getting caught falsely clFacebook releases 'Community Help' disaster relief for Facebook Lite
Just in time for hurricane season, Facebook is here to help.On Monday, Facebook announced that it waNew Apple Music Classical app is launching this month
Apple is giving Apple Music subscribers a free trip to the symphony, and you don't even need to getMeta drops the price of Meta Quest Pro VR headset by more than 30%
VR is about to become slightly more affordable as of March 5, says Meta. The company will drop the rYes, you can teach your cat to fetch
It's not just dogs who love the art of retrieval. Quite a few cat owners report that their feline fr10 Tips to Get You Started with Microsoft PC Game Pass
When Microsoft changed the name of "Xbox Game Pass for PC" to the much simpler PC Game Pass, it wasWhy Peter Molyneux's Godus is Such a Disaster
"You know what Peter Molyneux's like," an ex-22Cans employee told me while trying to sum up the infa