![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() In the video, Vito transfers the bath water into his vape using an eye dropper and we can only hope it goes nowhere near his eyes again. Well, vaping with it, apparently.YouTuber Vito decided to share a 10 minute review of the "powerful holy elixir" on his YouTube channel, on which he has almost 160,000 subscribers. Get a job kids, then you can afford nice things like me. People are so mad because I spent $30 on my princess's holy elixir. The sale of Belle's brew triggered a lot of questions online, like, who is buying it? Why are they buying it? And – dare we even ask – what are they doing with it?! By the sounds of it, her fans were practically gasping because she sold out of the stuff in just 48 hours. Instagram model Belle Delphine is selling her own bath water for $30īasically, the Instagram model (also known as Gamer Girl and Weird Elf Kitty Girl) began selling her bath water to "thirsty" fans at $30 a jar. Technically it's not just any old bath water, though, it's straight from Belle Delphine's tub. YouTubers are always doing the dumbest thing for views but using someone else's bath water to vape with is probably one of the wildest stunts on the platform. His verdict? “Normal enough to be drinkable if you were dehydrated in the Australian outback, dying of thirst, but too weird to drink with a ready meal at home.” So now you know.We're all about recycling and all but this… In an article for the US Spectator entitled “I drank Belle Delphine’s GamerGirl Bath Water, now my tummy hurts”, Charlie Nash documents has experience of doing just that, “in the name of journalism”. The author of the tweet later came forward to admit the viral (in both senses) story was completely false.Īll the same, that doesn’t mean fans aren’t drinking the stuff. The website adds that the already bizarre saga has been “made even more bizarre with the addition of a fake viral outbreak”.Ī fake Twitter account posing as the Daily Mail claimed that dozens of fans had contracted herpes after drinking their jars of bath water. although we can’t confirm that the packages they received contained bath water (as opposed to some other kind of water)”. Myth-busting website Snopes confirms that at least two YouTubers have “received delivery of the ‘GamerGirl Bath Water’. In fact, less than a week after Delphine posted the bathtub video, the jars were listed as sold out. Jars can be purchased on Delphine’s website, with a disclaimer on the listing clarifying: “This really is bath water… This water is not for drinking and should only be used for sentimental purposes.” Whatever those are. That said, while selling vials of her bath water might be a gimmick, it is not a hoax. “She’s very directly playing into the sensibilities of these men.” “She’s almost like a parody of the kind of girl these dudes want,” sex and technology writer Lux Alptraum told Rolling Stone magazine. She later tweeted: “I am now selling my bath water! This is what humanity has come to.” The bath water gag has a similar tongue-in-cheek tone, with Delphine posting that the she was selling the product “for all you THIRSTY gamer boys”. “For example, a video titled ‘Belle Delphine strokes two BIG cocks’ contained footage of Delphine petting two roosters,” the website explains. In a message on her Instagram account last month, she promised to set up an account on X-rated website Pornhub if her post received a million likes - a target met within days.Īmid fever-pitch speculation from hot and bothered fans, “she uploaded a total of 12 non-pornographic videos with provoking titles” to Pornhub, says internet culture compendium Know Your Meme. Delphine is known for exploiting her sex object image to prank horny fans eager to see her cross the line from titillation to pornography. “Some people were grossed out, some people thought it was hilarious, and others couldn’t believe this was actually real,” says internet humour hub eBaum’s World. Needless to say, the stunt triggered an instant reaction from fans and quickly rippled out to the mainstream. At the start of July, Delphine uploaded a video of herself in a tub, filling jars with the bath water - which can be yours for the princely sum of $30 (£24) a jar, via her online merchandise store. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |