The Online Trick to ‘Send Student Loan Debt Collectors Packing’
What looks like a satisfying debt hack in reality has very limited applications.
What looks like a satisfying debt hack in reality has very limited applications.
Facebook’s promoted Reels included a video claiming that Dawn dish soap is actually hand soap, a “big if true” claim apparently circulated to promote a multi-level marketing scam.
As Texas struggled with atypical winter weather, videos instructing people how to construct a terracotta space heater assembled with candles went viral.
The advent of “quarancleaning” during the COVID-19 pandemic led to the viral popularity of using Tide to mop floors.
“Fish antibiotics” were a meme unto themselves, but a viral Facebook post advises users without access to healthcare to use “Fish Mox” if they can’t get prescription antibiotics.
Viral household hacks like one claiming that laundry detergent cups are designed to be thrown in with the wash frequently appear with the additional assertion that common household products are being used incorrectly.
A popular social media post claims that pouring fabric softener like Downy in your toilet (or using laundry detergent) is an amazing bathroom housekeeping hack.
A tweet published in December 2018 reiterated a long-circulating purported “life hack,” in which an easy-to-miss arrow on a car’s gas gauge indicated the side of the vehicle on which its gas tank was located: How old were you when you realized the arrow on the gas pump in your car shows which side the …
Does the Arrow on a Car’s Gas Gauge Indicate Which Side Has the Fuel Tank? Read More »