PDA

View Full Version : Woman who styled hair with Gorilla Glue attempts to remove it, documents trip to hospital emergency room



Teh One Who Knocks
02-09-2021, 12:10 PM
By Michael Bartiromo | Fox News


https://i.imgur.com/ZM3dJaNl.jpg

It’s not so funny anymore.

A Louisiana woman who styled her hair with Gorilla Glue — and went viral for it — is now updating her TikTok followers on the difficult process of trying to reverse the damage.

Late last week, Tessica Brown admitted on TikTok that she decided to use Gorilla Glue spray adhesive after running out of Got2b Glued, her preferred brand of hairspray.

"My hair has been like this for about a month now," she lamented in a video that has since been viewed almost 19 million times. "It’s not by choice. No, it’s not by choice."

In the video, Brown explained that she tried washing her hair at least "fifteen times" to get the glue out, but the glue just wouldn't budge.

6925174778387025157

Many of the commenters were quick to make jokes at Brown’s expense, with some in disbelief over her choice to use Gorilla Glue, and others teasing her for the "helmet" she gave herself.

"Well, I mean at least it looks good," one user wrote.

Whether it looked "good" or not, Brown was eager to have a pliable head of hair once again, as evidenced by her attempts to loosen the glue with conditioners, coconut oil and tea tree oil. In one particular video, she appeared on the verge of tears when demonstrating her difficulties.

"I thought this was [funny]," one commenter admitted. "I would like to apologize."

Brown, out of options, later suggested that she took herself to the emergency room at the St. Bernard Parish Hospital in Chalmette, La., where they apparently instructed her to use sterilized water and nail polish remover pads to remove the adhesive, according to a photo Brown shared on Instagram. Then, on Sunday, Brown shared a YouTube video of another woman helping to apply the pads to her scalp, while Brown wiped away tears and, at one point, winced in pain.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6no-JKRVME

"I’ve never been so interested in someone’s life like this woman’s," wrote one YouTube commenter. "I really hope she gets it all out."

"It looks like she’s in a lot of pain," another added. "This situation isn’t funny, y’all."

Brown has promised to update her followers on the outcome of the process. She did not immediately respond to Fox News request for comment on her current condition.

In the meantime, Brown’s followers have been sending messages of sympathy and support. Celebrities like Missy Elliot and Chance the Rapper have also chimed in, with the latter saying he hopes "she recovers well," and that he’s glad people are "actually supporting her thru this."

Even Gorilla Glue chimed in, telling TMZ that perhaps Brown could try saturating her hair in rubbing alcohol to remove the glue — and Tessica told the outlet she plans on trying it, if all else fails.

Brown and her sister Juanita, meanwhile, have also set up a GoFundMe account to help raise money for Brown’s medical bills. As of Monday morning, it had already exceeded its $1,500 goal by more than $5,000.

DemonGeminiX
02-09-2021, 12:13 PM
:dumbass:

lost in melb.
02-09-2021, 12:43 PM
Special kind of stupid

Teh One Who Knocks
02-09-2021, 12:45 PM
By Jesse O’Neill - New York Post


https://i.imgur.com/E9lgtIfl.jpg

A Louisiana woman who went viral after struggling to remove Gorilla Glue from her hair claims that the hospital nor the company’s advice helped remove the hardened adhesive.

Now she’s considering a lawsuit to get out of the sticky situation, according to TMZ.

Tessica Brown hired an attorney and is weighing litigation against Gorilla Glue, because while the product’s label warns against using on eyes, skin or clothing – it does not mention hair – the outlet reports.

During Brown’s weekend trip to the ER, healthcare workers put acetone on the back of her head, but instead of getting to the root of the problem, it burned her scalp and only made the glue gooey before hardening back up, according to TMZ.

Gorilla Glue is aware of the dilemma, and tweeted a statement reading: “We are very sorry to hear about the unfortunate incident that Miss Brown experienced using our Spray Adhesive on her hair. We are glad to see in her recent video that Miss Brown has received medical treatment from her local medical facility and wish her the best.”

The company goes on to reiterate that its product “is not indicated for use in or on hair as it is considered permanent.”

Brown posted last week that her hair had been stuck in place for a month after she ran out of her usual hair product and opted to use the extra-strong superglue instead.

The super strong glue is only intended to be used with products like wood, laminate, fabric, paper and cardboard.

Goofy
02-09-2021, 01:09 PM
Now she’s considering a lawsuit to get out of the sticky situation, according to TMZ.

Tessica Brown hired an attorney and is weighing litigation against Gorilla Glue, because while the product’s label warns against using on eyes, skin or clothing – it does not mention hair – the outlet reports.


There's no warning on my kitchen knife to tell me not to stab my eyes out, luckily for me i'm not a complete fucking mong, unlike Tessica (fucking really?) Brown :roll: God our world is literally jam-packed with idiocy :|

FBD
02-09-2021, 01:35 PM
they're not flooding the planet with migrants for nothin

DemonGeminiX
02-09-2021, 02:53 PM
I'm betting that gorilla glue label will be getting a new entry.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBjelRDKHUk

lost in melb.
02-09-2021, 03:03 PM
She might be receptive to strap-on fun in that position. Just sayin' :hand:

DemonGeminiX
02-09-2021, 03:04 PM
She might be receptive to strap-on fun in that position. Just sayin' :hand:

:nono:

Don't stick your dick in stupid. It's a rule.

lost in melb.
02-09-2021, 03:05 PM
:nono:

Don't stick your dick in stupid. It's a rule.

My intention was to watch :excellent:

Teh One Who Knocks
02-10-2021, 01:16 PM
By Ian Haworth - The Daily Wire


https://i.imgur.com/VwZtqSBl.jpg

Tessica Brown, a Lousiana TikToker known as “Gorilla Glue Girl,” went viral recently after she decided to use Gorilla Glue Spray Adhesive as hair spray.

“My hair has been like this for about a month now. It’s not by choice,” Brown said in a video which has been viewed millions of times. “When I do my hair, I like to finish it off with a little ‘Göt2b Glued’ spray, you know, just to keep it in place. Well, I didn’t have anymore ‘Göt2b Glued’ spray, so I used this: Gorilla Glue spray. Bad, bad, bad idea.”

In response, Gorilla Glue said that they were “very sorry to hear about the unfortunate incident that Miss Brown experienced using our Spray Adhesive on her hair,” and that they wished her the best.

Unable to escape from the assumption that any negative outcome experienced by a person of color is the result of racism, Sunny Hostin of The View weighed in, saying that people were being “dismissive.”
1358197466068357123
There is only one word to describe anyone who decides to use Gorilla Glue in their hair — let alone someone who is then surprised that it turns out to be a “bad, bad, bad idea.” That word is stupid.

The United States is descending into a chasm of childish irresponsibility, where even the most careless or immature actions are forgiven, with blame directed elsewhere with a targeted fury. Such “stupidity privilege” isn’t limited to one gender or one race, but stands as an equal opportunity excuse for idiocy.

Since the long-lost days of blaming corporations for the mere temperature of coffee, we now live in a reality where even the most common sense decisions are being deferred to corporations — often with a subsequent eye for profit. Yes, Gorilla Glue said their products were designed for “craft, home, auto or office projects,” and not for “eyes, skin or clothing,” but they never said anything about hair! Time to cash in!

Brown has since raised about $13,500 in her GoFundMe campaign after sharing her “struggles.” TMZ reported that she had “hired an attorney and is weighing her legal options against Gorilla Glue,” and that Brown felt it was “misleading” that Gorilla Glue made no mention of hair in their warning label.

The problem here is obvious. There is an almost limitless number of ways each item in our world can be incorrectly used. Among responsible adults, common sense usually fills the void between warning labels and the warnings otherwise deemed unnecessary.

As an example, Gorilla Glue also never warned us not to use their product as a toothpaste. Eyes, skin, clothing? None of those describe teeth or tongues or gums or cheeks! This same “logic” can be applied with infinite delight. When I bought a hammer, I was never told it shouldn’t be used to trim my toenails. When I borrowed a book from the library, I was never told that it couldn’t double as a defibrillator. When I booked a window seat on an airplane, I was never informed that the seat was not built from an actual window.

It’s time for us to grow up. One central and fundamental part of growing up is the assumption and requirement that you are responsible for your own actions, using your developed experience of the world around you to make sound and safe decisions. Unless we want our society to continue to collapse under its own stupidity, we must do all we can to demand that adults start acting their age.

If it takes ridiculing someone for thinking that Gorilla Glue was an appropriate hair product, then so be it.

lost in melb.
02-11-2021, 09:30 AM
ffs just shave it off. Lesson learnt!

Hoping that you can get that mass of glued hair back to normal is also...stupid.

PorkChopSandwiches
02-11-2021, 05:50 PM
1358197466068357123

Oh thanks you white devil for blacksplaining to me