TikTok’s Viral Smiley Face Dating Quiz Is Being Hailed As ‘So Accurate’
You can always count on TikTok to come up with the wildest and weirdest trends, especially when it comes to love and dating. One of the latest crazes doing the rounds, the smiley face relationship quiz, promises to help you “find your dating style with a smiley character.” And while it might seem like a load of nonsense, TikTok users insist it’s “so accurate.” Worth a try, eh?
Read full storyStudy Suggests People With Tattoos Have An Easier Time Finding Sexual Partners
Plenty of people find tattoos sexy. There’s something mysterious and rebellious about them, and that’s hot. In fact, a 2017 Type survey found that 64% of women are attracted to guys with body ink, while a lower but still respectable 39% of women feel the same. Perhaps it’s no surprise, then, that a new study found that people with tattoos find it much easier to get laid.
Read full storyShelter Worker Slammed As ‘Fatphobic’ For Not Letting ‘Morbidly Obese’ Woman Adopt Dog
A worker at an animal shelter is being slammed as "fatphobic" for refusing to allow an overweight woman to adopt a dog. The employee refused the "morbidly obese" woman on the grounds that they believed the dog wouldn't get enough exercise. In a since-deleted Reddit post, the worker shared their story, which many dubbed cruel and completely inappropriate.
Read full storyDisneyland's First Customer Still Uses His Lifetime Pass Every Year — 67 Years Later
Mary Poppins dances with a young girl at DisneylandiStock/smckenzie. In July 1955, Dave MacPherson was a 22-year-old college student who happened to be the first person in line at Disneyland's California park ticket window at 2 a.m. on opening day. That made him the first person to buy his ticket on July 18, a distinction that earned him a lifetime pass to the theme park. Now, 67 years later, he still uses it.
Read full storyNorwegian Army Conscripts Forced To Return Used Underwear Once Military Service Is Complete Due To Supply Shortages
The Norwegian army will ask military conscripts to return used underwear at the end of their service due to supply shortages. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Norway's enlisted service members are struggling to get new underwear, leading authorities to request their return so they can be reused by the next batch of recruits, Euronews reports.
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