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During the Brit Awards 2025, viewers were left baffled after spotting a woman dressed as a horse on the red carpet. The mysterious attendee turned out to be German DJ HorsegiirL, who is known for wearing a horse mask to protect her identity.
The moment gained even more attention when host Jack Whitehall joked with Danny Dyer, asking him why he had brought a horse to the event. Social media quickly lit up with reactions, with some suggesting that Dyer had mistaken HorsegiirL for Megan Thee Stallion.
HorsegiirL rose to fame in 2023 with her viral track My Barns My Rules, amassing over 140,000 followers on TikTok and building a fanbase known as the "Farmies". The DJ, who describes herself as "half-horse, half-human," has performed to sold-out crowds in Sydney, London, and New York.
You guys probably don’t know this because you’re too young, but back in my day, people with mental issues were institutionalized and given treatment. What they definitely didn’t do was hand them a mic and a camera to normalize the “unnormalizable.”
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When someone calls an incorrect bingo, reactions can vary. Some players laugh, others sigh in frustration at the interruption, and the most competitive ones relish the mistake. In more informal events or games with bets involved, the penalty can go beyond public embarrassment—buying a round of drinks, singing a ridiculous song, or even taking on a more risqué challenge if the atmosphere is particularly lively.
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You’re watching the video and at first, nothing makes sense—two Asian girls, maybe Japanese or Korean, sitting on tiny stools in miniskirts, surrounded by a bunch of RC 4x4s. It looks like some quirky promo event... until suddenly—plot twist.
The camera cuts to what looks like someone logging into a website, picking one of the cars, and taking control remotely, seeing everything through the car’s onboard cam. And that’s when the real game begins: the cars aren’t racing for fun, they’re battling for the best view under the girls’ skirts. Crashing into each other, pushing, crawling underneath. All for a better shot.
And yeah, this is almost definitely a paid thing. Somewhere out there, someone built a system where people pay to drive a remote control car and peek up skirts through a live camera feed. The level of creativity—or depravity—is honestly wild.
It’s insane how twisted, absurd, and high-tech the human mind can get when it mixes tech with fetishes.
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Every time I see these kids climbing buildings, flipping on ledges, or hanging from rooftops dozens of meters above ground, it blows my mind. This extreme trend blends recklessness with defiance, driven by a craving for adrenaline, fame, or social media likes. Sure, they often earn applause, views, and even viral moments—but the line between success and tragedy is incredibly thin. A single slip, one wrong step, or the slightest distraction could mean losing absolutely everything in just seconds.
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Controversy keeps growing around the AI-generated model with Down syndrome, whose Instagram account has now surpassed 123k followers. It’s clear that many of the videos use filters, and some are obviously created entirely by AI—but despite the moral debate surrounding it, the numbers speak for themselves.
On one side, critics argue that using artificial intelligence to create this kind of content crosses certain ethical lines, potentially exploiting the image or vulnerability of sensitive groups. And on the other side… well, with that many followers, it's pretty clear where most people stand.
You know how this goes: lots of moral talk, plenty of ethics being thrown around—but in the end, everyone’s got their own little guilty pleasures. Right, buddy?
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