Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

TikTok Nurse With Over A Million Followers Slammed For Saying Abstinence Is The Best Way To Prevent STDs

TikTok Nurse With Over A Million Followers Slammed For Saying Abstinence Is The Best Way To Prevent STDs
@nursehollyoffical/TikTok

After TikTok-famous Nurse Holly posted a short video calling abstinence "the best way to prevent STDs," legions of social media-using nurses loudly—and creatively—denounced her claim.


An opinion shared on a social media platform seems equally likely to be buried instantly under a mountain of new content with every passing second. Or that opinion can catch like wildfire, make the rounds and be on everyone's radar by dinner time.

But if, like @nursehollyofficial on TikTok, someone has 1.7 million followers, those odds skew a bit. Nurse Holly learned that the hard way and suffered the old internet onslaught.

Nurse Holly's inbox...

Giphy

The TikTok video in question has since been deleted on account of the storm it produced.

But despite the video's deletion, it kicked around Twitter plenty before Nurse Holly made that choice.

In response to the backlash, Nurse Holly told Buzzfeed:

"I understand that my voice will not be accepted by many as it's an unpopular view. This video was simply created with the intention of helping little girls see that saving sex for one partner may have certain benefits."

Most of the fruits of that backlash are the myriad ways nurse's responded to Holly's public-school-health-class ethos.



Of course, plenty of non-nurses were not shy about criticism.




And just like that, TikTok became the catalyst for lively, informative debate about contraception and public health.

The book Sex, Teens, and Everything in Between: The New and Necessary Conversations Today's Teenagers Need to Have about Consent, Sexual Harassment, Healthy Relationships, Love, and More is available here.

More from Trending

Chris Martin from Coldplay
Dave Simpson/WireImage/Getty Images

Chris Martin Divides Fans After Thanking India Concertgoers For 'Forgiving' British Colonialism

It's always important to remember our history, take responsibility for our ancestors' actions, and try our best to improve. But there's a time and a place for discussing historical events and conflicts.

As fans of Coldplay pointed out, bringing up intense political conflict during a concert might not be the best choice.

Keep ReadingShow less
Adrien Brody & Felicity Jones
A24

'The Brutalist' Director Speaks Out To Defend Film's Use Of AI After Igniting Backlash

Another day, another industry grappling with the use of AI.

Director Brady Corbet had to clarify and defend his film's artistic choices to use AI in his low-budget, high-profile movie about a Hungarian architect in post-war America.

Keep ReadingShow less
Carrie Underwood singing at President Donald Trump's inauguration
Julia Demaree Nikhinson - Pool/Getty Images

Carrie Underwood Reportedly Had A 'Hissy Fit' After Her Glitchy Inauguration Performance

Country singer Carrie Underwood's rendition of "America the Beautiful" inside the Capitol rotunda after Republican President Donald Trump was sworn in on Monday hit a technical snag when she was forced to sing a cappella.

The American Idol alum managed to do what any other trained, professional singer would under the circumstances and expertly sang live without the expected backing music track.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Anderson Cooper and Michael Fanone
CNN

Capitol Officer Slams Trump For Pardoning Jan. 6 Rioters: 'I Have Been Betrayed By My Country'

Michael Fanone—who worked for the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia for 20 years until he sustained serious and life-threatening injuries when he was brutally attacked by President Donald Trump's supporters during the January 6 insurrection—spoke out on CNN after Trump issued a mass pardon of all the insurrectionists on his first day in office.

Fanone's name has become synonymous with the many police officers who suffered horrific and unprecedented trauma as they attempted to restore order and protect the seat of the nation's government on January 6, 2021.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot from @kclmft's TikTok video; Donald Trump
@kclmft/TikTok; Bill Pugliano/Getty Images

TikToker Calls Out Subtly Racist Message After Spanish Version Of White House Website Disappears

The moment Republican President Donald Trump was sworn in during Monday's inauguration, the twice-impeached former president became the first convicted felon to become Commander-in-Chief—and for a second term, no less.

Trump didn't waste time making good on his campaign promises by signing off on executive orders and revamping the White House website, the latter of which featured a hype video on the home page and the deletion of a Spanish language version of the site.

Keep ReadingShow less