The boy who cried wolf is unironically one of the most important and best stories to tell people, especially kids. All of this could have been prevented if she just took that story to heart.
@@julidee_he’s not wrong, if anything he didn’t insult the OP. This comment was just stupid. Has anyone ever seen the video of the guy calling the cops over how “he shoved chopsticks up his ass”? That’s an old video. People do dumb shit all the time. This isn’t new especially in terms of the internet.
I was taught as a kid that 911 is an essential number to know and one to absolutely never mess around with. I’ve used it twice in my life, both as an adult, and both times had to work up the nerve to actually call bc it felt wrong lol. I can’t imagine prank calling it.
Right? I had to call 911 about 3 years ago cuz my female neighbor ran out of their apartment saying her husband was lighting the bathroom upstairs on fire. They were both high on meth and he set the bathroom trash on fire, but it wasn't even a huge fire. But I was terrified, especially considering their apt was linked with ours, and I didn't want ours to catch on fire. But, I felt so wrong for calling 911 lol I have major phone anxiety anyway, so it was especially nerve wracking to make that call.
When I was nine I think I called 911 to drive me to school after missing a bus lol, I was a dumb head back then. Didn't stop me from walking like 4 miles to school anyways over back roads because fear of truancy, so I kind of wish that it was okay to miss school sometimes, else I wouldn't have to walk uphill to school both ways like my grandparents did sometimes.
I've done it 4 times in life: 1. druggie was trying to break down the doors while everyone but my youngest brother and I was out. 2. Dog got a gashed leg from an exposed screw. I didn't know who to call and thought a hurt pet counted as a 911 level emergency. (I'm autistic and was holding gauze over a large gash over the dog's leg. It worked out since police later told my parents where to go get her help.) 3: I found a man who had fallen on the light rail tracks near the bus stop I was waiting at. I ditched the stop right before the bus arrived when I noticed them and unintentionally got others to notice by my actions. 4: saw a moped or motorcycle rider take a bad fall and called it in. Ambulance showed up very quickly to help.
Pranking has went from "there's something on your shirt" to people playing bomb countdowns in libraries. It's honestly so sad, and to see people think that's something worth replicating is even worse.
On the positive side, I was able to use the image of an 11-year old girl in handcuffs to impress upon my own daughter just how bad an idea it is to blindly attempt social media challenges. I can't communicate the level of relief I felt when I explained to her why the girl was in handcuffs and the only response my daughter could muster was "that's so stupid!" Yes, yes it is, good on you kiddo.
This. People are going to do stupid things for as long as people exist. The best we can do is make examples of these stupid actions to minimize the spread of stupid.
@@dalpaengi 18 years is very exagerated, even school allowing internet. Social media and influencer are the problem. All those things didn’t exist on internet back then. I have a computer since i was 11 years and i’m now 27 years old, did i ever made something similar to this girl, no. Don’t allowing kid until +18 don’t help them, they just need parent watching what they watch and what they do with it. Kids can learns about stuff, discover a passion or play educational game on internet
I had an argument with an old friend in high school about the origins of chocolate milk. she was convinced they came from brown cows and got angry with me when I tried to explain it to her. I am no longer friends with her and considering she’s a mother now I sincerely hope that did not continue.
She was probably surprised when she began to lactate herself and started asking questions; likely stupid ones like "Am I a cow?" "Do we drink people milk in the stores?" and other things you received answers to ages ago. And she probably still thinks chocolate milk comes from brown cows in the back of the grocery store.
I was like "that's kinda extreme" until a reread it and realized you said highschool... I just assumed this happened in elementary or smth 💀 Hopefully she's more educated now lmao
Ross creations newer content is the PERFECT way to continue pranks, gluing a pickle jar shut and asking strangers to open it is 10x funnier than telling the cops your friend was kidnapped, no staged videos, no violent or dangerous activities, just good comedy that can make anybody laugh, even the people being pranked
This "evolution" of pranks always weirds me the hell out because how did it went from simple, innocent pranks to fucking faking a kidnapping and all of this dumb shit
I accidentally dialed a police department's call center when I was like 9 or 10 years old. It wasn't 911 but a full seven digit number that was _one_ number off from my classmate that I was calling to ask about homework. It was a genuine misdial and I was terrified as I profusely apologized and tried to convince the dispatcher that there wasn't an emergency and that I didn't intend to call the police. The poor dispatcher didn't believe me and assumed I was in some kind of hostage situation so I ended up telling her what happened and read off the phone number I intended to dial and the name of the person I was intending to call. The dispatcher eventually relented and said that they would get off the line with me and call back in five minutes and if there was still no emergency to report that they would leave it at that. They did, and it was the most nerve wracking series of phone calls I've ever had in my life. I felt terrible and couldn't apologize enough for what happened. They were very understanding and thankfully I didn't get into trouble for the honest mistake. 😵💫
Usually those are non-emergency lines for the public to call with something that isn't serious. Sounds like they just wanted to put you through the ringer
@@zzzzzzzzzz_meI know that at my job (999 call taker for the ambulance service), if someone calls, for example, the receptionist phoned number, or recruitment, any 'business' number and it's outside of business hours, those calls come through to us emergency call handlers in the same way that an emergency call would. I think it's a safety net for people trying to call on a non emergency line in an emergency, because people do.
Many years ago when I was young and dumb I tried to program 911 into a speed dial button on the phone. Unfortunately it dialed instead of saving and I got a new butthole over the phone.
There's a reason why people have already forgotten the name of Darrell Brooks before it was ever mentioned. Deranged, racist, ideologue. The only people who know the name are those that followed the trial. Those who don't might have heard of the guy who murdered 6 people with a vehicle during a Waukesha Christmas Parade. However, it was probably represented as an "out of control SUV" in the media at the time...
I only prank called someone once in my life. Me and my friend were stupid 11 year olds and thought it would be a good idea to prank call McDonalds and pretend to be a senile old man trying to order Burger King. The employee immediately (obviously) caught on and scolded us, threatening to call the FBI and have them track down our address. We were scared shitless and she made us apologize to her 😂 Now that I'm older I realize she was lying but it was effective in teaching us to never do stuff like what happened in the video. Thank you McDonald's employee
Me n my friends once called a grown man selling pokémon cards online, stoned outta our minds hating on his hustle. Pissed him off enough to call back lol, dad was not pleased
yeah when i was in grade school me and my friend decided to do something stupid and prank call gamestop trying to preorder the newest call of duty for the Atari. he hung up instantly lmao
I never knew you could text 911. I'm glad I watched this video just for that. I can just see that being super useful, say if the killer is in the house and you're trying to be quiet and hiding in the closet. Good to know. Good to know.
I found out after I butt dialed 911. They texted me asking if there was an emergency, I said it was an accident and apologized. They never responded. I don’t remember if they tried to call first or if they just texted.
There is a true story about a kidnapping victim who told her kidnapper that she would order him a pizza if he was hungry. He agreed but was too stupid to have her put it on speaker. The 911 dispatcher caught on very quickly and a plain clothes cop actually delivered a pizza... and handcuffs.
I texted 911 from my hotel once. The people in the next room were fighting and it was loud. I was afraid to make the call and take a chance that they heard me- I didn't want to put my child in any danger. I took a chance and tried texting and it worked, thank the gods.
@@ComancheWarrior63That is hysterical, obv not the kidnapping part but the fact that the officer just showed up with a pizza and handcuffs like i just imagine he must've said something like "Is this your pepperoni with a side of justice?" Before handcuffing him
As a kid, when landlines were still a common thing, I accidentally dialed 911 when trying to dial my dad's 914 area code. I hung up immediately. They called back and I had to try and explain in my best scared-child gibberish that it was an accident. They still sent an extremely annoyed officer that I had to wake my mom up to talk to lol. The experience still haunts me to this day.
reminds me of when my brother was playing with the phone and dialing random numbers, eventually the cops showed up because he ended up dialing 911. parents had to explain why a 2 year old called the cops
This happened with another kid in my class while in school. He had to call his parents to bring hw he left home, put in the start of our area code (similar to yours but the 3rd number is different) and accidentally put in another 1. Just an annoyed cop but could have been much worse since it was at school.
that is so weird in my country its a good thing my old friend when he was a kid he called 000 and his mum was terrified but they said its a good thing, cos if the kid is the only person there to call they know what to call! witch is extra important when kids assume urs 911 cos of media. im sorry you where literally just a kid and it could of saved you one day the fact you knew the number, they shouldn't scare kids into not calling it one day they might hesitate
I've done the same thing. I got a land-line phone as birthday gift (it was purple with glitter I loved it) and to test it out the only phone number I remembered was 911. Lo and behold it rang, I cut the call 2 rings in and soon 2 cops came and wanted to talk to me personally to see if I was okay.
Wow. Nowadays the police wouldn’t be bother to turn up . If you hang up that means you are not interested in pursue the call. I did this a few weeks ago when I was to report a break in my business. I changed my mind because the theft it was only the till float and have no cctv recording . I knew it was pointless because the police even with footage they do nothing to thief’s in the Uk. ☹️
She thought she couldn't get in trouble for it. Reminds me of a recent video I saw where a bunch of teens told a cop they couldn't be ticketed by him because they were minors. Raising kids, not raising them, to think they're exempt from rules and laws just causes so many problems.
I don't think it's that she thought she was exempt from the rules. I think she genuinely watched a video that she didn't know was fake where the 'cops' laughed the prank off, and thought she was going to get the same response. The issue is that kids often can't differentiate content from reality, especially when content is being presented as if it is reality. When you show a kid a video of someone pranking the cops and the cops being cool with it, the kids are going to think they can do it too and get the same response We aren't talking about spoiled brats who think rules don't apply to them, we are talking about kids with no supervision over what they watch online and no one to correct them when they see something that plants a false view of how the world works into their minds
@@windwaker407 Yeah, it shows a lot of these people haven't watched prank content that they think she thought she'd 'get away' with something. She thought it'd be funny and that the cops would also think it was funny, because staging the whole thing and having the actors laugh it off at the end is how they avoid enraging their audience and ending up in trouble with the internet for mean-spirited pranks.
Who would've ever thought a 11 year old child could've pulled off such a stupid prank without any consequences....Oh wait she suffer serious consequences. Never mind.
@@federruchi6147 It's always for other people, of course. When they fall afoul of their own draconic rules and laws they're shocked when they end up in prison over something they think is minor. It's always 'a good lesson' to other people, but when it's them it's 'I never thought _I'd_ be the one in prison'.
If your kid is old enough to use a phone it’s probably a good idea to tell them about the dangers of making prank calls that are malicious (fake emergencies/fake threats). Like if you’re gonna give your young kid free range with a cell phone you should sort of expect stuff like this to happen especially if you’ve never told them the consequences of messaging the police department about a fake crime.
my elementary school had a day where a firefighter came in and explained to everyone how calling 911 works and what situations its appropriate for. he made it clear in no uncertain terms that calling 911 for silly or made-up reasons is a crime. i'm not sure if all schools do that but it seems that they should lol
I called 911 once and hung up immediately. Cops showed up and gave the entire speech about how it isn't a joke to call them unless there's an emergency. I felt so bad. I have such a huge conscious and i feel bad about the tiniest stuff, so this had me shook up lmao
@Enki1013In the UK here; had my phone do the emergency call thing here by mistake once. They called back, asked where I am, if I was definitely okay, took some contact details and disconnected.
When I was like 7 years old I remember 999 (I'm from England) being this number you always hear about, but my stupid child mind was like "that's not real though, right? there's not enough numbers... I'm just gonna quickly check" I called 999, heard the "what is your emergency?" thing, and hung up, they called back and my parents answered it, I got a lecture x_x
Reminds me about how I accidentally called 911 on my phone as a middle schooler because I accidentally pressed the emergency call button on my home screen while trying to unlock it. Ended up hanging up immediately only for them to call me back. I was so scared I was gonna get in trouble but all things considered, they were pretty nice about it.
I love how the news always calls it a challenge when it’s obviously not? Like no one is challenging others to fake a kidnapping and report it to the police.
The challenge refers to the people in the video doing the challenge. Like the cinnamon or milk challenge. They "take up" the challenge that's going around verses challenging other people to do it. That's always the format with stupid challenges like this because if they're real, they're meant to be dangerous, and if they're fake, then they're too dangerous and not worth it to even do for "content." They're avoiding liability if people really try these things for themselves. Only the innocent ones tell other people to do it like the "draw in your own style." But they're still challenges. They just can't be blamed if someone else is too stupid to do it and causes damage or death like many already have.
It started with the mannequin challenge, which was an actual challenge. Then there was the ice bucket challenge, I think? And at some point it went from actual things that are challenging to “Hey there’s a new trend!”
I called 911 as a kid and immediately hung up once someone actually answered, obviously they drove to my house, my grandma was watching me at the time and she let the officer come in, I was like 8 and the officer told me that he came here to check on me which could’ve taken up a spot to go and check up on someone who actually needed their help, I felt really bad and said I didn’t think it would actually go through on the phone for some reason, apologized and then he left after saying some stuff to my grandma idk what it was, my grandma however smacked me upside the head after he left and said I could’ve been the reason someone died, definitely feel bad to this day.
Police always pull that card for a quilt trip. It's nonsense. They don't even show up on time when you actually do need them. Not that mention if they really had an issue that was life or death that would get priority over your call
@@microusb42069It's still a very important message to send to a young person like that. Don't mess with emergency hotlines unless you absolutely need them, simple as that.
When they said she faked a kidnapping I thought she just went "my friend got kidnapped oh no help!" and then said it was a joke i didnt expect her to fabricate a full on kidnapping lmao
Seriously, I thought she made one little phone call to 911. But this little psycho went on and on for 30 minutes with a play by play through text messages. I'm still just wondering what she was gonna text to say it was all just a prank.
@@jenniferb.awesomehonestly makes me glad texting 911 didn't exist when I was a kid. It definitely does not feel as real as calling someone, and I see how she could do that.
I’m sincerely scared for the kids because they’re essentially being taught that it’s okay to do borderline sociopathic pranks on their friends, family and/or strangers because it’s “funny.” They don’t know that this isn’t acceptable and their actions _will_ have consequences. But what makes me mad is the parents that clearly cannot teach their kids how to properly act. Obviously kids are dumb and are gonna do something that they’ll regret later on, but parents do have a responsibility too.
When my daughter was 1 I accidentally locked my doors with her inside. In a black car, in the middle of July in TN, with no shade around, on a Sunday. I immediately panicked & started screaming for help. Everyone was scared of busting the windows & spraying shards of glass all over her. So i called 911 for help. They put me on the phone with a cop & all he told me was, "I cant respond to that. Call a locksmith." (On a sunday? Yeah, I woulda been waiting for hours.) So I tried to tell him, "ok I will figure out how to get her out but can someone still come out to make sure she's ok from the heat??" But he just told me, "sure, if you think she needs medical attention AFTER you get her out, just call us back." Then just a few weeks later, a nephew called 911 & hung up as a "prank." And ya know what happened? TWO cop cars showed up within minutes to "scare them and teach a good lesson." It just blows my mind the way they seem to be allowed to pick and choose. I still bump into that cop in public from time to time and I never fail to remind him of how much I think he sucks, lol. And needless to say, a wonderful neighbor ran to help me. We were able to get her out unharmed, just scared and drenched in sweat.
In England the police wouldn’t come out for that either and most people wouldn’t expect them to, we’d call our recovery service AA, RAC, something like that. We’d also take them to the hospital once out of the car, if they needed it, or if an emergency call an ambulance. I would imagine that the reason the police turned up to your nephews silent prank call was incase they were in danger and unable to talk, they would do that in the UK too after trying to call back and getting no answer. I doubt they’d turn up just to scare him, although he clearly needed teaching a lesson.
@@stellakittycat9356but the UK doesn’t really get as hot as Tennessee in the middle of July while in direct sunlight. The average temps are 90 degrees Fahrenheit, so about 32.2 Celsius. And inside the car, temperatures can easily reach 120 f (48.9 c) in minutes. If she hadn’t managed to get her out quickly, it’s very likely ambulances might have been needed. AAA isn’t super reliable in certain areas and can take hours so a cop to open a door is also sometimes necessary. I’ve seen cops show up for dogs and children in cars before, it’s part of their jobs.
@@HyperWolf and the person said no one wanted to break the car window which is what the police usually do. I’m sure if she’d explained to a locksmith her concerns they would have treated it as an emergency call. In England we have 2 keys for our vehicles, I carry one and my husband the other, or it would be at home, so I’d have got him to bring his key. Clearly she had other options as she said a neighbour helped so not as “life threatening” as she’s trying to imply, sounds like she was home, so grab the other key. Personally I’d have smashed the window furthest from the baby, a front window on the opposite site of the vehicle. To blame the police because she didn’t want her window broken or to pay for a locksmith is very unfair. I’m sure a local garage could have helped.
@@stellakittycat9356 Cops here have shown up before for dogs stuck in cars and they just stick a metal bar into the side and jiggle it and it pops open. I’ve seen it used so often that I assume most carry that. We also have the 2 keys and it’s definitely common for the spouse to take the 2nd key so they can deliver it to you if needed. The main issue is it’s the US. It’s huge. It’s common for people to work an hour’s drive away from home. Imagine waiting even 10 minutes for the spouse to drive there with the extra key. That could be death for the child. My neighbor is a locksmith. He turns his work phone off when he’s not working. I don’t know if that’s common practice though. So I can’t argue this one. I would have broken a front window but I’m mainly concerned that they wouldn’t send medics right away. Like I said, cars can reach 120f and higher. Death can occur in less than 30 minutes in a hot car. And it takes just minutes for there to be some kind of harm to a child since they don’t regulate internal temperatures well before 3. A parent can be relieved that the child seems fine and then there can be adverse consequences from heat/dehydration that aren’t apparent right away. A check up is recommended. And honestly, I had a panic attack once and they sent me an ambulance “just in case” even though I’d told them I was ok and that my mom’s friend had just freaked out. This seems like a more important scenario to check on just in case.
They charged a child with a felony who could legitimately not understand the gravity of what she did. If this grown ass woman doesn't get some charges, I'm gonna be pissed
I'm sorry but 11 is definitely old enough to know better than to spend half an hour wasting police time. Not saying a felony isn't extreme, but they won't actually convict her, and maybe she won't be a complete idiot in future
@@BiIIyBearHam my brother in Christ she is 11 I don’t think she understands the FULL gravity of the situation, if she really completely understood how bad this was I don’t think she would’ve ever done it.
@@SkylerLoveheart I don't think it was well deserved unless their parents taught them that calling 911 is only for emergencies. Kids are naive which is why it's the job of the parents to teach them about everything.
As a kid, sometimes the question you ask yourself isn’t always, “should I do this” but rather, “can I do this?” However, as a kid, this applied to me throwing rocks on my neighbors roof and not making fake 911 calls.
my dad gave me advice that if i ever got lost to the point where it’s impossible to find my house i should throw a rock through a window so the police can drive me home😂
To be honest both of those self-question are good. -Should i do this; probably not, the consequence probably outweight the 'haha funny' -can i do this; physically yes but technically by law no (referring to your throwing rocks... lol)
When i was about 7 i was in a shopping centre with my parents. We went into a bathroom display shop where there were sea shells in a small bowl on a bath. I took a handful of them, immediately regretted it, and as we came out there was police just chilling talking to people, i told my parents straight away id stolen these sea shells, and was shook to my lil core, tears and everything, convinced my parents were gonna rat me out and id be put in the slammer. Seashells bro.
@@dorkydragon5055 what the shells were for? They were just there to look nice by the bath in the display, or do you mean for me? Because to this day I have no idea, I have never needed shells, nor have I ever been super fascinated by them. I think I just saw them and thought they looked nice and thought I could get away with it. And I could have if I didn't have a little breakdown
As a kid I once dialed 911 on a landline phone at church and hung up immediately. Cops arrived, I was instantly traumatized. Kids really learn things the hard way, no matter the generation
Similar-ish story lol. I was probably 5 or 6, and my mom found a bat in the attic, so she started screaming (she's VERY scared of them), and so I called 911 - but then hung up immediately. Cops come knocking on our door about 5 minutes later and my mom had to explain the situation 😂
I once dialed 999 by accident, messing around when i had just gotten my first smartphone dialing random numbers, Still not entirely sure how i managed it but perhaps it started with 999 and the phone just sees that and forgets the other numbers. I was in the car at the time and as soon as i heard "emergency services ho-" i hung up. I freaked out but said nothing and nothing ever game from it thankfully
Well, it's an 11-year-old girl, so of course she's mindless. Thing is, she's only 11. As much as many people are going to disagree with me on this, I genuinely hope that she's still able to have a future, go to college or a trade school if she wants to, and get a decent, well-paying job as an adult.
I feel like at 11 years old, the scare of having police show up and getting arrested will be a good lesson. I don't think she should be punished any more than that though, she's still very young and shouldn't actually have her life ruined for being a stupid kid.
100% agree. Charging her does no good for anyone, not the police, the girl, or the parents. She clearly learned her lesson here and no one was hurt, charging her would be a huge waste of more peoples time.
She should be made to do some form of penance...community service work perhaps. An hour of scared sh!tless, followed by laughing about it with her friends is not sufficient.
Then I don't think you understand the gravity of the situation. A felony and misdemeanor charge is absolutely warrented in this scenario. She wasted police resources and could have easily put innocent lives in danger. That's not a learning lesson, that's a crime and it should be dealt as such regardless of age, race, and gender.
That's not how that works. If someone calls 911 reporting something like a kidnapping or a bomb threat it is taken seriously every time, which is why faking things like that are a felony. 911 operators don't get to say "Meh, sounds like a prank." and hang up.
I’m really happy i found this channel. It popped up on my feed a few weeks ago & I’m hooked. I live a VERY stressful life…. His calm voice and comedy lets me escape while I listen. I Genuinely thank you for that ❤
I’m SO thankful every day that social media didn’t exist when I was a kid. MySpace debuted in my early teens and I thought the concept was incredibly strange even then; this idea of sharing really personal info/moments with casual acquaintances and total strangers.
Honestly I've never understood it. I had an Instagram account that I posted on from like 6th - 8th grade, since everyone else in my school had one. But then I realized that no one else actually cares about what I had for dinner or where I went on vacation, and there was no point spending my time to document everything I ever do instead of just _doing_ it. I've never touched social media since, and honestly I think it's for the best.
I know a big issue is that most parents don't spend enough time on youtube to understand what is on it. I spend a lot of time on it, my wife doesn't. So I can walk into a room here a sound effect or song and know exactly what my kids are watching. And when they get caught watching something inappropriate I take away their tablets.
Im so thankful my mom taught me certain things. I remember seeing pranks during the peak of pranks in the early 2010’s and thinking “who is really dumb enough to do these” i see now that sadly alot of people are.
This is something parents are now going to have to step up and educate their kids about. In a perfect world, those videos wouldn’t exist, but there will always be those clout chasers
It should be a part of TH-cam's policy for fake content encouraging malicious acts like this requiring a disclaimer that you should not do this at home and it's all staged.
@@autumnfrost-art I would tell you but YT would cens... 'protect' you from my comment but safe to say it's got absolutely NOTHING to do with waythism... honest.
@@Haburgthats an excellent point. It really grinds my gears how some people seem to completely forget what country they live in when theyre on the internet, trying to rile people up and make everyone mad to feed off of each other when they see an act or penalty they feel is unjust compared to a similar situation. Different states have different laws and something may be legal in one state but illegal in another or possibly the maximum penalty is just not the same.
@@notthatnut3026 it's like half Europeans who don't understand how large the US is, if you can drive from one end of your country to the other in an afternoon stop speaking about us politics.
I believe the chief said they charged her with as much as legally possible. I think they're also suing her for the cost of all the resources they spent on looking for her.
It's very unlikely she'll have her life ruined by this at age 11. I would predict she'll most likely be offered a plea that includes expunging this record if a couple conditions are met, such as a stay out of trouble order (don't commit another crime for a period of time) and community service, which is fair. It's not fair to have an 11-year-old have to carry a felony conviction when she just thought a dumb prank was funny and meant no true harm.
Since that black woman is 25 and was charged with two misdemeanours your "justice" system is pretty fucked up if an 11 year old get a felony conviction.
Exactly this. People really don't understand that she meant no harm and she had no idea that what she did was wrong. They're being way too hard with her
Ah yes we are in a time where people ignored the teachings of “crying wolf” or whatever it’s called. Seriously as a kid that was ingrained to me to never ever fake something serious.
funny enough when i was growing up in the 90s and 2000s(born 89), it was always hammered into me and many others that pranking 911 was one of the worst things you can do. Now obviously we prank called from payphones and stuff, BUT we never fucked with 911.
@@schultz8122 Yeah, I didn’t do things this stupid when I was 11. She needs to get off that part of the internet if she is influenced to do stuff like that
Take this as a lesson to not let Ipads raise your kids; be there for them! When my parents spoke of having the "TV babysitter", rules of what and what not to show them were much stricter, albeit because the technology was simpler, but I think my point still stands.
I can see now that Charlie’s trauma from prank calling 911 as a little one was where we got his unfathomably awesome performance as district 8 hospital helper.
you reminded me of this when you brought up the second story my mom never runs over boxes in the road and will hard swerve to miss them because when she was living in Oklahoma there was a news story about some lady that left her baby in a box in the middle of the road because she didn't want it
In 2013 at my school, a teacher who was quite hated for being strict disappeared for more than 1 month. When he returned we found out that an 8 year old girl had accused him of touching her in the school bathrooms. It turns out that the girl had heard that on TH-cam and repeated it to his mother but referring to this teacher, to this day, more than 10 years later, the teacher has not returned to work in schools due to the bad reputation he received in the incident...
Can you clarify plz The girl saw to lie about people online? Or did see someone talk about their creepy teacher and made her own story? I'm a bit confused
@@jonnust6236 what do you think bro? little girl lies to police about sexual abuse, gets away with it with no ridicule and never learns from the mistake. ruins a teachers life. it comes from children wanting attention so bad that theyd rather commit crimes than be an actual likeable person and have conversations with real people.
Yeah in 7th grade these 2 girls that were friends wanted to go to a different school so they both said they were touched by our science teacher and he lost his job and they got what they wanted and their parents transferred them. I'm guessing they had tried asking their parents to no avail and so knew they had to do something more drastic. Us other students knew it was a lie. That was 21 years ago and kids were already doing that...
These are not challenges. A "challenge" nowadays is just synonymous with being peer pressured into doing something so stupid that everyone laughs at you, like someone at a party who gets hammered and falls through a table, and doesnt realize nobody is laughing *with* them
Got rid of Twitter because of it. I hated seeing the "X" in my notifications because it keeps making me think there's an error on my phone. I wasn't really using Twitter anymore anyways, this is just the last straw that convinced me to finally cut the line.
'We're residents of Dufusville and we're getting lots of new neighbours' Charlie puts those teams of late night show comedy writers to shame without even trying
@@scottt7517 Doofusville* And put in those periods, buddy. Also, you need to shorten your sentences, try "speak" next time. I can also see you avoided typing the word "your" being that you would write the wrong one. Don't worry, the other commenter had no grammatical knowledge, either.
Making a serious crime offense a challenge after we just had one of the most biggest kidnapping investigation hoaxes is the most deplorable thing I've seen all month.
@@floppycockjamboozle5382 Woman said she saw a toddler by the side of the highway in the south somewhere, then her phone goes dead while she's on the phone with her sister. Bystander even corroborates a kidnapping stating there was a man in her car before police got there, turns out she made the entire thing up for apparently no reason.
I've worked with 11 year olds. They are _not_ old or mature enough to comprehend what the consequences of a "funny" prank call might be, and certainly not experienced enough to even know that false reporting is that severe of a crime. Charging a kid barely into double digits with a _felony_ is beyond irrational. It's like catching someone picking an flower and throwing them into jail. It's really _that_ much of an overreaction in the perception of a kid that young. That felony should belong to the person who encouraged the girl to commit the crime, not to the child. We live in such a bad timeline.
From a young age I was taught to never dial 911 unless it was an absolute emergency. The only time I ever accidentally called the police was when I got ahold of my dads old phone, which wasn’t able to make any calls to any friends or anything, so I saw that and thought “what would happen if I called 911.” They picked up the phone and I hung up. Luckily they didn’t show up though
I was a a hotel and kept dialing my friends room the number was 119 and I mislicked and basically the whole day was ruined bc cops and ambulance show up terrified of dialing 911 ever since
Yes I accidentally called 000 (Our emergency services number) because the off button on this 'babies first phone' I had also was the 0 key, and I didn't hold the off button enough 3 times, calling the popo.
@@Mr.Bimgusit shouldn’t be minimized by something being worse but there is definitely a big difference in the negative effects and levels of badness between actions
I've said this before but I wanna say it again. I absolutely love when you spout such vile sarcasm and NEVER say "only kidding" or in any way admit that it is sarcasm.. LOVE your sense of humor. It reminds me of someone else's sense of humor.
LOL the story about calling the cops because the pool is haunted reminded me of when my friend called the cops because she thought her car was stolen but she had just forgotten where she parked it. 3 cops showed up and one of them did a sweep of the area and comes back, goes “ma’am there’s a silver Nissan just like you described parked behind that house over there” and her face IMMEDIATELY goes blood red and she starts frantically apologizing.
You have to be a cold hearted bastard to deny something that every other child have. My parents raised me and my siblings through guilt, They would make us believe it's me and my siblings fault that we're barely scraping by. They would often remind us how expensive school expenses are for 5 kids and if we didn't do well in school that money is just wasted for no reason. When i grew to be an adult and learn myself how to manage household expenses. I realised that we weren't poor at all. My parents would rather spend money decorating our house, buying tv's and expensive hifi system because at least they could gloat about it whenever they invited their friends to our house. To this day it pisses me off when my parents ask why is it so hard for me to ask them how they're were doing and why i spend so little time with them. I'm just treating them the way they used to treat me. My parents only started to value their own children when all of us got jobs and moved out of their house. Also all 5 of us will never ever get married and have children of our own. (1 of my sister did though by she divorced without ever producing children
@@stellviahohenheimit’s not cold hearted to deny internet access. The internet has EVERYTHING on it and is unfiltered ain’t no FCC. It’s not like denying a tv or a basic phone, the internet can expose kids to VERY bad things often times by accident. When I was like 7-8 I used to type random letters in the search for fun, I came across a gore site…
It's a troubling domino effect. I think the number one thing to do is to have conversations about the reality of what's on the internet with your children, and express to them that not everything trending is right. We can't protect them from everything, so that is important.
Back when I was 4 or 5, I wanted to play a prank on my dad. It was one I saw in a cartoon, where the bucket of water is balanced above a door and falls on the person who opens it. Only I knew I’d likely get in trouble for making a mess with water in the house and I thought a bucket hitting someone in the head might hurt. So instead I used my stuffed animals, because they wouldn’t hurt and I thought being surprised with a rain of stuffed animals would be something nice to get surprised by. Basically what I’m saying is even as a post-toddler I knew things on tv weren’t always a good thing to copy in real life, and that pranks shouldn’t be mean.
I remember as a kid I was playing with a payphone while at an airport waiting for our connecting flight, and I dialed 911 not knowing that it would actually call and connect with someone.
@@faboo2001I probably would have done the same tbh, I always typed out 911 and my country's emergency number on toys. Never did it to actual phones but as a small child it's tempting, funnily enough I knew that if I did I would be wasting police time.
I was waiting for you to talk about the Alabama fake kidnapping. What sucks is I live here and people were extremely concerned and were worried everyday until the news it was fake broke out. I’ve also heard quite a bit of people say they will never stop to help even a toddler on the side of the road because of what “happened”
@@bluchismoon in fear of human trafficking or some crap. The woman stated she saw a toddler on the side of the road so she stopped and was “kidnapped” by “human traffickers”.
Its sad, most human trafficking happens to people who knew their traffickers. Not to mention most who are actually trafficked are those most vulnerable. (Low income and woc are usually targeted most for sex-based trafficing,) and they are usually coaxed by people promising better jobs and opportunities. While possible, you probably aren't gonna be trafficked if you help a baby on the side of a road. Robbed maybe, which is still awful, but not typically full-on trafficked.
@@haveagoodday7021 most definitely, I’m sure the cases of human trafficking in a highly traveled area on random people are extremely uncommon. Especially here where almost everyone who would stop and help most likely carry a sidearm. But because of that one woman’s made up story it’s got easily paranoid people scared to help.
That's their choice and you don't get to decide that. Not everyone wants to risk their life helping others, this world is dangerous and you aren't the morality police. Stop trying to act like it's crazy if someone makes a different decision than you, and when would you ever see a toddler on the side of the road in need of help lmao? You're upset over some ridiculous scenario that would never happen
The stuff they do now, would be considered highly embarrassing and shameful, hell they probably even get picked on for the stuff they do. But now it's like they're praised for it!? Amazing. Lmao
when I was her age, I was so scared with stranger adults especially police officer. It is blows my mind seeing kids like this are brave enough to put up something like this. Kids nowadays are something else man
The worst things that I regret I did as a kid were things I saw in a movie or tv show. Even before the internet, media has been influencing kids to do things. For instance, when they stopped featuring smoking as much in tv shows and movies, the rates of teens smoking went down. I think that it is important for parents to consume media with their children, so that they can discuss what they see and learn what’s ok and what isn’t. In my opinion, children really shouldn’t be consuming media on their own unsupervised until they are at least teenagers. And even when they are teenagers, they still shouldn’t use social media until they become an adult. Exceptions of course for something like Discord or Xbox party chat so that they can game with their friends online.
Gaming chats can be some of the most toxic, abusive, criminally negligent places in modern society. Parents should definitely be aware of what’s going on in those as well.
'For instance, when they stopped featuring smoking as much in tv shows and movies, the rates of teens smoking went down'. That's very interesting information. In fact, when teen got their social media later in life, depression was lower than those that do. Now obviously this is correlation, but it's still pretty telling.
As someone who’s life has been irreparably ruined by being online, I can relate to this unfortunately. I hope she finds the help she needs and abandons this lifestyle of pranks and causing trouble so she doesn’t end up like me with a life of making public apologies.
When I was in high-school we had a girl and a guy film a fake kidnapping prank in a public outdoor mall. The guy put a bag over the girls head in public while she was fake screaming for help then they drove off. Reports came in quick about this and they were both charged. We weren’t too surprised about this because the guy was also charge previously with throwing 2x4s at cars and a bunch of drug related charges. Edit: I forgot to mention while the cops were going around the area trying to find there car, there were reports of an actual kidnapping happening around the same time. When the cops found out they were uno-reversed they were fucking pissed. I think the girl who was involved got off or made a deal but the dude was 18+ and was charged with multiple felonies
My dad told my brother and I at age 7 and 5 that if we ever got arrested for anything we would need to figure it out ourselves from then on. We mess up, we fix it.
I can relate. Journeyz shoe store used to have payphones in them growing up. I dialed 911 thinking the call wouldnt go through since it was a payphone. Operator answered, i hung up, went back to my mom, then freaked out when the payphone started ringing. Store employee answers, then turns his head slowly straight to me. I shrugged like i didnt know anything about the situation. I was so happy he didnt tell my mom
There was a "prank/challenge" a few months back where kids were shooting BB guns and also throwing rocks off of highway overpasses. We had multiple drivers injured and one elderly lady killed by this shit. Someone threw a large rock off the overpass by our house and it went into the windshield and killed her. A few other people had their cars damaged and arms/hands injured from the BB guns. We had another "challenge" at the public schools in our town where kids were destroying and vandalizing toilets, and when they would get fixed, they would break them again. I really, sincerely hate TikTok and the TikTok generation.
Hate the sin, not the sinner. Not a religious person myself, but I wholeheartedly agree with the principle. It can be very hard - I know some teens that make my blood boil too - but I also know that hating them didn't help one bit. While reaching out and trying to show there's a different way to live did.
To be fair I've been hearing about situations like this ever since I was a kid and I'm 27 now (regarding people being killed by assholes who throw rocks down of overpasses)
The scum that came up with such a "challenge" should be charged with capital murder and if there was any report against the original video that was not acted on by TikTok then they should also get the capital murder charge.
Yeah that's great. She makes a mistake based on what content creators portray in their fake challenges, and now gets to deal with bullying unless she moves on top of a felony charge. Totally fair. Totally proportional.
Charlie brought up some positive memories in this depressing story. Of my first i guess.. run-in with police.. Was like 5 years old, didn't know what a phone really was (I was extremely dumb back then). Hit a bunch of random buttons, but whenever the 'loud noises' of a failed call hit, i would hang it up.... Eventually called 911 unknowingly, not understanding anything, saying hi to the dispatcher, being completely clueless.. Mother was helping relatives, and ended up finding me a few moments alter, concerned at what I had done, and apologized to the dispatch. Told me never to call that number unless i'm in major trouble. Was a life lesson for me. I thank god that it was back in the early 000s that i did this, or else i would have gotten my family in major trouble.
I prank called 911 when I was 11, literally nothing happened other than them coming to my house to check if I was ok. I was really stupid lol, I asked the dispatcher if I could get some chicken nuggets.
The chocolate milk from brown cows doesn't surprise me too much. There's vegans out there that think strawberry milk is vegan because "it comes from strawberries"
There's literally 0 people over the age of 10 that believe that and the fact that you got 60 likes is just cringe. But enjoy living in your straw man ass delusion.
Does she deserve punishment? Yes. Does she deserve a felony charge at 11 for not understanding the gravity of the situation they were causing? No. Hopefully they take an appropriate level of action and expunge the record/dismiss the charges in exchange for giving the kid some community service
@@WadeAlmano he didnt, he literally just repeated what the news anchor said. Until she is actually convicted saying she being charged with a felony isn't something crazy.
I'm always feeling... so ashamed for being in the same generation as some of these people. I was raised by a single mother and she was a hard ass for most of my life, but I wised up and help her around the house wherever possible. I obviously disagree with how she raised me at points, but crap like this is enough to make me consider that she possibly had a method to such madness simply because she actually raised me and didn't immediately put me in front of a screen to let what's on the other end do all the teaching.
I hate when people bring up "I'm ashamed for being in this generation" would u rather be in a slave owning one? or the one where they didn't want blk people in their diners? This is the best generation we've had so far
@@roxannejohnstone9913 ...gdamn, relax with the fake outrage and sensationalizing. I'm baffled how you read the OP's comment and somehow pulled slavery and segregation out of it. Stop being deliberately obtuse to start a fight, you knew exactly what the OP was talking about.
@@roxannejohnstone9913 No. The best generation is the result or specific situation. No one cares about the past specially when it doesnt affect them. What she said is understandable. Today is the best Tech Gen.
@@roxannejohnstone9913stfu that's obviously not the point. Our generation has ppl who ate tidepods and willingly committed suicide for internet clout. It's a complaint about the current system. Millenials didn't do this shit and they got all their stuff together and are buying houses now, our generation has problems to work out still
Out of the many pranks that I've watched/heard, this is one that is way over the line, especially with it resulting in an outcome like that. I hope this serves as a great reminder to not just the younger generation, but all of us. I think another lesson here is: "Just because you can, doesn't mean you should." And that's that.
Not gonna lie I myself was a kid once and did stumble across the curiosity of prank calling the police. I thank my mother for simply telling me what would happen if I did this or that, it stuck with me enough it’s one of those core memories you can easily remember by any trigger moment. Just like Charlie said you can’t let the internet raise your kids cause I didn’t have internet back then so now it’s gonna be harder to raise children.
Depends. Hopefully it made her not want to do it again but I'm thinking at most she's indignant she's being punished for a "silly prank call," and doesn't care to understand the level of her stupidity.
Traumatic? 😂😂😂 it will be a massive inconvenience for her as well as financially drawing for ger parents, but it will be anything but traumatic for her. Stop injecting "muh traumas" unto places it does not belong. Now everyone that gets hit by a leaf in the wind thinks they've gone through some sort of trauma.
@@graydi66yI think you underestimate how scary grown massive adults wirh authority who are upset with you are when you're an 11 year old girl. She's pretty terrified.
@@ShadowSkyX Her brain isn't developed enough to understand the seriousness of it BEFORE she actually did it. The severe reaction, however, will educate her: it shows that the adult world, the police force, takes this VERY seriously, and that is a lesson she'll never forget. Jesus, how are you people accusing an 11 year old of stupidity without even understanding the most basic child psychology?
@@graydi66y For a little girl her age, being man handled like and put in cuffs is traumatic. Yes, what she did was stupid and her fault completely but she's a child and didn't understand it. I think that the way they handled it was a little too much but it happened. I don't understand why people get so easily triggered by the word trauma.
I'm fine with the cuffs, or maybe even a trip to the police station, to show her the seriousness and scare her into thinking before doing similar things in the future, but I sincerely hope they don't actually charge her with anything. There were and are a lot of kids who have dialed 911 for some stupid reason and had to learn this lesson, and I don't think I've ever heard of any of them being actually charged with anything.
She won't get charged I bet. I know lawyers can be scumbags but this isn't a good money case for anyone and is a waste of time for everyone really. I can't imagine a federal attorney or even a judge would waste their time on this shit. I think it's just being blown up cus they know a ton of people will see this and use it as an example so they might not have to continue to waste their time with future happenings of this same incident. It's still gonna happen tho prolly
The thing is, it worked great, she just didn't understand what it means when your challenge "works"; she thought the point was for it to be funny. No, the point is to get clout. And it went perfectly - she ended up on the national news! The real tragedy here is that parents fail to talk to their kids about the dangers of clout. 🤣
This reminds me of when I was around 7 or 8, I was playing with stuffed animals. I voiced them in my head because I was scared to be too loud, and I had dialed 911 and hung up immediately after (because I was playing) and I was silent not saying a word. Eventually the police knock on the door and my mom yells out for me. My mom was so pissed. So you should teach your kids ONLY to dial the police in an emergency, especially if you're giving your kid their own electronic capable of making phone calls.
I swear whenever I see the word "Challenge" anywhere nowadays, I know something stupid or life-ruining is going to be involved.
@Susnation532 @realyoz you both are bots.
@realyoz I exposed *bofa* lmao! 😂😂…
Stab your neighbor challenge
Take a life challenge.
@@DG_427it will be too hard for them
The boy who cried wolf is unironically one of the most important and best stories to tell people, especially kids. All of this could have been prevented if she just took that story to heart.
@@yozlolYFGAbro go push your content somewhere else
Well maybe u gotta make it onto a tiktok cause kids dont read stories or books anymore
Tell that to the common voter defending Ukraine.
@@Mi_Fa_Volarewhat.
@@Mi_Fa_Volarecan you not turn every discussion into your rancid political discourse?
I remember when challenges were things like "Draw these 10 characters in your own style"
That's still a thing and that's also not a very old challenge
@@Dr.BDoverppl like u are so exhausting to talk to
@@julidee_shut up
@@julidee_... ok? you're not my friend you're just some weirdo online that overestimates their conversational value nobodies in a rush to talk to you
@@julidee_he’s not wrong, if anything he didn’t insult the OP. This comment was just stupid. Has anyone ever seen the video of the guy calling the cops over how “he shoved chopsticks up his ass”? That’s an old video. People do dumb shit all the time. This isn’t new especially in terms of the internet.
I was taught as a kid that 911 is an essential number to know and one to absolutely never mess around with. I’ve used it twice in my life, both as an adult, and both times had to work up the nerve to actually call bc it felt wrong lol. I can’t imagine prank calling it.
Right? I had to call 911 about 3 years ago cuz my female neighbor ran out of their apartment saying her husband was lighting the bathroom upstairs on fire. They were both high on meth and he set the bathroom trash on fire, but it wasn't even a huge fire. But I was terrified, especially considering their apt was linked with ours, and I didn't want ours to catch on fire. But, I felt so wrong for calling 911 lol I have major phone anxiety anyway, so it was especially nerve wracking to make that call.
When I was nine I think I called 911 to drive me to school after missing a bus lol, I was a dumb head back then. Didn't stop me from walking like 4 miles to school anyways over back roads because fear of truancy, so I kind of wish that it was okay to miss school sometimes, else I wouldn't have to walk uphill to school both ways like my grandparents did sometimes.
Whenever you call 911 you are the main suspect
I've done it 4 times in life:
1. druggie was trying to break down the doors while everyone but my youngest brother and I was out.
2. Dog got a gashed leg from an exposed screw. I didn't know who to call and thought a hurt pet counted as a 911 level emergency. (I'm autistic and was holding gauze over a large gash over the dog's leg. It worked out since police later told my parents where to go get her help.)
3: I found a man who had fallen on the light rail tracks near the bus stop I was waiting at. I ditched the stop right before the bus arrived when I noticed them and unintentionally got others to notice by my actions.
4: saw a moped or motorcycle rider take a bad fall and called it in. Ambulance showed up very quickly to help.
Pranking has went from "there's something on your shirt" to people playing bomb countdowns in libraries. It's honestly so sad, and to see people think that's something worth replicating is even worse.
Damn dude went to the crypt for that countdown reference. Lol
but its just a prank tho? dont take it so serious
@@yozlolYFGAim after you blud watch your back
@@viponly5372 Tricking people into thinking their lives are danger as a joke is quite humorous.
If someone starts counting down and acting serious like there's a bomb, they need to get punched. Straight up.
Can’t believe the cops didn’t smash that like button after she revealed it was a prank.
dude i laughed out loud at that 😂😂😂
Damn that's a good one
You had me super concerned for a darn second there.
@@serenity8839 I was alarmed for a moment there too.
IF I CAN SPIN DEES FEEDGAT SPEENAR FOR FAAV SICANDS YOU HAAV TO SMASH THE LIKE BUTTON
Someone should really create a tier list of challenges by the amount of lives they've taken.
Charlie should do that, ignore the bots
CHARLIE? MORE LIKE TRASHIE, I’M ENTIRELY BETTER ☠💀☠ (shhhh im undercover)
You should do it before Charlie does.... you might go viral
How are people getting arrested but these bots are not getting terminated?
Nah then people would try to beat the top by doing more stupid and outrageous shit,
Calling it "the platform formerly known as Twitter" is so much better than its current name
Instead of X they could've called it Ƭ̵̬̊
Its Xitter where the x is pronounced "sh"
It's always twitter to me. Like the local pub. It had the same name fir 80 years then 20 years ago it was changed. But not to me.
@@arejaycee5704. Tweeting has now been christened “extruding”. I rather like it, it’s somehow so apt.
ex twitter
On the positive side, I was able to use the image of an 11-year old girl in handcuffs to impress upon my own daughter just how bad an idea it is to blindly attempt social media challenges. I can't communicate the level of relief I felt when I explained to her why the girl was in handcuffs and the only response my daughter could muster was "that's so stupid!" Yes, yes it is, good on you kiddo.
Good kid
Honestly I think the answer is just don't let your kids on the internet until they're at least 13, and have the ability to reason for themselves.
@@Mr.Bimgussome children need to not be allowed online until they are 18 years old and out of the house tbh.
This. People are going to do stupid things for as long as people exist. The best we can do is make examples of these stupid actions to minimize the spread of stupid.
@@dalpaengi 18 years is very exagerated, even school allowing internet. Social media and influencer are the problem. All those things didn’t exist on internet back then. I have a computer since i was 11 years and i’m now 27 years old, did i ever made something similar to this girl, no. Don’t allowing kid until +18 don’t help them, they just need parent watching what they watch and what they do with it. Kids can learns about stuff, discover a passion or play educational game on internet
I had an argument with an old friend in high school about the origins of chocolate milk. she was convinced they came from brown cows and got angry with me when I tried to explain it to her. I am no longer friends with her and considering she’s a mother now I sincerely hope that did not continue.
She was probably surprised when she began to lactate herself and started asking questions; likely stupid ones like "Am I a cow?" "Do we drink people milk in the stores?" and other things you received answers to ages ago.
And she probably still thinks chocolate milk comes from brown cows in the back of the grocery store.
I was like "that's kinda extreme" until a reread it and realized you said highschool... I just assumed this happened in elementary or smth 💀 Hopefully she's more educated now lmao
Why do we allow the low IQ to reproduce
My boss still thinks blood is blue before being exposed to oxygen so Yee.
@@llamaniaman4002 If you ever feel like you'll never find love. just remember, that dumbass became a mother lol
Ross creations newer content is the PERFECT way to continue pranks, gluing a pickle jar shut and asking strangers to open it is 10x funnier than telling the cops your friend was kidnapped, no staged videos, no violent or dangerous activities, just good comedy that can make anybody laugh, even the people being pranked
Vlog Creations*
@@-N-A- you must not remember what his channel name used to be
@@_dtayylor you must not remember what their channel is currently called
@@-N-A-banger comeback XD
This "evolution" of pranks always weirds me the hell out because how did it went from simple, innocent pranks to fucking faking a kidnapping and all of this dumb shit
I accidentally dialed a police department's call center when I was like 9 or 10 years old. It wasn't 911 but a full seven digit number that was _one_ number off from my classmate that I was calling to ask about homework. It was a genuine misdial and I was terrified as I profusely apologized and tried to convince the dispatcher that there wasn't an emergency and that I didn't intend to call the police. The poor dispatcher didn't believe me and assumed I was in some kind of hostage situation so I ended up telling her what happened and read off the phone number I intended to dial and the name of the person I was intending to call. The dispatcher eventually relented and said that they would get off the line with me and call back in five minutes and if there was still no emergency to report that they would leave it at that. They did, and it was the most nerve wracking series of phone calls I've ever had in my life. I felt terrible and couldn't apologize enough for what happened. They were very understanding and thankfully I didn't get into trouble for the honest mistake. 😵💫
Usually those are non-emergency lines for the public to call with something that isn't serious. Sounds like they just wanted to put you through the ringer
Shout-out to the dispatcher for always staying vigilant I guess. Maybe the panic in your voice is what gave the impression of a hostage situation? 😅
Aww bless younger you. Glad the dispatcher was both vigilant and understanding.
@@zzzzzzzzzz_meI know that at my job (999 call taker for the ambulance service), if someone calls, for example, the receptionist phoned number, or recruitment, any 'business' number and it's outside of business hours, those calls come through to us emergency call handlers in the same way that an emergency call would. I think it's a safety net for people trying to call on a non emergency line in an emergency, because people do.
Many years ago when I was young and dumb I tried to program 911 into a speed dial button on the phone. Unfortunately it dialed instead of saving and I got a new butthole over the phone.
Well, she better not get a worse punishment than the full grown woman who just got caught faking her kidnapping.
So far, the little girl got WAY more of a punishment than the dumb adult has. Last I heard they’re still “discussing the issue” 🤦♂️
There's a reason why people have already forgotten the name of Darrell Brooks before it was ever mentioned. Deranged, racist, ideologue. The only people who know the name are those that followed the trial. Those who don't might have heard of the guy who murdered 6 people with a vehicle during a Waukesha Christmas Parade. However, it was probably represented as an "out of control SUV" in the media at the time...
Which woman? There's been a few. Do you mean the one who called police saying there was a child on the highway, and then disappeared for two days?
@@AsymmetricalCrimes You need to take better care of yourself man, mental health is not a joke, hope you get better.
@@TylerAO12no you idiot. The woman has been charged yesterday.
I only prank called someone once in my life. Me and my friend were stupid 11 year olds and thought it would be a good idea to prank call McDonalds and pretend to be a senile old man trying to order Burger King. The employee immediately (obviously) caught on and scolded us, threatening to call the FBI and have them track down our address. We were scared shitless and she made us apologize to her 😂 Now that I'm older I realize she was lying but it was effective in teaching us to never do stuff like what happened in the video. Thank you McDonald's employee
@TurkeyInAToaster and pretty harmless.
Jesus thats a bit extreme. McDonalds be fuckin Anti Burger King Nazis god damn.
Me n my friends once called a grown man selling pokémon cards online, stoned outta our minds hating on his hustle.
Pissed him off enough to call back lol, dad was not pleased
I've only tried prank calling phone scams in the past, but to be fair they actually deserve it.
yeah when i was in grade school me and my friend decided to do something stupid and prank call gamestop trying to preorder the newest call of duty for the Atari. he hung up instantly lmao
As a person who's life isn't ruined, don't do TH-cam challenges
As a person i can person
@Susnation532bot
@realyozbot
As a bot that tries to prove that I am better than X TH-camr, I can say that TH-cam is not going to do anything to fix us
@@goodfriend4059 Post a link though and youtube is on that like flies on shit.
I never knew you could text 911. I'm glad I watched this video just for that. I can just see that being super useful, say if the killer is in the house and you're trying to be quiet and hiding in the closet. Good to know. Good to know.
Glad I'm not alone.
I found out after I butt dialed 911. They texted me asking if there was an emergency, I said it was an accident and apologized. They never responded.
I don’t remember if they tried to call first or if they just texted.
There is a true story about a kidnapping victim who told her kidnapper that she would order him a pizza if he was hungry. He agreed but was too stupid to have her put it on speaker. The 911 dispatcher caught on very quickly and a plain clothes cop actually delivered a pizza... and handcuffs.
I texted 911 from my hotel once. The people in the next room were fighting and it was loud. I was afraid to make the call and take a chance that they heard me- I didn't want to put my child in any danger.
I took a chance and tried texting and it worked, thank the gods.
@@ComancheWarrior63That is hysterical, obv not the kidnapping part but the fact that the officer just showed up with a pizza and handcuffs like i just imagine he must've said something like
"Is this your pepperoni with a side of justice?" Before handcuffing him
As a kid, when landlines were still a common thing, I accidentally dialed 911 when trying to dial my dad's 914 area code. I hung up immediately. They called back and I had to try and explain in my best scared-child gibberish that it was an accident. They still sent an extremely annoyed officer that I had to wake my mom up to talk to lol. The experience still haunts me to this day.
reminds me of when my brother was playing with the phone and dialing random numbers, eventually the cops showed up because he ended up dialing 911. parents had to explain why a 2 year old called the cops
This happened with another kid in my class while in school. He had to call his parents to bring hw he left home, put in the start of our area code (similar to yours but the 3rd number is different) and accidentally put in another 1. Just an annoyed cop but could have been much worse since it was at school.
that is so weird in my country its a good thing my old friend when he was a kid he called 000 and his mum was terrified but they said its a good thing, cos if the kid is the only person there to call they know what to call! witch is extra important when kids assume urs 911 cos of media.
im sorry you where literally just a kid and it could of saved you one day the fact you knew the number, they shouldn't scare kids into not calling it one day they might hesitate
I've done the same thing. I got a land-line phone as birthday gift (it was purple with glitter I loved it) and to test it out the only phone number I remembered was 911. Lo and behold it rang, I cut the call 2 rings in and soon 2 cops came and wanted to talk to me personally to see if I was okay.
Wow. Nowadays the police wouldn’t be bother to turn up . If you hang up that means you are not interested in pursue the call.
I did this a few weeks ago when I was to report a break in my business. I changed my mind because the theft it was only the till float and have no cctv recording . I knew it was pointless because the police even with footage they do nothing to thief’s in the Uk. ☹️
She thought she couldn't get in trouble for it. Reminds me of a recent video I saw where a bunch of teens told a cop they couldn't be ticketed by him because they were minors. Raising kids, not raising them, to think they're exempt from rules and laws just causes so many problems.
I don't think it's that she thought she was exempt from the rules. I think she genuinely watched a video that she didn't know was fake where the 'cops' laughed the prank off, and thought she was going to get the same response. The issue is that kids often can't differentiate content from reality, especially when content is being presented as if it is reality. When you show a kid a video of someone pranking the cops and the cops being cool with it, the kids are going to think they can do it too and get the same response
We aren't talking about spoiled brats who think rules don't apply to them, we are talking about kids with no supervision over what they watch online and no one to correct them when they see something that plants a false view of how the world works into their minds
@@windwaker407 Yeah, it shows a lot of these people haven't watched prank content that they think she thought she'd 'get away' with something. She thought it'd be funny and that the cops would also think it was funny, because staging the whole thing and having the actors laugh it off at the end is how they avoid enraging their audience and ending up in trouble with the internet for mean-spirited pranks.
@@Thedarkbunnyrabbit its just they really wanna have a punitive attitude. Go figure.
Who would've ever thought a 11 year old child could've pulled off such a stupid prank without any consequences....Oh wait she suffer serious consequences.
Never mind.
@@federruchi6147 It's always for other people, of course. When they fall afoul of their own draconic rules and laws they're shocked when they end up in prison over something they think is minor. It's always 'a good lesson' to other people, but when it's them it's 'I never thought _I'd_ be the one in prison'.
If your kid is old enough to use a phone it’s probably a good idea to tell them about the dangers of making prank calls that are malicious (fake emergencies/fake threats). Like if you’re gonna give your young kid free range with a cell phone you should sort of expect stuff like this to happen especially if you’ve never told them the consequences of messaging the police department about a fake crime.
my elementary school had a day where a firefighter came in and explained to everyone how calling 911 works and what situations its appropriate for. he made it clear in no uncertain terms that calling 911 for silly or made-up reasons is a crime. i'm not sure if all schools do that but it seems that they should lol
@@ancientalien000I know my elementary school did that multiple times
had this drilled into my head before my parents even entertained the idea of getting me a phone. a severe lapse in judgement on her parents' end.
It's called a cell phone because it puts you in a cell
@@ancientalien000I think it was middle school for me, but that’s more when kids in my area started getting phones so 🤷
A reminder why they're called Influencers for a reason. It's a shame most of them don't stop to think about the impact they have
A reminder: You called them that.
They are losers.
You are losers.
How Charlie’s earphone never falls out with his regular arm and hand movements never fails to amaze me
He glues it in. No other explanation
He's a true streamer to the heart. He has surgically implanted it there himself.
he can just do another take and edit it out when it happens
@@mickvd4yeah but it’s still funny to think it’s attached to his ear. Which it is.
That’s his charging port, he was low battery when he recorded rhis
I called 911 once and hung up immediately. Cops showed up and gave the entire speech about how it isn't a joke to call them unless there's an emergency. I felt so bad. I have such a huge conscious and i feel bad about the tiniest stuff, so this had me shook up lmao
yup, my brother did the same thing and SWORE he didnt actually dial 911, 10 minutes later a police officer was knocking at our front door
@Enki1013 yes, I know that now, but I was like 8
@Enki1013In the UK here; had my phone do the emergency call thing here by mistake once. They called back, asked where I am, if I was definitely okay, took some contact details and disconnected.
When I was like 7 years old I remember 999 (I'm from England) being this number you always hear about, but my stupid child mind was like "that's not real though, right? there's not enough numbers... I'm just gonna quickly check" I called 999, heard the "what is your emergency?" thing, and hung up, they called back and my parents answered it, I got a lecture x_x
Reminds me about how I accidentally called 911 on my phone as a middle schooler because I accidentally pressed the emergency call button on my home screen while trying to unlock it. Ended up hanging up immediately only for them to call me back. I was so scared I was gonna get in trouble but all things considered, they were pretty nice about it.
I love how the news always calls it a challenge when it’s obviously not? Like no one is challenging others to fake a kidnapping and report it to the police.
69 likes omg11!1!!1!1!!1!
Lol right, like what's the challenge... trying to trick the police? Trying to NOT trick them? 😂
Because dumb idiots called similarly dumb actions as "challenge" and the boomers picked up on it.
The challenge refers to the people in the video doing the challenge. Like the cinnamon or milk challenge. They "take up" the challenge that's going around verses challenging other people to do it. That's always the format with stupid challenges like this because if they're real, they're meant to be dangerous, and if they're fake, then they're too dangerous and not worth it to even do for "content." They're avoiding liability if people really try these things for themselves. Only the innocent ones tell other people to do it like the "draw in your own style." But they're still challenges. They just can't be blamed if someone else is too stupid to do it and causes damage or death like many already have.
It started with the mannequin challenge, which was an actual challenge. Then there was the ice bucket challenge, I think? And at some point it went from actual things that are challenging to “Hey there’s a new trend!”
I called 911 as a kid and immediately hung up once someone actually answered, obviously they drove to my house, my grandma was watching me at the time and she let the officer come in, I was like 8 and the officer told me that he came here to check on me which could’ve taken up a spot to go and check up on someone who actually needed their help, I felt really bad and said I didn’t think it would actually go through on the phone for some reason, apologized and then he left after saying some stuff to my grandma idk what it was, my grandma however smacked me upside the head after he left and said I could’ve been the reason someone died, definitely feel bad to this day.
Police always pull that card for a quilt trip. It's nonsense. They don't even show up on time when you actually do need them. Not that mention if they really had an issue that was life or death that would get priority over your call
@@microusb42069....last I checked police couldn't teleport and they couldn't clone themselves either
So your grandmother physically assaulted you after the police left?
@@microusb42069It's still a very important message to send to a young person like that. Don't mess with emergency hotlines unless you absolutely need them, simple as that.
If I had a dollar for every youtuber who ruined their lives doing a stupid challenge, I'd be able to afford an esports team like Charlie
And with the rate he's losing money, he could afford to run it for 1,000 years.
If I had a QUARTER for every TH-camr who ruined their lives doing a stupid challenge, I’d be able to afford an esports team like Charlie
supermega failed the "Don't be a rape apologist challenge"
Congratulations on the top comment man.
@@Davedave590Who cares
When they said she faked a kidnapping I thought she just went "my friend got kidnapped oh no help!" and then said it was a joke i didnt expect her to fabricate a full on kidnapping lmao
Seriously, I thought she made one little phone call to 911. But this little psycho went on and on for 30 minutes with a play by play through text messages. I'm still just wondering what she was gonna text to say it was all just a prank.
@@jenniferb.awesome😂😂😂😂
@@jenniferb.awesomehonestly makes me glad texting 911 didn't exist when I was a kid. It definitely does not feel as real as calling someone, and I see how she could do that.
I’m sincerely scared for the kids because they’re essentially being taught that it’s okay to do borderline sociopathic pranks on their friends, family and/or strangers because it’s “funny.” They don’t know that this isn’t acceptable and their actions _will_ have consequences.
But what makes me mad is the parents that clearly cannot teach their kids how to properly act. Obviously kids are dumb and are gonna do something that they’ll regret later on, but parents do have a responsibility too.
@realyoz You are on the sex offender registry and ik that because someone exposed you on discord
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
Man the spam comments are out of control (still).
there ain't a better teacher than experience
@@ripsal RIPSAL?! MORE LIKE IDIOT!
When my daughter was 1 I accidentally locked my doors with her inside. In a black car, in the middle of July in TN, with no shade around, on a Sunday. I immediately panicked & started screaming for help. Everyone was scared of busting the windows & spraying shards of glass all over her. So i called 911 for help. They put me on the phone with a cop & all he told me was, "I cant respond to that. Call a locksmith." (On a sunday? Yeah, I woulda been waiting for hours.) So I tried to tell him, "ok I will figure out how to get her out but can someone still come out to make sure she's ok from the heat??" But he just told me, "sure, if you think she needs medical attention AFTER you get her out, just call us back." Then just a few weeks later, a nephew called 911 & hung up as a "prank." And ya know what happened? TWO cop cars showed up within minutes to "scare them and teach a good lesson." It just blows my mind the way they seem to be allowed to pick and choose. I still bump into that cop in public from time to time and I never fail to remind him of how much I think he sucks, lol. And needless to say, a wonderful neighbor ran to help me. We were able to get her out unharmed, just scared and drenched in sweat.
In England the police wouldn’t come out for that either and most people wouldn’t expect them to, we’d call our recovery service AA, RAC, something like that. We’d also take them to the hospital once out of the car, if they needed it, or if an emergency call an ambulance. I would imagine that the reason the police turned up to your nephews silent prank call was incase they were in danger and unable to talk, they would do that in the UK too after trying to call back and getting no answer. I doubt they’d turn up just to scare him, although he clearly needed teaching a lesson.
@@stellakittycat9356but the UK doesn’t really get as hot as Tennessee in the middle of July while in direct sunlight. The average temps are 90 degrees Fahrenheit, so about 32.2 Celsius. And inside the car, temperatures can easily reach 120 f (48.9 c) in minutes. If she hadn’t managed to get her out quickly, it’s very likely ambulances might have been needed. AAA isn’t super reliable in certain areas and can take hours so a cop to open a door is also sometimes necessary. I’ve seen cops show up for dogs and children in cars before, it’s part of their jobs.
They were right not to come out and pat you on the back for trying to get to a locksmith
@@HyperWolf and the person said no one wanted to break the car window which is what the police usually do. I’m sure if she’d explained to a locksmith her concerns they would have treated it as an emergency call. In England we have 2 keys for our vehicles, I carry one and my husband the other, or it would be at home, so I’d have got him to bring his key. Clearly she had other options as she said a neighbour helped so not as “life threatening” as she’s trying to imply, sounds like she was home, so grab the other key. Personally I’d have smashed the window furthest from the baby, a front window on the opposite site of the vehicle. To blame the police because she didn’t want her window broken or to pay for a locksmith is very unfair. I’m sure a local garage could have helped.
@@stellakittycat9356 Cops here have shown up before for dogs stuck in cars and they just stick a metal bar into the side and jiggle it and it pops open. I’ve seen it used so often that I assume most carry that.
We also have the 2 keys and it’s definitely common for the spouse to take the 2nd key so they can deliver it to you if needed. The main issue is it’s the US. It’s huge. It’s common for people to work an hour’s drive away from home. Imagine waiting even 10 minutes for the spouse to drive there with the extra key. That could be death for the child.
My neighbor is a locksmith. He turns his work phone off when he’s not working. I don’t know if that’s common practice though. So I can’t argue this one.
I would have broken a front window but I’m mainly concerned that they wouldn’t send medics right away. Like I said, cars can reach 120f and higher. Death can occur in less than 30 minutes in a hot car. And it takes just minutes for there to be some kind of harm to a child since they don’t regulate internal temperatures well before 3. A parent can be relieved that the child seems fine and then there can be adverse consequences from heat/dehydration that aren’t apparent right away. A check up is recommended.
And honestly, I had a panic attack once and they sent me an ambulance “just in case” even though I’d told them I was ok and that my mom’s friend had just freaked out. This seems like a more important scenario to check on just in case.
They charged a child with a felony who could legitimately not understand the gravity of what she did. If this grown ass woman doesn't get some charges, I'm gonna be pissed
That’s not how “justice” works in the US
She is charge with two misdemeanours and she is 25. It's pretty f'ed up.
I'm sorry but 11 is definitely old enough to know better than to spend half an hour wasting police time. Not saying a felony isn't extreme, but they won't actually convict her, and maybe she won't be a complete idiot in future
@BiIIyBearHam I totally agree I'm just saying this full grown adult she be judged more harshly than the 11 year old kid since it's more deceitful
@@BiIIyBearHam my brother in Christ she is 11 I don’t think she understands the FULL gravity of the situation, if she really completely understood how bad this was I don’t think she would’ve ever done it.
I remember calling 911 on our home phone and just hanging up as a prank, but they immediately came to the house. My dad spanked the shit out of me lol
Well deserved
@@DemBigOlEyesYeah like OP doesn't know that now, thanks captain obvious
No fking way! I just left a similar comment about me doing this when I was a toddler with pretty much the same outcome except it was my mom.
@@SkylerLoveheart I don't think it was well deserved unless their parents taught them that calling 911 is only for emergencies. Kids are naive which is why it's the job of the parents to teach them about everything.
@@DemBigOlEyes jesus christ dude please just laugh at the funny story
I miss the good old days where people would just explode watermelons with rubber bands as a challenge
@@yozlolYFGAstfu goku pfp
Let's do the Harlem shake
I did that once and my hamster died
@@pissmast3r Wait a minute. How did your hamster die? Did you stuff it inside the watermelon?
@@ItsDaNewGuy Watermelon shrapnel...
That’s absolutely insane! I’m glad that the police responded and took it seriously, but it’s a damn shame.
As a kid, sometimes the question you ask yourself isn’t always, “should I do this” but rather, “can I do this?” However, as a kid, this applied to me throwing rocks on my neighbors roof and not making fake 911 calls.
my dad gave me advice that if i ever got lost to the point where it’s impossible to find my house i should throw a rock through a window so the police can drive me home😂
Same, moved to a new house at 7 and decided throwing rocks over the backyard fence was a good idea. One broken window later told me otherwise.
To be honest both of those self-question are good.
-Should i do this; probably not, the consequence probably outweight the 'haha funny'
-can i do this; physically yes but technically by law no (referring to your throwing rocks... lol)
@@TwinShards the "technically by law" is the _"should I do this?"_ part that gets fully ignored by kids
@@cawsomeaolin😂😂😂 great dad advice imo !
When i was about 7 i was in a shopping centre with my parents. We went into a bathroom display shop where there were sea shells in a small bowl on a bath. I took a handful of them, immediately regretted it, and as we came out there was police just chilling talking to people, i told my parents straight away id stolen these sea shells, and was shook to my lil core, tears and everything, convinced my parents were gonna rat me out and id be put in the slammer. Seashells bro.
Ben steals seashells by the seashore
you’re a menace to society, you deserve to be put behind bars.
Did you find out what they were for?
@@dorkydragon5055 what the shells were for? They were just there to look nice by the bath in the display, or do you mean for me? Because to this day I have no idea, I have never needed shells, nor have I ever been super fascinated by them. I think I just saw them and thought they looked nice and thought I could get away with it. And I could have if I didn't have a little breakdown
@@LadyDecember*by the sea store
As a kid I once dialed 911 on a landline phone at church and hung up immediately. Cops arrived, I was instantly traumatized. Kids really learn things the hard way, no matter the generation
Similar-ish story lol. I was probably 5 or 6, and my mom found a bat in the attic, so she started screaming (she's VERY scared of them), and so I called 911 - but then hung up immediately. Cops come knocking on our door about 5 minutes later and my mom had to explain the situation 😂
I did the same thing and the police called back. Never did that again.
i’ve done that 1000+ times 😂 but not in my house tho
I once dialed 999 by accident, messing around when i had just gotten my first smartphone dialing random numbers, Still not entirely sure how i managed it but perhaps it started with 999 and the phone just sees that and forgets the other numbers. I was in the car at the time and as soon as i heard "emergency services ho-" i hung up. I freaked out but said nothing and nothing ever game from it thankfully
0:15 - I think at least 5% of all survey answers are just trolling.
I sadly troll on surveys so I can guarantee that I would say that I thought chocolate milk came from brown cows just to throw them off a bit
Getting the idea to prank 911 through a TH-cam challenge has got to be most mindless thing I've ever heard.
CHARLIE? MORE LIKE TRASHIE, I’M ENTIRELY BETTER ☠💀☠ (shhhh im undercover)
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
Nah, fuck the 911
Well, it's an 11-year-old girl, so of course she's mindless. Thing is, she's only 11. As much as many people are going to disagree with me on this, I genuinely hope that she's still able to have a future, go to college or a trade school if she wants to, and get a decent, well-paying job as an adult.
At least she got a very good lesson for her life that her parents should've taught her way before, like decent parents.
I feel like at 11 years old, the scare of having police show up and getting arrested will be a good lesson. I don't think she should be punished any more than that though, she's still very young and shouldn't actually have her life ruined for being a stupid kid.
i feel like you made that shit up
@@mintoo2coolMade what up
100% agree. Charging her does no good for anyone, not the police, the girl, or the parents. She clearly learned her lesson here and no one was hurt, charging her would be a huge waste of more peoples time.
She should be made to do some form of penance...community service work perhaps. An hour of scared sh!tless, followed by laughing about it with her friends is not sufficient.
Then I don't think you understand the gravity of the situation. A felony and misdemeanor charge is absolutely warrented in this scenario. She wasted police resources and could have easily put innocent lives in danger. That's not a learning lesson, that's a crime and it should be dealt as such regardless of age, race, and gender.
Imagine in reality getting kidnapped? Now you have to prove somehow you are literally getting kidnapped from all the liars
not only does that happen, but often... no need to imagine
That's not how that works. If someone calls 911 reporting something like a kidnapping or a bomb threat it is taken seriously every time, which is why faking things like that are a felony. 911 operators don't get to say "Meh, sounds like a prank." and hang up.
You don't have to prove anything. Come oooon now. Educate yourself before you start spouting dumb shit please.
@@McBernesexactly this won't affect it
I’m really happy i found this channel. It popped up on my feed a few weeks ago & I’m hooked. I live a VERY stressful life…. His calm voice and comedy lets me escape while I listen. I Genuinely thank you for that ❤
I want the kind of brain that Charlie has that can come up with wild phrases like "cinnamon toast cope" on the fly lmao.
bro ikr
uhhh ya do. figure out how to use it
Literally read this as he said it!!! 😂
I'm not even surprised that shit like this happens anymore. What a world we live in where this is expected.
-bot
@Susnation532nice bot
videos only been up for 2 minutes bro
@@phonicfan31what purpose do those bots even serve? I highly doubt anyone is actually looking at the videos on their channels.
@@johs7961 ikr lmao, like farmer
I’m SO thankful every day that social media didn’t exist when I was a kid. MySpace debuted in my early teens and I thought the concept was incredibly strange even then; this idea of sharing really personal info/moments with casual acquaintances and total strangers.
Honestly I've never understood it. I had an Instagram account that I posted on from like 6th - 8th grade, since everyone else in my school had one. But then I realized that no one else actually cares about what I had for dinner or where I went on vacation, and there was no point spending my time to document everything I ever do instead of just _doing_ it. I've never touched social media since, and honestly I think it's for the best.
@@Mr.Bimgus save for TH-cam, of course
It's so fucking weird
we’re not all like this
@@Bfkcjscbsnjclmao what
I know a big issue is that most parents don't spend enough time on youtube to understand what is on it. I spend a lot of time on it, my wife doesn't. So I can walk into a room here a sound effect or song and know exactly what my kids are watching. And when they get caught watching something inappropriate I take away their tablets.
Children should try a challenge where they try not to do something unfathomably stupid for 24 hours (it’s impossible)
Most kids are getting bolder and stupider
Ong
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
Charlie kicked my ass in a Walmart packing lot!!
People should try a challenge of not using bots to comment (impossible)
Im so thankful my mom taught me certain things. I remember seeing pranks during the peak of pranks in the early 2010’s and thinking “who is really dumb enough to do these” i see now that sadly alot of people are.
This is something parents are now going to have to step up and educate their kids about. In a perfect world, those videos wouldn’t exist, but there will always be those clout chasers
It should be a part of TH-cam's policy for fake content encouraging malicious acts like this requiring a disclaimer that you should not do this at home and it's all staged.
So we’ll give a child a felony but a grown woman who faked an amber alert gets 2 misdemeanors and a 2k fine
@@autumnfrost-art I would tell you but YT would cens... 'protect' you from my comment but safe to say it's got absolutely NOTHING to do with waythism... honest.
State law influences alot
@@Haburgthats an excellent point. It really grinds my gears how some people seem to completely forget what country they live in when theyre on the internet, trying to rile people up and make everyone mad to feed off of each other when they see an act or penalty they feel is unjust compared to a similar situation. Different states have different laws and something may be legal in one state but illegal in another or possibly the maximum penalty is just not the same.
@@notthatnut3026 it's like half Europeans who don't understand how large the US is, if you can drive from one end of your country to the other in an afternoon stop speaking about us politics.
I believe the chief said they charged her with as much as legally possible. I think they're also suing her for the cost of all the resources they spent on looking for her.
It's very unlikely she'll have her life ruined by this at age 11. I would predict she'll most likely be offered a plea that includes expunging this record if a couple conditions are met, such as a stay out of trouble order (don't commit another crime for a period of time) and community service, which is fair. It's not fair to have an 11-year-old have to carry a felony conviction when she just thought a dumb prank was funny and meant no true harm.
Since that black woman is 25 and was charged with two misdemeanours your "justice" system is pretty fucked up if an 11 year old get a felony conviction.
Exactly this.
People really don't understand that she meant no harm and she had no idea that what she did was wrong. They're being way too hard with her
Even so her record should be wiped by the time she turns 18 so I'm sure she'll be alright
@@Thulzorwtf are you talking about?
@@Thulzorwhat was the point of mentioning her race?
Ah yes we are in a time where people ignored the teachings of “crying wolf” or whatever it’s called.
Seriously as a kid that was ingrained to me to never ever fake something serious.
I think its called the boy who cried wolf or something along those lines
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
Facts kids these days don't know that
Aesop’s Fables was the collection of fairy tales that taught these morals and lessons, but nobody reads these days lol.
The fact that you can't even remember the name of the story-
funny enough when i was growing up in the 90s and 2000s(born 89), it was always hammered into me and many others that pranking 911 was one of the worst things you can do. Now obviously we prank called from payphones and stuff, BUT we never fucked with 911.
It’s sad that life ruining trends are so common that it doesn’t even warrant a feeling of surprise anymore when a new one pops up
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
*The Grimace Shake left the chat*
@Susnation532January 12, 2031
@realyozApril 6, 2029
@@ripsalNovember 5, 2035
As a mother of a 10 year old… this is just mind blowing and scary. They still feel so little
They're not so little they don't know better
@@ShadowSkyX that’s not true. It’s not something as serious as murder. She did something stupid.
@@Sunflwr but 10 year olds can still tell right from wrong.
@@schultz8122 Yeah, I didn’t do things this stupid when I was 11. She needs to get off that part of the internet if she is influenced to do stuff like that
Take this as a lesson to not let Ipads raise your kids; be there for them! When my parents spoke of having the "TV babysitter", rules of what and what not to show them were much stricter, albeit because the technology was simpler, but I think my point still stands.
I can see now that Charlie’s trauma from prank calling 911 as a little one was where we got his unfathomably awesome performance as district 8 hospital helper.
Now this is the deep lore I come to the comments for
you reminded me of this when you brought up the second story my mom never runs over boxes in the road and will hard swerve to miss them because when she was living in Oklahoma there was a news story about some lady that left her baby in a box in the middle of the road because she didn't want it
In 2013 at my school, a teacher who was quite hated for being strict disappeared for more than 1 month. When he returned we found out that an 8 year old girl had accused him of touching her in the school bathrooms. It turns out that the girl had heard that on TH-cam and repeated it to his mother but referring to this teacher, to this day, more than 10 years later, the teacher has not returned to work in schools due to the bad reputation he received in the incident...
Can you clarify plz
The girl saw to lie about people online? Or did see someone talk about their creepy teacher and made her own story? I'm a bit confused
@@jonnust6236 what do you think bro? little girl lies to police about sexual abuse, gets away with it with no ridicule and never learns from the mistake. ruins a teachers life. it comes from children wanting attention so bad that theyd rather commit crimes than be an actual likeable person and have conversations with real people.
Yeah in 7th grade these 2 girls that were friends wanted to go to a different school so they both said they were touched by our science teacher and he lost his job and they got what they wanted and their parents transferred them. I'm guessing they had tried asking their parents to no avail and so knew they had to do something more drastic. Us other students knew it was a lie. That was 21 years ago and kids were already doing that...
@@RevenantNeverDies no I'm just confused as to what the youtube vid is
I know what the girl did I just don't understand what the vid she saw was about
@@jonnust6236These TH-cam prank videos get so sexual and clickbaity. I'm sure if we searched we'll find something similar.
These are not challenges. A "challenge" nowadays is just synonymous with being peer pressured into doing something so stupid that everyone laughs at you, like someone at a party who gets hammered and falls through a table, and doesnt realize nobody is laughing *with* them
I love how everyone refuses to call Twitter by its new name and they just say "the platform formally known as Twitter"
*X*
If Elon can't respect his kid why should we respect him lol
for me, it's still twitter, I'm always going to call it twitter regardless of the name it now has
Got rid of Twitter because of it. I hated seeing the "X" in my notifications because it keeps making me think there's an error on my phone. I wasn't really using Twitter anymore anyways, this is just the last straw that convinced me to finally cut the line.
Man we’ve all done silly stuff especially when we were young. I’m 43 and thankful phones weren’t like they are now back then lol
'We're residents of Dufusville and we're getting lots of new neighbours' Charlie puts those teams of late night show comedy writers to shame without even trying
Tf r u rambling on ab grandpa
@Goldkangaroo06 I was admiring someones use of the English language there's a skill to how to say things one your clearly lack
@@scottt7517 Doofusville* And put in those periods, buddy. Also, you need to shorten your sentences, try "speak" next time. I can also see you avoided typing the word "your" being that you would write the wrong one. Don't worry, the other commenter had no grammatical knowledge, either.
@@carbon6588 Give mans a break. Looks like language isn't his first English.
Making a serious crime offense a challenge after we just had one of the most biggest kidnapping investigation hoaxes is the most deplorable thing I've seen all month.
We just had one of the biggest kidnapping hoaxes? Did I miss something? Like Jonbenet Ramsey part 2?
Bot
@@floppycockjamboozle5382 Not exactly the same, but it's a really famous kidnapping hoax. Google "Carlee Russell".
@@floppycockjamboozle5382 Woman said she saw a toddler by the side of the highway in the south somewhere, then her phone goes dead while she's on the phone with her sister. Bystander even corroborates a kidnapping stating there was a man in her car before police got there, turns out she made the entire thing up for apparently no reason.
Sherri Papini did the same thing back in 2016-2017. Sad fucking shit
1:09 "while it may not have been the end of the world... it was the end of all rational thought" what a powerful line
I've worked with 11 year olds. They are _not_ old or mature enough to comprehend what the consequences of a "funny" prank call might be, and certainly not experienced enough to even know that false reporting is that severe of a crime. Charging a kid barely into double digits with a _felony_ is beyond irrational. It's like catching someone picking an flower and throwing them into jail. It's really _that_ much of an overreaction in the perception of a kid that young.
That felony should belong to the person who encouraged the girl to commit the crime, not to the child.
We live in such a bad timeline.
From a young age I was taught to never dial 911 unless it was an absolute emergency. The only time I ever accidentally called the police was when I got ahold of my dads old phone, which wasn’t able to make any calls to any friends or anything, so I saw that and thought “what would happen if I called 911.” They picked up the phone and I hung up. Luckily they didn’t show up though
Just in case your younger self sees this before this event happens, even non-working phones can call 911.
I was a a hotel and kept dialing my friends room the number was 119 and I mislicked and basically the whole day was ruined bc cops and ambulance show up terrified of dialing 911 ever since
Yes I accidentally called 000 (Our emergency services number) because the off button on this 'babies first phone' I had also was the 0 key, and I didn't hold the off button enough 3 times, calling the popo.
I called 911 when I was 4 had all the cops show up I was like tehee 🤭
@@browniepoints5227 did they find out you did it or did you get away Scott free
This is exactly why I tell my eldest not to ever do something he sees online. People ruin their lives or take others' lives like that.
People are acting it's as bad as when that stupid teen who ran over a mother and child then didn’t care afterwards. It's nowhere near as bad as that
@@jessebrucepinkman9834 Why do we need to compare shitty events to each other? Can't we agree that both are bad and call that good enough?
@@Mr.Bimgusit shouldn’t be minimized by something being worse but there is definitely a big difference in the negative effects and levels of badness between actions
Why just the eldest? What ab the other kids…
@@brookelynnwu8016cause the youngest always look up to the eldest
This is actually sad for the 11 year old girl, but at least she'll hopefully learn a lesson from it
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
So many bots lmao
You got three spam bots in your comment section, holy shit. Report and dislike them.
Also, yes, I feel bad for the 11 year old girl
shes lying. she got caught and just had to pass the blame for others to be mad at instead of her. kids learn that fast.
proof: i waas a kid once.
Who did she pass the blame to 💀💀💀
I've said this before but I wanna say it again. I absolutely love when you spout such vile sarcasm and NEVER say "only kidding" or in any way admit that it is sarcasm.. LOVE your sense of humor. It reminds me of someone else's sense of humor.
LOL the story about calling the cops because the pool is haunted reminded me of when my friend called the cops because she thought her car was stolen but she had just forgotten where she parked it. 3 cops showed up and one of them did a sweep of the area and comes back, goes “ma’am there’s a silver Nissan just like you described parked behind that house over there” and her face IMMEDIATELY goes blood red and she starts frantically apologizing.
Putting a child in front of a ipad is just the equivalent of putting them in front of the Orb of Confusion
D'uuuuuuuuuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
You have to be a cold hearted bastard to deny something that every other child have. My parents raised me and my siblings through guilt, They would make us believe it's me and my siblings fault that we're barely scraping by. They would often remind us how expensive school expenses are for 5 kids and if we didn't do well in school that money is just wasted for no reason. When i grew to be an adult and learn myself how to manage household expenses. I realised that we weren't poor at all. My parents would rather spend money decorating our house, buying tv's and expensive hifi system because at least they could gloat about it whenever they invited their friends to our house. To this day it pisses me off when my parents ask why is it so hard for me to ask them how they're were doing and why i spend so little time with them. I'm just treating them the way they used to treat me. My parents only started to value their own children when all of us got jobs and moved out of their house. Also all 5 of us will never ever get married and have children of our own. (1 of my sister did though by she divorced without ever producing children
@@stellviahohenheimit’s not cold hearted to deny internet access. The internet has EVERYTHING on it and is unfiltered ain’t no FCC. It’s not like denying a tv or a basic phone, the internet can expose kids to VERY bad things often times by accident. When I was like 7-8 I used to type random letters in the search for fun, I came across a gore site…
It's a troubling domino effect. I think the number one thing to do is to have conversations about the reality of what's on the internet with your children, and express to them that not everything trending is right. We can't protect them from everything, so that is important.
Back when I was 4 or 5, I wanted to play a prank on my dad. It was one I saw in a cartoon, where the bucket of water is balanced above a door and falls on the person who opens it. Only I knew I’d likely get in trouble for making a mess with water in the house and I thought a bucket hitting someone in the head might hurt. So instead I used my stuffed animals, because they wouldn’t hurt and I thought being surprised with a rain of stuffed animals would be something nice to get surprised by.
Basically what I’m saying is even as a post-toddler I knew things on tv weren’t always a good thing to copy in real life, and that pranks shouldn’t be mean.
god, the good ol' "i didnt know dialing 911 was free on a payphone" mistake. feels like a universal experience at this point.
@realyozi exposed deez nuts lmao!
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
I remember as a kid I was playing with a payphone while at an airport waiting for our connecting flight, and I dialed 911 not knowing that it would actually call and connect with someone.
@@faboo2001I probably would have done the same tbh, I always typed out 911 and my country's emergency number on toys. Never did it to actual phones but as a small child it's tempting, funnily enough I knew that if I did I would be wasting police time.
@Susnation532SHUT UP
I was waiting for you to talk about the Alabama fake kidnapping. What sucks is I live here and people were extremely concerned and were worried everyday until the news it was fake broke out. I’ve also heard quite a bit of people say they will never stop to help even a toddler on the side of the road because of what “happened”
How was that their takeaway??
@@bluchismoon in fear of human trafficking or some crap. The woman stated she saw a toddler on the side of the road so she stopped and was “kidnapped” by “human traffickers”.
Its sad, most human trafficking happens to people who knew their traffickers. Not to mention most who are actually trafficked are those most vulnerable. (Low income and woc are usually targeted most for sex-based trafficing,) and they are usually coaxed by people promising better jobs and opportunities. While possible, you probably aren't gonna be trafficked if you help a baby on the side of a road. Robbed maybe, which is still awful, but not typically full-on trafficked.
@@haveagoodday7021 most definitely, I’m sure the cases of human trafficking in a highly traveled area on random people are extremely uncommon. Especially here where almost everyone who would stop and help most likely carry a sidearm. But because of that one woman’s made up story it’s got easily paranoid people scared to help.
That's their choice and you don't get to decide that. Not everyone wants to risk their life helping others, this world is dangerous and you aren't the morality police. Stop trying to act like it's crazy if someone makes a different decision than you, and when would you ever see a toddler on the side of the road in need of help lmao? You're upset over some ridiculous scenario that would never happen
I have to say I am glad I was a kid in the 90s and not the 2020s.
It's easy to assume we would be smarter, but we are a result of our environment.
Charlie Commented On My Video 😭😭
do you mean 1890s? by 1990s calling emergency as a prank had already become rather stale
The stuff they do now, would be considered highly embarrassing and shameful, hell they probably even get picked on for the stuff they do. But now it's like they're praised for it!? Amazing. Lmao
Kids made fake 911 calls in the 90s. It's not new. It always resulted in a talk to the parents and a stern warning. Kids are dumb.
I'm glad that the madness that is social media didn't come about till my late teens early 20s
when I was her age, I was so scared with stranger adults especially police officer. It is blows my mind seeing kids like this are brave enough to put up something like this. Kids nowadays are something else man
The worst things that I regret I did as a kid were things I saw in a movie or tv show. Even before the internet, media has been influencing kids to do things.
For instance, when they stopped featuring smoking as much in tv shows and movies, the rates of teens smoking went down.
I think that it is important for parents to consume media with their children, so that they can discuss what they see and learn what’s ok and what isn’t.
In my opinion, children really shouldn’t be consuming media on their own unsupervised until they are at least teenagers. And even when they are teenagers, they still shouldn’t use social media until they become an adult. Exceptions of course for something like Discord or Xbox party chat so that they can game with their friends online.
Gaming chats can be some of the most toxic, abusive, criminally negligent places in modern society. Parents should definitely be aware of what’s going on in those as well.
'For instance, when they stopped featuring smoking as much in tv shows and movies, the rates of teens smoking went down'.
That's very interesting information. In fact, when teen got their social media later in life, depression was lower than those that do. Now obviously this is correlation, but it's still pretty telling.
As someone who’s life has been irreparably ruined by being online, I can relate to this unfortunately. I hope she finds the help she needs and abandons this lifestyle of pranks and causing trouble so she doesn’t end up like me with a life of making public apologies.
@Susnation532 don't care
Is this a joke going over my head or serious and if this is serious what did you do?
@@byamps422he obviously farted.
Damn, no details but I can imagine how bad that can be, hope you’re doin well
Edit: goddammit XD
Yikes, hope all is well on your end.
When I was in high-school we had a girl and a guy film a fake kidnapping prank in a public outdoor mall. The guy put a bag over the girls head in public while she was fake screaming for help then they drove off. Reports came in quick about this and they were both charged. We weren’t too surprised about this because the guy was also charge previously with throwing 2x4s at cars and a bunch of drug related charges.
Edit: I forgot to mention while the cops were going around the area trying to find there car, there were reports of an actual kidnapping happening around the same time. When the cops found out they were uno-reversed they were fucking pissed. I think the girl who was involved got off or made a deal but the dude was 18+ and was charged with multiple felonies
“the girl got off”
“the guy involved got multiple felonies”
Glad to hear that Justice was served then
What ab the real kidnapping
My dad told my brother and I at age 7 and 5 that if we ever got arrested for anything we would need to figure it out ourselves from then on. We mess up, we fix it.
My mom said she’d break me out of jail if it was self defense:D
Kind of a weird thing to tell a 5 and 7 year old LOL. I don't even think at age 7 I fully grasped what prison was.
Terrible advice you get in legal trouble you call a lawyer dealing with it yourself is THE WORST thing to do
The fact that Filthy Frank's prank are probably the tamest compared to most prank channel still made me chuckle.
I can relate. Journeyz shoe store used to have payphones in them growing up. I dialed 911 thinking the call wouldnt go through since it was a payphone. Operator answered, i hung up, went back to my mom, then freaked out when the payphone started ringing. Store employee answers, then turns his head slowly straight to me. I shrugged like i didnt know anything about the situation. I was so happy he didnt tell my mom
There was a "prank/challenge" a few months back where kids were shooting BB guns and also throwing rocks off of highway overpasses. We had multiple drivers injured and one elderly lady killed by this shit. Someone threw a large rock off the overpass by our house and it went into the windshield and killed her. A few other people had their cars damaged and arms/hands injured from the BB guns. We had another "challenge" at the public schools in our town where kids were destroying and vandalizing toilets, and when they would get fixed, they would break them again. I really, sincerely hate TikTok and the TikTok generation.
Hate the sin, not the sinner. Not a religious person myself, but I wholeheartedly agree with the principle. It can be very hard - I know some teens that make my blood boil too - but I also know that hating them didn't help one bit. While reaching out and trying to show there's a different way to live did.
To be fair I've been hearing about situations like this ever since I was a kid and I'm 27 now (regarding people being killed by assholes who throw rocks down of overpasses)
The scum that came up with such a "challenge" should be charged with capital murder and if there was any report against the original video that was not acted on by TikTok then they should also get the capital murder charge.
@@thedausthed This
@bfkcjsbsnsbcjc when has he ever encouraged the harassment of someone
She is going to be haunted by this at school until she moves.
Yeah that's great. She makes a mistake based on what content creators portray in their fake challenges, and now gets to deal with bullying unless she moves on top of a felony charge. Totally fair. Totally proportional.
Charlie brought up some positive memories in this depressing story. Of my first i guess.. run-in with police.. Was like 5 years old, didn't know what a phone really was (I was extremely dumb back then). Hit a bunch of random buttons, but whenever the 'loud noises' of a failed call hit, i would hang it up.... Eventually called 911 unknowingly, not understanding anything, saying hi to the dispatcher, being completely clueless.. Mother was helping relatives, and ended up finding me a few moments alter, concerned at what I had done, and apologized to the dispatch. Told me never to call that number unless i'm in major trouble. Was a life lesson for me. I thank god that it was back in the early 000s that i did this, or else i would have gotten my family in major trouble.
I prank called 911 when I was 11, literally nothing happened other than them coming to my house to check if I was ok. I was really stupid lol, I asked the dispatcher if I could get some chicken nuggets.
@@TheMasterCat9 Bruh, lol. Did ya get them at least?
Woah wait, you were dumb when you were five? That's so wild
@@stevendemayo3631 What's the point of this comment you weirdo
Aww
“We are all citizens of doofusville”
Never have I heard more true words. Charlie is truly the oracle of our generation
The chocolate milk from brown cows doesn't surprise me too much. There's vegans out there that think strawberry milk is vegan because "it comes from strawberries"
There’s no way people genuinely believe that.
Yeah i dont believe that at all
The next thing you're going to try to tell me is that almonds don't have little teets.
There's literally 0 people over the age of 10 that believe that and the fact that you got 60 likes is just cringe.
But enjoy living in your straw man ass delusion.
Ok whats next huh? The golden goose isnt a real animal? Cmon now
"mike shitwood 7:53"
Charging that little girl is such a force
Does she deserve punishment? Yes. Does she deserve a felony charge at 11 for not understanding the gravity of the situation they were causing? No. Hopefully they take an appropriate level of action and expunge the record/dismiss the charges in exchange for giving the kid some community service
They aren’t going to give an 11 year old that harsh a punishment lmao. Charlie uses being charged = to being convicted.
It could be that they are faking the charge for the fake kidnapping inspired by a fake fake kidnapping. We need to go deeper.
@@WadeAlmano he didnt, he literally just repeated what the news anchor said. Until she is actually convicted saying she being charged with a felony isn't something crazy.
At 11 year old she should know that wasting police resources is very serious.
I'm always feeling... so ashamed for being in the same generation as some of these people. I was raised by a single mother and she was a hard ass for most of my life, but I wised up and help her around the house wherever possible. I obviously disagree with how she raised me at points, but crap like this is enough to make me consider that she possibly had a method to such madness simply because she actually raised me and didn't immediately put me in front of a screen to let what's on the other end do all the teaching.
I hate when people bring up "I'm ashamed for being in this generation" would u rather be in a slave owning one? or the one where they didn't want blk people in their diners? This is the best generation we've had so far
@@roxannejohnstone9913 ...gdamn, relax with the fake outrage and sensationalizing. I'm baffled how you read the OP's comment and somehow pulled slavery and segregation out of it. Stop being deliberately obtuse to start a fight, you knew exactly what the OP was talking about.
@@roxannejohnstone9913 No. The best generation is the result or specific situation. No one cares about the past specially when it doesnt affect them.
What she said is understandable. Today is the best Tech Gen.
@@roxannejohnstone9913stfu that's obviously not the point. Our generation has ppl who ate tidepods and willingly committed suicide for internet clout. It's a complaint about the current system. Millenials didn't do this shit and they got all their stuff together and are buying houses now, our generation has problems to work out still
Well this 11 year old isn’t gen Z which is what I assume you’re talking about
I’ve been binge watching your channel lol. I lov it.
Out of the many pranks that I've watched/heard, this is one that is way over the line, especially with it resulting in an outcome like that.
I hope this serves as a great reminder to not just the younger generation, but all of us.
I think another lesson here is: "Just because you can, doesn't mean you should." And that's that.
Not gonna lie I myself was a kid once and did stumble across the curiosity of prank calling the police. I thank my mother for simply telling me what would happen if I did this or that, it stuck with me enough it’s one of those core memories you can easily remember by any trigger moment. Just like Charlie said you can’t let the internet raise your kids cause I didn’t have internet back then so now it’s gonna be harder to raise children.
I bet this was very traumatic for the girl. I hope others will see her as an example and think twice
Depends. Hopefully it made her not want to do it again but I'm thinking at most she's indignant she's being punished for a "silly prank call," and doesn't care to understand the level of her stupidity.
Traumatic? 😂😂😂 it will be a massive inconvenience for her as well as financially drawing for ger parents, but it will be anything but traumatic for her.
Stop injecting "muh traumas" unto places it does not belong. Now everyone that gets hit by a leaf in the wind thinks they've gone through some sort of trauma.
@@graydi66yI think you underestimate how scary grown massive adults wirh authority who are upset with you are when you're an 11 year old girl. She's pretty terrified.
@@ShadowSkyX Her brain isn't developed enough to understand the seriousness of it BEFORE she actually did it. The severe reaction, however, will educate her: it shows that the adult world, the police force, takes this VERY seriously, and that is a lesson she'll never forget. Jesus, how are you people accusing an 11 year old of stupidity without even understanding the most basic child psychology?
@@graydi66y For a little girl her age, being man handled like and put in cuffs is traumatic. Yes, what she did was stupid and her fault completely but she's a child and didn't understand it. I think that the way they handled it was a little too much but it happened. I don't understand why people get so easily triggered by the word trauma.
They should start charging content creators as accessories to these crimes.
They are actively encouraging these things.
the kid needed a lesson like detaining her but actually charging her is such a scumbag move of them
yea specially when the grown ass women got away with just a 2k fine
Yeah dude and especially where they give past felons slap on the wrist and little bails to roam the streets again. Our justice system is messed up.
It's going to go away once she turns 18. Her life won't be ruined by this. It's just a lesson she had to learn the somewhat hard way.
@@HelpW4nted good luck applying to colleges with a felony on your record.
@@poisonshroom64 That's assuming they keep the felony charge. We won't know what she actually gets charged with.
I'm fine with the cuffs, or maybe even a trip to the police station, to show her the seriousness and scare her into thinking before doing similar things in the future, but I sincerely hope they don't actually charge her with anything. There were and are a lot of kids who have dialed 911 for some stupid reason and had to learn this lesson, and I don't think I've ever heard of any of them being actually charged with anything.
Fuck around and find out.
She absolutely deserved that charges.
bro just having the police show up is enough. looking at her attitude, she clearly isn’t a scumbag kid, just a kid that didn’t use their frontal lobe.
kinda breaks my heart a little. I really hope she doesn't get actually charged with anything
@@kirbybie Fuck around and find out. Welcome to reality.
She won't get charged I bet. I know lawyers can be scumbags but this isn't a good money case for anyone and is a waste of time for everyone really. I can't imagine a federal attorney or even a judge would waste their time on this shit. I think it's just being blown up cus they know a ton of people will see this and use it as an example so they might not have to continue to waste their time with future happenings of this same incident. It's still gonna happen tho prolly
The thing is, it worked great, she just didn't understand what it means when your challenge "works"; she thought the point was for it to be funny. No, the point is to get clout. And it went perfectly - she ended up on the national news! The real tragedy here is that parents fail to talk to their kids about the dangers of clout. 🤣
Really! The 'prize' you win is to end up in handcuffs on the front page. Hmmmm.
This reminds me of when I was around 7 or 8, I was playing with stuffed animals. I voiced them in my head because I was scared to be too loud, and I had dialed 911 and hung up immediately after (because I was playing) and I was silent not saying a word. Eventually the police knock on the door and my mom yells out for me. My mom was so pissed. So you should teach your kids ONLY to dial the police in an emergency, especially if you're giving your kid their own electronic capable of making phone calls.