The video opens on a typical school bathroom. At first, it’s just a view of the floor. Then the camera moves up, and you see it: total destruction. There’s a mirror sitting in the sink. One of the ceiling tiles is missing. Paper towel dispensers have been ripped from the walls.
What happened? The answer can be summed up in two words: devious licks.
It all started back in September, with a TikTok of a kid stealing masks from his school. On the video, he wrote “absolutely devious lick.” From there, the #deviouslicks challenge took off.
Soon, kids were posting their own #deviouslicks videos on TikTok. Some stole toilets and fire alarms. Others vandalized—or damaged—bathrooms with red paint. Many of these teens were suspended from school. Some even got in trouble with the police.
Teachers, principals, and parents were shocked. They blamed the teens for their bad behavior. But some blamed social media more.
Shouldn’t TikTok be doing more to stop these dangerous challenges?
The video shows a school bathroom. At first, all you see is the floor. Then the camera moves up. It shows a mess. A mirror is sitting in the sink. A ceiling tile is missing. Paper towel dispensers have been torn from the walls.
What happened? The answer can be summed up in two words: devious licks.
It started back in September. There was a TikTok of a kid stealing masks from his school. On the video, he wrote “absolutely devious lick.” From there, the #deviouslicks challenge took off.
Kids started posting their own #deviouslicks videos on TikTok. Some stole toilets and fire alarms. Others used red paint to wreck bathrooms. Many of these teens were suspended from school. Some got in trouble with the police.
Teachers, principals, and parents were shocked. They blamed the teens for their actions. But some blamed social media more.
Shouldn’t TikTok do more to stop harmful challenges?
The video opens on a typical school bathroom. At first, it’s just a view of the floor. Then the camera moves up, and you see it: total destruction. There’s a mirror sitting in the sink. One of the ceiling tiles is missing. Paper towel dispensers have been ripped from the walls.
What happened? The answer can be summed up in two words: devious licks.
It all started back in September, with a TikTok of a kid stealing masks from his school. On the video, he wrote “absolutely devious lick”—and that’s how the #deviouslicks challenge began.
Soon, kids were posting their own #deviouslicks videos on TikTok. Some stole toilets and fire alarms. Others vandalized—or damaged—bathrooms with red paint.
Many of these teens were suspended from school, and some even got in trouble with the police.
Teachers, principals, and parents were shocked. They blamed the teens for their bad behavior—but some blamed social media more.
Shouldn’t TikTok be doing more to stop these dangerous challenges?