Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

TikToker Warns What Not To Do In Passenger Seat After Accident Leaves Her Seriously Injured

Screenshots of @dsaenz94 from TikTok video
@dsaenz94/TikTok

TikToker @dsaenz94 shared a PSA about not putting your feet up on the dashboard if you're in the passenger seat after a car accident left her with several severe injuries.

There are two kinds of people in the world: those who call themselves "paranoid" for always thinking that something bad could happen to them, and those who believe "it would never happen to me."

TikToker DeAnn Saenz of @dsaenz94 on TikTok was a member of the latter group after a lifetime of never getting into a car accident or even breaking a bone.


While on a trip to see her grandmother, Saenz did the same thing that she usually did when her husband was driving: she stretched her legs and put her feet up on the dashboard.

Coincidentally, a few months before this drive she'd seen a TikTok by "Lauren the Scarred Mortician" advising people not to put their feet up on the dashboard of the car as it would surely worsen their injuries or likelihood of death in the event of a car accident. Saenz listened to this advice for a bit but then went back to her old habits.

Back to putting her feet on the dash, Saenz was in a car crash with her husband over Labor Day weekend in which she woke up lying "on the ceiling" of her husband's car. One of her feet was stuck between the dashboard and a portion of the windshield that was not broken, her other foot was broken, and she had multiple other severe injuries, including a C2 cervical break in her spine.

Saenz took this experience as a sign to not take life for granted and to also understand that events like a car accident very realistically can happen to anyone, even to people like her who previously believed they wouldn't.

Saenz got back onto TikTok after more than two years away from the platform to share her story and to share the following public service announcement (PSA): Do not ride with your feet propped up on the dashboard.

You can watch that video here:

@dsaenz94

#psa #caraccidentcheck #fypage

In a follow-up video, Saenz offered a similar announcement, encouraging people to not drive above the speed limit, as it might save a life. She shared that she had been told that if her husband had been driving any faster, she likely would have died instead of suffering from her series of injuries.

You can watch that video here:

@dsaenz94

Drive the speed limit guys
 it might save your life😅#caraccident #fyp#drivesafe #psa

Many appreciated Saenz sharing the safety tip for those who might not know.

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

But most were more just happy that Saenz and her husband were okay.

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

@dsaenz94/TikTok

There's a lot to learn from Saenz's short series of videos so far, and she's promised that more are coming as she continues to heal and go through physical therapy.

But the most important takeaway is to practice proper safety precautions and to be grateful for the life we have because our time here is not permanent.

And perhaps as Saenz and her fellow TikTokers have said, "Always do what the Mortician Lady says."

More from Trending

Elon Musk; Sydney Sweeney
Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images; Brianna Bryson/WireImage/Getty Images

Elon Musk Shares Bizarre AI Video Of Sydney Sweeney Weeks After Making Gross Comment About Her Body

Just weeks after 54-year-old Elon Musk was called out for making a creepy, juvenile AI video about actor Sydney Sweeney's breasts, he decided to promote the use of her likeness and voice to tout how great his X AI Grok Imagine—a text-to-video feature—is at making deep fakes.

The video, originally posted by another user, featured an AI created Sweeney on a spaceship speaking about Grok videos. The original prompt didn't specify Sweeney by name, leading many to wonder if Musk had altered Grok's responses again.

Keep ReadingShow less
'Marty Supreme' Star Exits New Film Amid Backlash To Her Casting As Mexican Character—And Her Response Is Going Viral
Michael Tran / AFP via Getty Images

'Marty Supreme' Star Exits New Film Amid Backlash To Her Casting As Mexican Character—And Her Response Is Going Viral

After a week of online backlash, actor Odessa A’zion announced last Wednesday that she has dropped out of Sean Durkin’s A24 film Deep Cuts.

Deep Cuts adapts Holly Brickley’s 2025 novel of the same name. Set in the 2000s, the story follows two music-obsessed twentysomethings navigating ambition, belonging, and adulthood during a formative decade.

Keep ReadingShow less
Paul Dano; Quentin Tarantino
Aurore Marechal/Getty Images; Kevin Winter/Getty Images

Paul Dano Finally Spoke Up After Quentin Tarantino Dunked On His Acting Skills—And His Response Is Everything

Quentin Tarantino's comments late last year about the skill of some actors were rude and unnecessary, but his comments may have done all of us a favor.

In 2025, Tarantino issued a barrage of insults toward Paul Dano, Matthew Lillard, and Owen Wilson, calling them weak actors, as well as people he didn't care for.

Keep ReadingShow less
Katie Miller; Melania Trump
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Katie Miller Spouts Unhinged Theory After Melania Trump's Documentary Is Pulled From South African Theaters

Podcaster Katie Miller, the wife of Trump's White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, accused the nation of South Africa of racism after news outlets reported that Melania, a new documentary about First Lady Melania Trump, is being pulled from theaters in the country.

Scheduled for nationwide release in South Africa and distributed locally by Filmfinity, the film had secured bookings with the country’s two major cinema chains, Ster-Kinekor and Nu Metro, as well as independent venues including Cape Town’s Labia Theatre, after clearing standard classification and regulatory approvals.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Scott Bessent discussing Trump Accounts
Fox News

Scott Bessent Dragged After Suggesting Alternative Gift Idea For Kids 'Rather Than Giving A Toy'

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was criticized for the out-of-touch suggestion that children should receive contributions to the Trump administration’s newly launched “Trump Accounts,” rather than physical gifts.

A provision in Trump’s tax legislation creates so-called “Trump Accounts,” which provide $1,000 for every newborn whose parents open an account. The funds are invested in the stock market by private firms, and the child can access the money upon turning 18.

Keep ReadingShow less