Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

YouTuber Prompts Outrage After Attempting To Absorb His Entire Pool With Paper Towels

YouTuber Prompts Outrage After Attempting To Absorb His Entire Pool With Paper Towels
Tyler Oliveira/YouTube

A YouTuber was slammed for basically insulting environmental conservation efforts by wasting water and thousands of paper towels for a meaningless prank.

Tyler Oliveira—whose YouTube channel has 590K followers—posted a video last week, asking, "Can 1,000,000 Paper Towels Absorb A Swimming Pool?"


In the video, Oliveira asked:

"These are paper towels. This is a swimming pool. The question is, how many paper towels will it take to soak up my entire swimming pool."

youtu.be

Did you click on the video to find out?

So did over 222K subscribers who were just as curious.

His egregious demonstration was inspired by his TikTok video of a similar concept that went viral.

In the TikTok video, Oliveira "accidentally" spilled a glass of water into a swimming pool and frantically tried soaking it up by using one paper towel after another.

The popular clip inspired him to expand upon the idea for a sequel.

"My big brain energy resonated with the masses and before I knew it this TikTok had over 11 million views."
"Little did I know, the rest of the world shared my curiosity, and I'd sparked a question across the nation."

He ordered "100,000 Sparkle paper towels" to his home for an experiment to see if he could come up with an answer.

He proceeded to dunk the rolls into the water, and quipped:

"We're destroying these paper towel rolls right now. We're still barely making a dent into this moist swimming pool."

With the towels failing to soak up an estimated 25,000 gallons of water, Oliveira determined after his calculations that it would take 3,625,000 paper towels to accomplish the task.

Many people did not see the humor in the resulting waste and called him out in the comments section, with one person writing:

"Talk about pollution and waste."

Another wrote:

"I can't believe how many trees he wasted."

User "Nicker Nacker" invoked young environmental activist, Greta Thunberg, and commented:

"Greta Thunberg: Sees this
Greta Thunberg: This does make me angry."

Cindy Chang, a dedicated fan of the YouTube channel, could no longer hold back.

After prefacing with general comments on the channel's content, she criticized his wasteful ways as someone coming "from a place where it is literally very difficult to even buy paper towels."

"I'd recommend to use your channel and influence to make a positive impact on others (you can be as funny as you want, but I think being so wasteful is unnecessary)."
"Like literally, I felt pretty bad for the amount of paper, plastic, and even water wasted in this video."
"As cringey as this might sound, you could have even donated those paper towels to people who actually don't have access to it, and it would have made a better impact than throwing them into a pool."

Others followed suit in admonishing Oliveira on Twitter.




His demonstration did prove something alright.

Oliveira tried to mitigate the backlash with a halfhearted apology and explained that the paper towels already "existed independently."

"Many of you may be upset at my use of paper towels in this video. And this may, perhaps, be justified."
"However I would like you to consider one thing. These paper towels existed independently of whether or not I would have used them."
"But yes, perhaps, I had a micro impact on the demand of paper towels throughout the entire paper towel industry. Who knows."

One person spelled things out for Oliveira:

"Its not about whether they already existed, more purchases = more demand = more being made, basic economics pal."

The YouTuber acknowledged that he "may not have considered its net consequence on the Earth" but deflected the guilt by saying his critics "failed to reflect on their own respective impact, and are just as guilty."

"People are rather energetic to jump into the comment section and demonstrate their environmental pro activity, despite the fact that these facts exist."

Hand dryers are used in most public restrooms for a reason.

Approximately 13 billion pounds of paper towels are used each year and make up 2% of total landfills in the U.S. alone.

The Environmental Protection Agency confirmed that paper "makes up the largest share of municipal waste in the US."

Paper towel and tissue waste—irrespective of being made from recyclable materials—also generate three times more carbon emissions than Dyson Airblade hand dryers, according to a 2011 study.

On Thursday evening—after all the negative comments berating Oliveira—the YouTube personality finally admitted that the demonstration was "a really bad idea."

"I was caught up in the idea of making a banger and I didn't really consider the net consequence on the world around me, and that's pretty messed up."

He decided to correct his misstep by donating $1,000 towards relief efforts for the Australian bushfires and asked followers to join him in reaching a $10,000 goal.

"Given that this video is receiving so much attention, albeit negative, I wanted to see if we could turn this big negative into a big positive! I've donated $1000 to the Australian Red Cross organization, and have created a link below via Facebook Fundraiser where you can donate as well!"
"All proceeds go directly to the Australian Red Cross organization which helps their emergency teams to fight the bushfires we're currently seeing across NSW, Qld and SA, and disasters yet to come."

It took some time, but he finally got around to trying to clean up the mess he made.

More from Trending

Jennifer Siebel Newsom
@jennifersiebelnewsom/Instagram

Gavin Newsom's Wife Has Stark Warning For MAGA Women Who Still Support Trump—And She's Absolutely Right

Jennifer Siebel Newsom, First Partner of California, shared a message for the women of MAGA in the wake of the firings of Attorney General Pam Bondi and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem.

The two women were the first Cabinet members of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump’s second administration to get their walking papers.

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump; Screenshot of Artemis II crew
Nicholas Kamm/Getty Images; @atrupar/X

Trump Tries To Blame Awkward Silence During Call With Artemis II On Technical Glitch—But The Video Says Otherwise

President Donald Trump was not fooling anyone when he blamed a supposed technical glitch for the Artemis II crew’s silence during their historic fly-by of the Moon.

Artemis II is the first mission to bring astronauts toward the Moon in over half a century, launching successfully on April 1 to the delight of space enthusiasts and the general public alike.

Keep ReadingShow less
Dan Levy; Catherine O'Hara
CBS Sunday Morning/YouTube; Amy Sussman/Getty Images

Dan Levy Gets Choked Up While Visiting 'Schitt's Creek' Town For First Time Since Catherine O'Hara's Death

Dan Levy has been open about his grief after the loss of the late, great Catherine O'Hara.

Catherine O'Hara was a lot of things to a lot of people, with her versatility and willingness to create big, memorable characters that people love and cherish, from Kate McCallister to Delia Deetz to Moira Rose.

Keep ReadingShow less
Laura Ingraham
Roy Rochlin/Getty Images; @lauraingraham/Instagram

Laura Ingraham Gets Blunt Reminder After Awkward Video Of Her Doing The Griddy Dance Goes Viral

After sharing a video of herself doing the "Griddy," Fox News talking head Laura Ingraham was called out for appropriating Black culture after years of attacking Black people, Black Democratic leaders, sharing racist stereotypes, and attacking their basic human rights on her program.

The Griddy is a popular celebratory dance seen in the NFL, NBA, and the game Fortnite. It was popularized by NFL players Ja'Marr Chase of the Cincinnati Bengals and Justin Jefferson of the Minnesota Vikings.

Keep ReadingShow less
Domino’s delivery driver Dan Simpson is seen on a Ring camera going the extra mile during a viral Boise, Idaho delivery.
@katey_93/TikTok

Internet Steps Up To Help Out Idaho Domino's Delivery Driver Who Went The Extra Mile For Customer

It started with a missing Diet Coke and turned into a six-figure thank-you.

A 68-year-old pizza delivery worker is heading into retirement with an unexpected boost after a small act of kindness sparked a viral moment—and a wave of support from strangers who chose to pay it forward.

Keep ReadingShow less