![]() In this video, she again uses the blue ghost filter, but this time with both her and Kyzo smiling at the camera. Responding to the influx of negative comments, Ms Neo posted a follow-up video on Sunday, which has attracted more than 301,500 views in just one day. However, it was only when her recent ghost prank video went viral that she began to receive a widespread, intense backlash from viewers. get some kind of response from your followers. "There's just something not right about putting your child in a fearful situation so that you can. In a response video, TikTok user "loveeverydaytiktok" called the influencer's video "totally unnecessary".Ī self-proclaimed "millennial auntie", the TikToker acknowledged the need for engaging content creation as part of Ms Neo's job, but suggested that she could use other funny videos or lovey-dovey moments with her kids instead of such pranks. ![]() "So, very very bad idea, please don't do that." "I still wake my husband up in the middle of the night to accompany me to the toilet now, this fear may or may not go away."Īnother agreed, saying: "My mum and dad did this to me 44 years ago (they just left me in the room alone), and to this day (50), I am traumatised even thinking about it. This will cause your child to have a fear of being alone in a room, please talk to him about it soon. "There were no eerie sounds or videos but I was traumatised. Some shared their own stories of similar childhood trauma, such as TikTok user "miyabeelim" who said: "My mum locked me in a well-lit room when I was 3 (I'm now 29) as a prank. ![]() One asked: "How could you do such a thing?" Though Ms Neo stated in the caption that she had "apologised with tears already", many comments under the video still criticised her for pulling the "traumatising" prank on him. ![]()
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