Oscar Isaac may have revealed that “Moon Knight” is returning for a second season.
21.07.2022 - 22:03 / nypost.com
Chef Pii has sparked an uproar over her “pink sauce.”After selling for less than a month there are a slew of concerns about what it looks like, its taste and labeling errors.To gain buzz for this condiment, Pii posted a TikTok video of her making it in her kitchen, which gained 6.4 million views. “TikTok created the pink sauce,” Pii, who has over 59,000 followers, exclusively told The Post.Immediately the backlash started on the same place it went viral: TikTok.“There are so many errors on this nutritional label, saying 444 servings, which is 14.4 grams [per serving],” user @seansvv stated.
“Which makes almost 6,300-something grams in the whole bottle, which is inaccurate. And if these small details were overlooked, I’m looking at quality control now.
I’m kind of scared.”But Pii said the label was a graphic design mistake and will be rectified in the next batch.The sauce’s main ingredient is dragon fruit, which is what gives it its signature pink color, she said. The other ingredients are sunflower seed oil, white vinegar, salt, raw honey, garlic, dried chili, lemon juice, milk and citric acid, according to the bottle’s label.Another issue was the sauce had different hues of pink and people were upset with a lack of consistency.Pii, who is also a mother of two, is chalking this up to both the batch of dragon fruit she’s using and that consumers are expecting the pink sauce to look exactly like her viral TikTok video.Some addressed concerns that the sauce needed to be refrigerated, which wasn’t printed on the label.
TikToker @seansvv said there weren’t enough preservatives in it for the sauce to just sit out.Pii defended her brand and said, “We did a test on them. They sat out for over 30 days.
Oscar Isaac may have revealed that “Moon Knight” is returning for a second season.
Jessica Shalvoy At this point, it’s no secret that what TikTok creators possess is incredibly valuable. That’s why artist and celebrity teams throughout the entertainment industry are urging their clients to join in on the frenzy.
TikTok, which has become the perfect summer bop for rocking your “big T-shirt” with unbothered style and, of course, swag in summer 2022.“Glock tucked, big T-shirt, Billie Eilish,” he raps over the bounce beat, nodding his head all the way to the “Bad Guy” singer. “I mean, honestly, I think Billie Eilish’s style is what the song’s about, but it’s also the character that Billie Eilish’s music portrays,” White told The Post. “I feel like it’s kind of identical to what I like to portray in my own music.”As you might expect from the title of his breakout single, White — like many of his generation — is a fan of Eilish.
Rosie O’Donnell has an answer for her daughter’s TikTok videos. The actress and TV personality replied to her daughter’s video that claiming she didn’t have a “normal” upbringing.Rosie O’Donnell shares a photo with her girlfriend on InstagramRosie O’Donnell takes her relationship with girlfriend Aimee Hauer to a new level!Replying to @user1067987344110O’Donnell shared a clip where she addressed her daughter Vivienne directly. “Vivi, what do you mean I didn’t do anything normal? I did normal things.
It’s a “Modern Family” reunion.
[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
Fueling the feuds? Hilary Duff‘s husband, Matthew Koma, poked fun at Candace Cameron Bure as her drama with JoJo Siwa continues to turn heads.
Matthew Koma is offering Candace Cameron Bure a slight correction.
PewDiePie is getting a lot of (well-deserved) criticism for this!
A TikTok trend involving a fizzy drink has led to a wave of mid-20-year-olds discovering that their lifelong inability to burp could actually be a medical condition. The trend, which sees people attempting to drink a bottle of Sprite without belching, has been popular across the globe in the past few months.
Patrick Frater Asia Bureau ChiefGHY Culture & Media, a mainland China-focused entertainment company from Singapore, has launched a slate of short drama series that it says mirror the professionally-generated short format developed by Chinese platforms Douyin and Bilibili. Its first three are fantasy “Goddess Hotel,” urban fantasy-light comedy “Miss Tanya” and sci-fi comedy “Ability Bureau.” Each short drama series is slated to run for 2 or 3 seasons, with 12 to 16 episodes per season, and each episode delivered at approximately 3 minutes. Involving Singapore production teams and actors, each project is estimated to cost between S$350,000 to S$1.6 million ($250,000 – $1.15 million) to produce.
Yet another TikTok challenge has resulted in some deadly consequences…