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  2. Consumption of Tide Pods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumption_of_Tide_Pods

    A related Internet meme, "Tide Pod-Chan", a moe anthropomorphization of a Tide Pod in a Japanese school uniform, was created in order to warn against pod consumption. [36] Tide later partnered with American football player Rob Gronkowski, having him issue the message: "What the heck is going on, people? Use Tide Pods for washing. Not eating. Do ...

  3. The researchers discovered that, in the most recent three years of the study, U.S. poison centers received more than 36,000 calls related to liquid laundry detergent pod exposures, which was an ...

  4. Study finds thousands of children poisoned by laundry ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2016-04-25-study-finds...

    The first comprehensive study on the dangers of laundry pods, published in the journal Pediatrics, found that 17,230 children younger than 6 years old -- an average of one child every hour ...

  5. Doctors warn parents about dangerous new 'Tide Pod challenge'

    www.aol.com/news/doctors-warn-parents-dangerous...

    The allure of eating Tide Pods and similar products has been a beloved internet meme for years due to the candy-like appearance of the small laundry detergent pacs. ... If you or your child has ...

  6. Laundry detergent pod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laundry_detergent_pod

    Notable brands of these packs include All, Arm & Hammer, Gain, Purex, Persil, Rinso and Tide. [1] They first became popular in February 2012 when they were introduced by Procter & Gamble as Tide Pods (Ariel Pods in Europe). [1] The chemistry of laundry detergent packs is the same as in liquid detergents (including alkylbenzenesulfonates).

  7. Tide Pods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tide_Pods

    The film in Tide Pods is a polyvinyl alcohol film developed by MonoSol which is intended to dissolve in any temperature water. The pod detergent is also 10 percent water by volume compared to liquid Tide detergent which is 50 percent water by volume. This was done to prevent the pod from melting from having high water volume.

  8. 5 of the most dangerous social media trends - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/5-most-dangerous-social-media...

    The Tide Pod challenge is arguably one of the most famous (and dangerous) internet trends. Starting in late December 2017, viral jokes started circulating on Twitter about eating Tide Pods, which ...

  9. Tide (brand) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tide_(brand)

    Since 2012, Tide has sold Tide Pods, a line of laundry detergent pod, making an estimated 15% of sales. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] In late 2017, an Internet meme was popularized around the concept of eating Tide Pods [ 19 ] and, as a result, people attempted the extremely dangerous "Tide Pods Challenge".