Saskatoon StarPhoenix

HASHTAGS TO TRASHTAGS

Viral image encourages teens to post before and after photos of their garbage cleanups

- LINDSEY BEVER

Often, news stories with the words “teenager” and “challenge” reveal some dangerous thing teens are daring each other to do, all for views online.

They’ve been the subjects of viral online panics for eating liquid laundry detergent pods and snorting condoms.

They’ve dared each other to guzzle a gallon (4.5 L) of milk — without vomiting; eat a tablespoon of cinnamon — without vomiting; and to gulp down two litres of a carbonated beverage — without vomiting. They’ve been known to douse themselves in rubbing alcohol and set themselves on fire, or throw boiling water on unsuspecti­ng peers.

This is not one of those stories. This is about the #trashtag challenge — one encouragin­g teens to do something constructi­ve.

The trend has been around for years — UCO Gear, an outdoor lighting company in Seattle started using the hashtag in 2015 to “encourage others to pack out trash when they spot it on the trail.”

But Facebook user Byron Román helped it grab widespread attention online — and aimed it at teens — posting earlier this month a before-and-after picture, showing a dramatic cleanup in a garbage-strewn area in the woods.

“Here is a new #challenge for all you bored teens,” Román wrote. “Take a photo of an area that needs some cleaning or maintenanc­e, then take a photo after you have done something about it, and post it.”

Román, a 53-year-old mortgage loan officer from Phoenix, Ariz., said he had seen the photo on a friend’s Facebook page, but it appears it came from an ecotourism company, Happy Tours GT in Guatemala. The company had previously posted the picture with a similar caption in Spanish, which, Román said, he translated into English. Then, he said, he added the hashtags #trashtag and #Basurachal­lenge and directed the message toward teens.

He said it was not meant to insult teenagers, but encourage them.

The Washington Post reached out to Happy Tours GT for comment, but the company said in a message that it only helped the image go viral and does not know where the picture originated or who the man in the photo is. Román said he had hoped that the man would have surfaced by now, but he has not yet been identified.

Even as the identity — or intentions — of the person in the photo remains a mystery, Román’s Facebook post continued to spread.

It has been shared hundreds of thousands of times and drawn comments, most from social media users who appeared to be adults discussing ways to get teens into it.

“Great idea! Step Up Youngsters!!” one person responded.

“Not just for teens,” another replied. “Let’s go humanity ...”

Román said he has since received hundreds of messages from people, including from teachers and parents, sending him photos of their own cleanups with their children.

“I think it’s our responsibi­lity to keep our planet clean. It doesn’t matter who made the mess because it belongs to all of us,” Román said.

Román said in a subsequent post that he did not start the #trashtag challenge, or the #basurachal­lenge, the Spanish word for “trash,” but added, “I am glad my post reached every corner of the world.”

And apparently, it did — people from around the globe have posted cleanup photos on Facebook, Instagram, Reddit and Twitter, and urged others to do the same.

The Post could not independen­tly confirm the veracity of the photos.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/CULTURA RF ?? “I think it’s our responsibi­lity to keep our planet clean. It doesn’t matter who made the mess because it belongs to all of us,” says Facebook user Byron Román of the #trashtag photo challenge.
GETTY IMAGES/CULTURA RF “I think it’s our responsibi­lity to keep our planet clean. It doesn’t matter who made the mess because it belongs to all of us,” says Facebook user Byron Román of the #trashtag photo challenge.

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