The News (New Glasgow)

Changing the tide

Kensington, P.E.I., police issue lightheart­ed warning advising young people not to try dangerous internet Tide Pod Challenge

- BY COLIN MACLEAN

All together now …

“If you don’t know just what it is

Remember, boys and girls Don’t put it in your mouth.” If you’re a Canadian under a certain age, chances are you learned not to eat dangerous things from a blue TV puppet singing those lyrics.

Const. Robb Hartlen of the Kensington Police Service is no different, which is why he found it a little distressin­g that he had to repeat that message on Wednesday.

Something called the Tide Pod Challenge has been gaining traction in some corners of the internet and the Kensington police want to help put a stop to it.

The “challenge” involves people biting into colourful laundry detergent pods, filming their reactions and posting them online.

It has led to the hospitaliz­ation of more than 40 people in Canada and the U.S. so far this year.

In an effort to reinforce just how dangerous the stunt is, Const. Hartlen created a Facebook post Wednesday morning in which he highlighte­d some items that are OK to eat — and some which are not.

“We’ve got a Coffee Crisp here. Yup, you can definitely put that in your mouth. Tide Pod? No!” remarks Hartlen in the video. “Now we’re going to get a little tricky

“If the post stops one person from doing something that could hurt them, then perfect. From the inception of the Kensington Police Service’s Facebook page we’ve tried to use humour as a vessel to push a good message, and that’s what we’re trying to do here, as well.” Const. Robb Hartlen

here. Maybe you think you want to take the drone challenge? No! Does not go in the mouth. Do not eat the drone — do not eat the Tide Pod.”

Hartlen said he got the idea for the video from a Concerned Children’s Advertiser­s public service commercial from the early 1990s, in which the furry blue puppets sang a song about what is OK to eat — and what is not.

The first verse, assuming it’s not already seared into memory, is:

“Don’t you put it in your mouth. Don’t you stuff it in your face. Though it might look good to eat.

Though it might look good to taste.

You could get sick.

Ick.

Real quick.”

After only a few hours online, Hartlen’s video had been shared hundreds of times and reached thousands of people.

The more people who see it, the better, he said.

“We’re trying to bring awareness to something that is potentiall­y very, very dangerous.”

“If the post stops one person from doing something that could hurt them, then perfect. From the inception of the Kensington Police Service’s Facebook page we’ve tried to use humour as a vessel to push a good message, and that’s what we’re trying to do here, as well.”

This is not the first time the Kensington’s Police Service’s Facebook page has hit a large audience

with a humorous take on a serious subject.

In 2016, Hartlen used it to post a tongue-in-cheek threat to force drunk drivers caught at Christmast­ime to listen to a Nickelback album. That post went viral, earned internatio­nal news coverage and eventually resulted in Hartlen apologizin­g to Nickelback, though he also used the platform the post provided to spread a message against impaired driving, creating a contest to help discourage it.

 ?? COLIN MACLEAN/SALTWIRE NETWORK ?? Const. Robb Hartlen of the Kensington Police Service created a social media video Wednesday to warn people about Tide Pod challenges, which is a dangerous fad making the rounds on the internet recently. In his video, Hartlen explains to the audience...
COLIN MACLEAN/SALTWIRE NETWORK Const. Robb Hartlen of the Kensington Police Service created a social media video Wednesday to warn people about Tide Pod challenges, which is a dangerous fad making the rounds on the internet recently. In his video, Hartlen explains to the audience...

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