“Desperate for Excitement: Woman’s Shocking Fake Kidnapping Scheme Unravels in Unforeseen Ways”

"Desperate for Excitement: Woman's Shocking Fake Kidnapping Scheme Unravels in Unforeseen Ways"

— Rain Drops Media (@Raindropsmedia1) December 29, 2024

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“In hindsight, it was a terrible idea. We weren’t thinking at all,” Vicky explained, recalling that a few of her father’s friends started calling him out of concern. 

“I’ve learned a lot from this, and I’ll be taking time off the internet to reflect, fast, and grow closer to God. Please keep me in your prayers,” the influencer concluded. 

But the comments weren’t quite as concerned as Vicky was likely thinking they’d be.

Following the statement, the influencer took some time offline

Image credits: woahvicky

“man who is kidnapping woah vicky out of all people 😭,” someone tweeted. 

“I mean the text doesn’t have any grammatical errors so it’s probably,” another humorously wrote. 

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It was harshly followed by, “i will pay them more if they keep her there.”

“1 million for Woah Vicky…” a user thought out and posted a Spongebob gif. “That’s okay. You can keep it.” 

“If this is true we won,” a fifth stated. 

Given Woah Vicky’s past, these reactions aren’t too much of a surprise.

Image credits: woahvicky

The 24-year-old, whose full name is Victoria Rose Waldrip, first gained attention in 2017 for her “controversial content,” as put by First Post, after she used multiple racial slurs and claimed to be Black, despite her Caucasian background.

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