The reminder came in the midst of the so-called Tide Pod Challenge, a social media phenomenon that has inspired countless ...
In 2004, Procter & Gamble was looking for a hit. It had been two decades since the consumer products conglomerate introduced Tide liquid detergent, revolutionizing the way people washed their clothes.
YouTube is cracking down on a dangerous new online trend where teens put poisonous laundry gel pods in their mouths, and then eat them like candy. They're calling it the "Tide Pod challenge" and ...
A YouTube video shows a teen with a brightly colored Tide Pod — the film casing for which is made in Northwest Indiana by Merrillville-based MonoSol — cupped in his hand while perched between his ...
Relax. Your kids are probably not eating Tide pods. I mean, they might be, but even if they are, laundry detergent is still probably one of the least dangerous consumer products you have to worry ...
Videos circulated in 2018 on social media showing kids biting into brightly colored liquid laundry detergent packets, or cooking the soap-filled capsules in frying pans, then chewing on them before ...