Sizwe Dlomo is not having a good time on Twitter. He was being dragged for his celebrity

Sizwe Dlomo was dragged after he tweeted about the celebrity prank death. He mentioned Drake in the challenge, and that is where they went for him in the comment section. Destiny Zee shared the screenshots of the comments. And from how they have been responding to him lately, he is now given the nickname “Potatoes,” because it has been mentioned throughout the entire comment section.


 

 

 

Many people have been against the challenge that has started on TikTok. Legendary Yvonne Chaka Chaka shared her comments on how she is against the challenge. It is not good because, when it comes to death, that is something you don’t want to play around with.

What if it happened? That would be bad and could be seen as how you wanted that person to die. It will eventually happen even if you can’t make jokes about dying. The social media challenges are not good, and you can’t be playing with someone’s emotions at that level because people are physically different. Some people, after they have heard a heartbreaking story or news, needs comfort in the best way possible.

Some people are seen as not good after they learn that someone they care about has died. How will the person you are making a joke about, feel about the prank you have made about themselves Through shock, many things have gone wrong. They have to consider about how other people will feel about it while they are seeing something to entertain the audiences. The rules of social media are not against the challenge, and it should be stopped for anyone who will be participating for the challenge.

“But not everyone enjoys the trend. The videos come at a cost, psychologists say, potentially traumatizing those pranked. Parents have a responsibility to talk with and set examples for their children before jokes go too far.”

“We have to get to a place where we bridge this gap with this empathy deficit that we are especially seeing with our children,” says T.M. Robinson-Mosley, counseling psychologist. “It is easy to see how some may dismiss this kind of prank by a child as harmless fun,” says New York psychologist Joseph Cilona.