It treats nighttime symptoms of the cold and flu — and most definitely should not be used as a poultry marinade. A potentially deadly trend in which buffoons are cooking chicken in NyQuil has been ...
TikTok searches for NyQuil Chicken reportedly increased by 1,400 times after the FDA warned against the "social media video challenge."Getty Images The FDA released a statement on September 15 asking ...
The Food and Drug Administration has told Americans not to cook their chicken in Nyquil, after a viral cooking trend has resurfaced on social media. In a recent warning issued by the FDA, the ...
As of recent, the Internet appears to be attempting to resurrect some former nonsensical trends to see if 2022 might give them another chance. On “wellness” TikTok, for example, someone has filmed ...
If you were considering cooking chicken in NyQuil, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is begging you to reconsider. In response to viral videos of people filming themselves sauteing chicken in a ...
The agency warned against a "recent" social media trend of cooking chicken in NyQuil last week, but the bizarre recipe hadn't been trending in months. Reading time 6 minutes If you’ve gone online this ...
The FDA has a warning for the TikTok generation: Don't use bright-blue, over-the-counter medications as marinade even if social media challenges you to do so. Case in point: The NyQuil chicken or ...
It’s about time that we learn the difference between what’s a viral trend and what’s just one person posting a meme that goes viral. For the sake of humanity, let’s count our lucky stars: NyQuil ...
Don't cook your chicken in NyQuil. Just don't do it, OK? If you think that goes without saying, the US Food and Drug Administration disagrees: the agency recently released a warning against a social ...
A warning about a dangerous food challenge issued by the US Food and Drug Administration has had the opposite effect — and instead spurred searches for it. Known as the “NyQuil chicken” or “sleepy ...
A new trend on TikTok has prompted a stern warning from the FDA. The so-called “sleepy chicken” challenge encourages people to cook chicken drenched in NyQuil. Yes, that NyQuil, the bright blue-green ...