
Singapore poly grad receiving 'bouquet' of roast duck and bitter gourd at graduation goes viral , Singapore News
Move over, flowers. One Singapore Polytechnic graduate got a roasted duck and bitter gourd instead.
A TikTok video of a woman receiving the unusual gift in lieu of a graduation bouquet has gone viral.
Tricia, who wished to be known only by her first name, posted the video of herself holding a whole roasted duck and bitter gourd at her graduation on May 7.
Captioned "best graduation bouquet", the 17-second video shows the Business Administration graduate laughing in disbelief with the items in her hands while her peers held flower bouquets.
The video has garnered over 477,000 views as of Thursday (May 15). @tr1c14_ BEST BOUQUET EVER🦆💐 #classof2025 #graduation #fyp ♬ sad SpongeBob music - michael
Speaking to AsiaOne, the 22-year-old said it was her "first time receiving such an interesting gift".
Tricia said she was expecting to get the bitter gourd since they had asked her what her least favourite vegetable was. After all, vegetable and fruit bouquets have become somewhat of a trend among young adults here.
"I was expecting the bitter gourd as they did ask me what my least favourite vegetable was, but I was shocked when I received the roasted duck. It was really unexpected," said Tricia.
Three of her friends — Jabez, Wayne, and Boyd — had wrapped the duck with brown paper to make it look like a bouquet.
Tricia, who admitted that she enjoys eating roast duck, felt her friends had planned the special surprise "to embarrass" her.
"Of course, I want to also give them an interesting bouquet [for their graduation] but it's hard to top a whole roasted duck," she said.
When asked if she would have preferred a flower bouquet, Tricia replied: "Who doesn't love flowers?"
"But I don't have a green thumb so this roasted duck bouquet definitely is my favourite out of all the flowers I have received," she said, adding that it was practical too.
She told AsiaOne that she "devoured the duck right after" the ceremony and said it was "really yummy".
The bitter gourd, on the other hand, is still with Tricia's friends as she forgot to bring it home. Mixed online reactions
Tricia's video has attracted over 200 comments from netizens.
Many were impressed by the roasted duck bouquet, with a user remarking that it was "better than flowers".
"Girl, I would be so jealous you got a whole roast duck, do you know how expensive a whole duck is now?" wrote another commenter.
However, several detractors said Tricia appeared to be attention-seeking.
"At the end of the day, as long as I didn't do anything to hurt people, the hate comments don't affect me much," said Tricia.
[[nid:716521]]
jengjee.hoon@asiaone.com

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
21 hours ago
- Straits Times
Not all heroes wear capes: Elephant goes viral for saving drowning gazelle at Guatemala zoo
An elephant is seen pulling a gazelle out of a pond inside a Guatemala zoo. PHOTO: SCREENGRAB FROM VIRALHOG/YOUTUBE Not all heroes wear capes: Elephant goes viral for saving drowning gazelle at Guatemala zoo Not all heroes wear capes. Sometimes, they have really big ears and long snouts. An elephant was recently filmed saving a gazelle that appeared to be drowning in a pond inside an enclosure at a zoo in Guatemala. The clip, which first appeared online on June 9, has gone viral, with over 1.5 million likes on TikTok and over 8 million views on one Facebook account. It shows an adult elephant trying to fish a young gazelle out of a pond. It is not clear how the gazelle found itself in this predicament. But it could be seen struggling to keep its head out of the water while trying to climb out of the pond surrounded by a high concrete mound. Using its long and flexible trunk, the elephant is seen grabbing the gazelle's horn and trying to winch it out of the water. Even though it loses its grip on its first attempt, it does not give up. Going in for a second try, it manages to get a firmer grip of the gazelle's horn and, with a mighty tug, pulls it out of the water. Some of the other gazelles look on, but seem unimpressed by their neighbour's heroics. Visitors to the zoo watching it from afar, however, can be heard cheering in the video. The elephant is then seen walking towards the rescued gazelle, seemingly to check on its condition. While it may have been just another day for the elephant, videos of its heroic act have made it the internet's star of the moment. Some netizens have also made inevitable comparisons to bipedal bad behaviour. 'Better than some humans,' said Ms Judy Tyler, on the Furry Tails Facebook page. 'Meanwhile, humans killing each other,' Mr Hadjer Bouzid chimed in on the same thread. Others were in awe of the elephant's sense of empathy and intelligence. 'This just shows how intelligent elephants are, what a hero,' said Ms Johan Kievit, also on the Furry Tails Facebook page. Ms Emily Brown added: 'I love how the elephant knows to pick him up by the horns.' 'And the elephant goes over to check, 'You doing okay, bud?',' Mr Eduek Moses added. Some animals have been known to naturally exhibit heroic traits. In June 2024, a dog ran nearly 7km to get help after his owner's truck plummeted into a ravine. Another dog saved a whole family by barking loudly to wake them up when the houseboat they were in caught fire. Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
2 days ago
- Straits Times
Extremely lifelike dolls are causing a frenzy in Brazil
Most hyper-realistic or reborn dolls cost around $258 to S$322 in Brazil, while limited edition ones have sold for more. PHOTO EPA-EFE SAO PAULO - A young woman posts a video that appears to show her holding her baby, Bento, and packing his bag for a trip to the hospital. She calls it 'one of the busiest and scariest days for me.' She grabs onesies, a bottle and medical documents and tucks him in the back of a car. At the hospital, he is weighed and lies in a bed, where she removes his pacifier, bottle-feeds him and wipes a few drops of formula from his cheek. But this was not an actual medical emergency – it was role-playing by a content creator – and the baby was not a real baby. It was a shockingly lifelike doll, called a reborn doll, which is handcrafted to look and feel like a baby. The video, which received more than 16 million views on TikTok, is part of a social media craze that has turned into a cultural and political flashpoint in Brazil. Widely circulated videos show women taking the hyper-realistic dolls to the park in strollers, celebrating their birthdays with cake and songs, and simulating childbirth. (A select few even simulate the dolls' having a nosebleed or potty training.) 'The ones I like the most are the newborns,' said Ms Juliana Drusz Magri, 36, who lives in Curitiba, the capital of the Brazilian state of Paraná, and works in human resources. She said she began collecting the dolls in 2018 and now has 22. 'The world of make-believe is an escape valve for me,' she said. 'And, no, I don't treat it like a real baby.' The dolls have flooded into pop culture. They were featured in June in an episode of Vale Tudo, a prime-time telenovela, and in a rap song trending on social media about a gang that walks down the street 'kicking reborn dolls.' Newspaper columnists, influencers and lawmakers have all weighed in, with varying degrees of sincerity about what some perceive as a threat to the social order and what others have described as a harmless hobby. Widely circulated videos showing women taking the hyper-realistic dolls to the park in strollers became a flashpoint in Brazil. PHOTO: EPA-EFE In the north-western Brazilian state of Amazonas, one lawmaker, Joao Luiz, recently carried one of the dolls into the legislature and argued, without evidence, that some women have been demanding public benefits for the dolls. His colleague Joana Darc also voiced concern. 'You just can't force a doctor in a hospital, for example, to treat a reborn doll as if it were a child, which is a living being,' she said on the floor. 'You can't force a teacher to accept a child in a day care centre because the person wants the reborn doll to study.' She asked where it would end: with people taking 'reborn pets' to the veterinarian to be neutered? In what looked like a bit of trolling, the official social media account of Curitiba warned the 'mothers' of reborn dolls not to sit in the yellow seats on city buses reserved for pregnant women. 'Reborns are cute, but they don't guarantee a place in the yellow seat, OK?' the post read. In defence of the dolls, the Rio de Janeiro City Council approved a proposal to make Sept 4 Reborn Stork Day, a holiday honouring the artisans who make the dolls. A Brazilian artisan working on a super realistic baby doll at her studio in Contagem, Brazil. PHOTO: AFP But the mayor of Rio de Janeiro, Eduardo Paes, vetoed the proposal. 'With all due respect to those interested, this isn't happening,' he wrote on social media. At least 30 Bills have been filed in legislative houses across the country to bar the dolls from receiving services in public health facilities, according to public records. But there appears to have been just one documented case of a woman with a psychiatric disorder showing up at a hospital to seek treatment for her doll, only to be turned away at the entrance, the news outlet UOL reported. Most of the Bills have been introduced by members of right-wing parties. Ms Vivi Louhrinci, 30, an actor from Curitiba, has been making reborn dolls since 2020, including some for the Brazilian productions of Wicked and Matilda. 'My life has turned into chaos with this boom,' she said, referring to the frenzy around the dolls. 'It has been a good exposure in this sense, but it is an exposure that is causing so much stress.' Vivi Louhrinci, an actress and artist who has been creating reborn dolls since 2020, holds a doll head in Curitiba, Brazil. PHOTO: PRISCILA RIBEIRO/NYTIMES Ms Camila Infanger, a doctoral candidate in political science at the University of Sao Paulo, said there had been a noticeable difference in the response to hobbies associated with women and those associated with men. 'Because women are doing it and women are the principal actors in this, it's been stigmatised differently,' she said, adding that the backlash was 'just another way to regulate women's lives.' The dolls have been around since the 1990s, when people started stripping the paint and hair off store-bought vinyl dolls and painstakingly reworking them to be more lifelike. And the interest in them is not limited to Brazil. Mr Dave Stack of Cleveland, the owner of Reborns, an online marketplace for reborn dolls, said he had seen a 'slow and steady increase' in sales since he started the site in 2012. He now sells 40 to 60 dolls per day, up from about 10 per day five years ago, according to his website. Most cost around US$200 to US$250 (S$258-S$322) and are made of vinyl, while a few limited-edition dolls made of softer silicone have sold for more than US$4,000, he said. A small percentage of the dolls are purchased by mothers who are grieving the loss of a child, Mr Stack said. Others have been bought by memory-care facilities, lawyers who use them for courtroom reenactments and people making movies and television shows. But most buyers are 'just people who love babies,' he said. Some popular videos made by content creators show the dolls getting a bloody nose, going on their first outing to Target or throwing up in the car. Collectors of reborn dolls gather in Parque Villa-Lobos, Sao Paulo, Brazil. Some mothers bought the dolls to grieve the loss of a child. PHOTO: EPA-EFE Ms Jennifer Granado, 43, who makes the dolls with her husband and daughter in Indiana, said about half of her customers are collectors and about half are coping with some type of trauma or loss. One customer, Ms Granado said, takes her dolls shopping and to the doctor's office, 'feeds' them baby food and takes pictures of them with Santa Claus on Christmas. 'She is unable to have kids so this is as close as she can get for her and her husband,' Ms Granado said. 'There's definitely a large group of people who don't understand why a grown adult would be playing with a baby doll. But they don't see it as a baby doll. They see it as a baby.' Ms Drusz called the dolls 'a calming, fun, I would even say innocent hobby,' and said she was frustrated with being judged for her interest in them. 'I hope that after all this is over, we can continue our collections in peace and do what we like without being labelled,' she said. 'I think that reborn dolls are an art, and art deserves to be appreciated.' NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.


AsiaOne
2 days ago
- AsiaOne
'Modern kampung spirit': Neighbours leave heartfelt notes on newly-weds' apology notice for wedding 'gatecrash' noise, Singapore News
Worried that their early-morning wedding celebrations on Saturday (June 7) might annoy their neighbours, a couple left a note in the lift asking for a little understanding. Their "sorry in advance" got plenty of kind messages back from residents at Block 77 Marine Drive — a true show of modern-day kampung spirit. Bernard Kuah, 32, told AsiaOne that he and his wife, Chermaine Wong, had sought permission from the town council to post the note in both lifts. The couple were concerned that the wedding "gatecrash", a traditional Chinese ritual where the groom and his entourage pick up the bride after overcoming a series of funny — and slightly embarrassing — challenges, would disrupt their neighbours' sleep. It was scheduled from 4am to 7am that day, Kuah, an HR manager, said. The couple put up the notice three days before the wedding — giving neighbours ample time to see it, rather than finding out at the last minute, he said. "Just a day later, we went to run some wedding errands and was taking the lift back home and saw Post-it notes on our posters," he added. "As each day passed, more notes started to appear." Ariel Ee, 22, was among those who left a note the night before the wedding. The student told AsiaOne that she and her mother felt it was a thoughtful gesture for the couple to put up an apology notice and decided it would be nice to return the kindness with well wishes. In a TikTok video, Ee could be seen sticking a Post-it note on the poster which read: "Congrats! Wishing you love, happiness and wish wishes on your union. All the best!" She called the couple's gesture, along with the neighbours' warm responses, a modern-day display of the kampung spirit. @ariyakult Kampung spirit in a modern way i guess! #sg #sgtiktok #singapore #sgfyp ♬ original sound - 🤍 The couple said that they received nine Post-it notes in total and have since taken down the notice. "We found it really sweet of our neighbours to drop these well wishes for us," said Kuah. "Not just my wife and I… our family and friends were really touched by the messages." Will they be framing the notice in their new home as keepsake? 'We have not thought of it yet as we are still busy unpacking and preparing for our honeymoon,' Kuah said. 'But that it is really good idea and I will let my wife know.' Additional reporting by Tan Yuan Ru. [[nid:692953]] chingshijie@