What This New York Times Columnist Said About Nick Fuentes Will Infuriate You
This Is What John Fetterman Had to Say When Asked Whether He Would...
This Is What a Federal Judge Said About the Sandwich Throwing Case
Following Mass Stabbing on UK Train, Defense Secretary Floats Idea of TSA-Style Station...
Did VA Democrat AG Candidate Jay Jones Just Try to Kick a Dog?
Comedian Wanda Sykes: DEI for Thee, Not for Me
Woman Banned From California Gold's Gym After Confronting Man in Her Locker Room
A UK Judge Just Acquitted Climate Activists Who Vandalized Stonehenge
From Bathrooms to Train Platforms, Britain Is No Safe Place for Women
Zohran Mamdani Blames President Trump for Bomb Threats Against New Jersey Polling Places
Germany's Deindustrialization Is a Cautionary Tale Against 'Green' Climate Policies
Wisconsin's Voter Rolls Are a Mess
SAF Files Lawsuit Challenging New Jersey Over Illegal Gun Confiscation
Canada's Warning to America: Property Rights Are on the Chopping Block
Tanzanian Agricultural Student Joshua Mollel’s Body Still Held Hostage by Hamas in Gaza
Tipsheet

Creative Teens in Protective Masks Hatched This Clever Plot to Buy Booze

(Screenshot via TikTok)

Some creative, young Americans have taken facial coverings to a new level. 

Several teenagers have taken advantage of mask mandates and have been visiting liquor stores dressed up like their grandmas in the hopes of scoring alcohol as a new prank on social media.

Advertisement

Countless teens have posted videos on social media of themselves dressed in their grandma's clothes, as well as makeup and wigs to make themselves look older. 

In one clip with over 2 million views, a young woman was seen wearing a white wig, glasses, and an old-person Halloween costume mask. She proceeded to enter a 7-Eleven convenience store wearing a headscarf and surgical mask, disguising herself as an elderly woman shopping, and left the shop with celebratory bags of purchased alcohol. The girl, along with her friends then "twerk" in costume, holding cans of Four Loko, a flavored malt liquor popular with teenagers and young adults. 

"If everybody keeps doing this they’ll have you taking DNA tests to buy beer," commented one user on the popular video. 

Another video showed a girl who appeared to have spray-painted her brown hair slightly gray and wrapped in a scarf while sporting sunglasses in the car. A shot of a liquor shop is then shown and smash cut to the girl with bottles of wine in her lap. That clip also ended with the teen twerking with her prized wine on the roadside.

While some of the teens in the videos put in what seemed to be tremendous effort into their disguises, others appeared to barely change their appearance as they hid their faces behind the mandatory face coverings. 

One blonde girl in a video was shown wearing glasses, a headscarf, and elderly women's clothing with a surgical mask, and gloves, walking around a liquor store accompanied by her "granddaughter." She was able to purchase a bottle of vodka and a case of Mike's Hard Lemonade. Close up shots of the girl showed that she was clearly a teen, not an elderly adult.

Advertisement

Some of the teens' videos sparked viewers concerns that cashiers at liquor stores were not properly checking for identification. All states require a photo identification to purchase alcohol, but most cashiers are not trained to ask for age verification from someone they believe to a be over 40 years old. Whether the teens costumes fooled the cashiers or the mandatory mask requirements have skewed the ability to cull underage purchases was not immediately clear.

Some liquor stores began using identification scanning technology that took the guess work out of photo ID verification, a function that totally invalidated the attempt to use a fake or manufactured ID. But presenting the real ID of another, older individual would not have been thwarted by this ability. 

Thanks to the antics of a very creative Generation Z, keeping liquor out of the hands of teens in surgical masks could be a big lift. Until age-verification technology is able to spot a costume, store clerks are going to have to be trained to tell a real grandmother from a fake teen granny. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement