No menu items!

Man builds sarcophagus and buries snacks: ‘confusing future civilization’

Share This Post

- Advertisement -

One TikTok user shared with his friends the recordings that he spent more than a month and a half building a sarcophagus to bury a snack and “mix up the civilizations of the future.”

The video, showing the making and painting process of “The Coffin” and even the burial of Flaming Hot Cheetos, crossed 10 million copies within two days of its release.

- Advertisement -

The footage shows the man creating a mold for the concrete coffin, the difficulty of painting it black, and even wrapping the cookie in resin to protect the cookie.

- Advertisement -

With the frame in place, the package was hung on steel ropes bolted to the sides of the sarcophagus, thus preventing an earthquake from breaking the resin surrounding it.

“I also used a laser to try to burn off all the germs in the sarcophagus,” the man detailed in the post.

The name of the dowry and its contents are painted with spray paint and gold leaf on the lid of the sarcophagus.

“The makers of these snacks are not sponsored and they don’t even know about this project,” the user said.

@market.nobody

? original audio – Sunday Nobody

In the video, he did not say how much money was invested in the project, but explained that the final weight of the work was 3,000 pounds (1.3 tons equivalent).

After digging the sarcophagus site for seven hours with a shovel, the man enlisted the help of a bulldozer to finish the hole and push the object back into place. After the pit was closed, a sign was left in the region warning the civilizations of the future.

The banner read: “Historical artifact is buried below. Do not open for 10,000 years. Burial year: 2022”.

With the popularity of the video, comments surrounding the man’s action were split between admiration and irony. “I wonder if ancient civilizations played tricks on us like this,” said one user.

Others complained that the tiktoker who made the video was “wasted time and money”.

“Many times in my life I thought I was bored, but now I realize I’ve never really been bored, bored enough to build a sarcophagus for a snack,” another said.

Until now, the creator of the video has not spoken to the international press on the matter. Even the country where the snack was buried was not disclosed by the user.

11/08/2022 4:00 am

source: Noticias

- Advertisement -

Related Posts