Atlanta woman slurps down 48 oysters in viral TikTok — driving her date to ditch the tab

A woman went viral on TikTok for what some consider overindulging on a first date.

TikTok user EquanaB (@equanaaa) posted a video last week recounting a recent date she went on at Fontaine’s Oyster Bar in Atlanta, Georgia.

EquanaB admitted in the video that she agreed to meet her date for a drink after he had been texting her for "weeks."

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Since Fontaine’s has the "best oysters in Atlanta hands down," according to EquanaB, she couldn’t resist putting in a few orders of the shellfish.

EquanaB recorded herself slurping down a few oysters, commenting on how delicious they were.

"It was so good," she said in the video. "I was not expecting it to be that good."

Oyster tray after oyster tray, EquanaB doused the shells in lemon and hot sauce, taking down each one until she hit a total of 48.

"When the fourth [tray] came out, he was looking at me crazy," she said. 

"I didn’t give a f---. I’m like, ‘Baby, you invited me out – I’m gonna eat.’"

EquanaB proceeded to order more food — namely, an order of crab cakes and a side of potatoes.

"Everything was so good," she said.

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After the woman finished feasting, she noticed her date had gone to the bathroom without returning for 30 minutes.

Upon realizing he had skipped out on the bill, EquanaB paid for their tab, calling his maneuver "crazy."

EquanaB then texted her date, "Running out on a tab is crazyyy."

He replied, "I offered to take you out for drinks and you ordered all that food. I can cashapp the total for the drinks."

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The video currently has more than five million views on TikTok, with many users reacting to the eventful recap of the date.

"The audacity to ask WHATS NEXT after 50 oysters is INSANE," one TikTok user Kayla McRae commented.

"He literally said can we meet for drinks, then you proceeded to slurp down half the ocean," wrote another user, Willie Dixon IV.

TikTok user @tammysimmone commented that the "slurping alone" would have made her leave.

"I could barely LISTEN to you slurping, so I can imagine how bad it was to actually watch it," said another user, @warriormami6792.

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Fontaine’s Oyster Bar general manager Kelcey Flanagan told Rolling Stone last week that this type of oyster indulgence is "nothing new" for the restaurant — or the Atlanta area.

"I will say, it had been a minute since I had a single female eat that many," Flanagan said. 

"But then, you know, she was eating crackers and things like that. But yeah, she put it away. It’s pretty impressive."

Flanagan described EquanaB as a "real pleasant" customer and said she hopes she’s not "getting too much flak."

"People have been roasting this poor girl," she said.

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Man claims he’s ‘targeted’ by the same bird after multiple attacks on his way home from work

Oops, the bird did it again. 

A man claims that a territorial bird has singled him out after attacking him day after day on his route home from work. 

Alejandro Rios, 25, lives in Brisbane, Australia, and bikes home from his kitchen catering job every day, as SWNS reported. 

Rios said he was first pecked on the head by a dive-bombing magpie bird on Sept. 20 — and he thought it was an odd occurrence. 

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"The first time, I felt something knock at my head," he said. 

"I was a bit worried … thought a piece of fruit had fallen off a tree or someone had hit me."

Rios said he soon realized he had become the bird’s target after he was attacked multiple times on his same route home. 

"By the end, it was funny because I knew it was coming," he said to SWNS about recognizing that he would be hit more than once. 

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The kitchen worker, who is wearing a helmet in the video that captured the attack, said he makes sure the bird doesn’t hit his eyes. 

Rios also added zip ties to his helmet to ensure the bird won’t hurt his head in any capacity. 

Magpies are believed to remember faces, something Rios said he recalled when realizing what type of bird was going after him.

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Magpies will attack things they see as a threat; they recall faces and tend to keep memories for long periods of time, according to the Government of South Australia Department for Environment and Water. 

Rios said he originally thought the bird didn’t like him because he was riding a bike — but soon realized that couldn’t be true, as other people biked past him and were not attacked. 

Regardless, Rios said he considers the bird a friend even if the animal really doesn’t like him.

"It’s a bit of a friend and a bit of a nemesis," he said. 

"I love animals, so I want to say it’s my friend — but it really, really hates me."

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