gorilla glue girl
Tessica Brown, known as Gorilla Glue Girl, is now a contestant on Food Network’s 'Worst Cooks in America: Viral Sensations.'
Let's take a look back at some of the viral moments that made us laugh, dance, and almost cry this year.
After an at-home dye job gone bad, the viral internet star recently traveled to La Fue Hair Clinic in Pasadena, California to get a combination of stem cell and platelet-rich plasma therapy.
Tessica Brown became known as "Gorilla Glue Girl" to the whole world back in early February after millions watched a viral video of her explaining how she couldn't remove the well-known adhesive from her hair.
Tessica Brown -- the woman who infamously went viral back in February when her TikTok warning others against the consequences she faced after using Gorilla Glue Spray as a substitute for Got2B spray -- is now coming out with a haircare line as per new reports.
Posted to her Instagram account earlier today, Tessica Brown a.k.a. Gorilla Glue Girl shared a clip showing off the status of her natural curls as they grow along their healthy hair journey in the aftermath of her viral incident.
Mistaking the nail glue in her purse for eye drops, Michigan woman Yacedrah Williams glued her eyes shut in a frightening accident last Thursday. In a recent interview, she shared how the unfortunate event happened and what lucky coincidence spared her vision.
The lumps Dr. Michael Obeng found in Tessica Brown's breasts are not cancerous.
#gorillagluegirl Tessica Brown addressed the harsh criticism she received from actress and Cocktails with Queens host LisaRaye McCoy. In the clip, Brown through some shade of her own by making a reference to McCoy's infamous role as stripper Diana "Diamond" Armstrong in the 1998 film, The Players Club.
Tessica Brown, aka, Gorilla Glue Girl, shared that trying to move forward after being the butt of jokes across the Internet (and even on Saturday Night Live), has been tough for her and her two little girls.
Almost two weeks since Tessica Brown went viral for styling her hair with Gorilla Glue spray instead of Got2B Blasting Freeze spray, the now-viral internet star shared via Instagram a new hairdo that's surprisingly similar to the one that started all the #GorillaGlueGirl madness.
Dr. Michael Obeng was able to deliver on his promise to successfully remove the adhesive from Gorilla Glue Girl's hair after it was stuck in there for more than a month.