strange but true
If cleanliness is next to piety, she fallen and dirty God.
Scrubbing the floors of public restrooms with caked-on brats, excrement, and filth is not a popular pastime for patrons of most big-box stores. But one anti-slop shopper is ringing in the new year by dedicating her free time and organizational expertise to beautifying the bathrooms, shelves, and aisles of high-traffic spots.
“I worked for free at a random target,” the online altruist known as @Ugh_Madison announced to an audience of over 4.3 million Instagram Reels watchers.
“I arrived at the office at 1pm and got ready for work,” continued the brunette, who is not a full-time employee of the retail giant. “We made sure to go above and beyond for our customers.”
In the click-worthy video, Madison, who won social media gold by devouring Golden Corral’s $12 free refill buffet for 12 hours, wears a crimson red top to restock Target and pick up leftover trash. You can see them throwing things away, organizing display tables, and helping customers. When searching for products. Neither store staff nor members of the security team questioned the Gen Z Good Samaritans who volunteered to work eight-hour shifts without compensation.
Madison lavished a few lucky bargain hunters with $20 gift cards and escorted them to the register to pay for their purchases in full.
and, toilet This saint left the toilet clean when picking up the tab for others.
“The toilet was really dirty,” says a modern-day Cinderella, wiping away wet toilet paper and trash in her cubicle with her bare hands. “But don’t worry,” she said, “I cleaned it.”
And this isn’t the first time this do-gooder has taken an innovative approach to a super-cluttered superstore.
In December, Madison spent nine hours cleaning and organizing Walmart ahead of Christmas rush.
She also brought her feng shui insight to public restrooms at Popeyes and Taco Bell restaurants, giving each fast-food restroom a holiday-themed look, including a plastic Christmas tree and a sign that reads “Have a nice poop.” It was decorated with a cheerful atmosphere.
Despite the naivety of her seemingly selfless demeanor, cybercritics were successful in finding fault with Madison’s market transformation.
“This is so disgusting,” exclaimed a creepy commentator.
“Girl, I know you didn’t pick up the tissues from the bathroom floor.” [with your] Bare hands,” said another.
“Why are people doing this for big corporations and not? Food pantries? Free clinics? Literally everywhere but big corporations,” an equally upset naysayer barked.
“I want this much money, this much free time, and this much boredom,” we started arguing again.
But fans of the store’s makeover praised the humanitarian’s handiwork, calling it “fascinating” and “amazing.”
Madison isn’t the only 20-something who gets a kick out of cleaning for free.
Auli Katarina, 29, a self-proclaimed “cleaning queen,” quit her full-time job to give free cleaning sponges to distressed homes around the world.
“I’m not afraid of dirt. Dirt is afraid of me,” boasted the blonde bombshell, who has amassed more than 10 million Clean Freak TikTok followers.
“The people I support are usually really suffering, but they want to make a difference, so I come to help them take the first step,” Katarina said in 2022 He told Southwest News Service in November.
“A lot of people will message me six months or a year later and show me their house, which is still beautiful,” she says. “that’s great.”
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