I Tested Viral TikTok Cleaning Products
Summary
TLDRIn this entertaining video, Safiya explores the world of viral TikTok cleaning products, diving into the niche genre of smart home ASMR cleaning videos. She tracks down and tests out various gadgets like the Hobot window cleaner, a blue light ULV sprayer, a fruit and vegetable cleaning machine, and a collapsible mini washing machine. With the help of her friend Tyler, Safiya provides a hands-on review, revealing the effectiveness and quirks of each product. The video also uncovers the origins of these cleaning trends, which often come from China's booming smart home device market. Safiya's engaging personality and humorous commentary make this video a delightful watch for anyone interested in the latest cleaning tech and home organization hacks.
Takeaways
- đ„ The video is a review of viral cleaning products from TikTok, showcasing smart home ASMR cleaning trends.
- đ€ Safiya, the host, investigates the phenomenon of smart home gadgets featured in cleaning videos on TikTok, which are mesmerizing and feature niche devices.
- đ The video includes a sponsored segment for Opera, a browser with features like Tab Island and a built-in AI tool named Aria, which is praised for productivity and organization.
- đ The cleaning products reviewed are sourced from websites like Ulikefit and SmartHome999, which are suspected to be dropshipping sites with questionable practices.
- đŹ A series of tests are conducted on the products, including a blue light sprayer, a fruit and vegetable cleaner, a collapsible mini washing machine, and a smart window cleaner.
- đ§ The blue light sprayer is tested for its disinfecting capabilities using water and its effectiveness is confirmed through a Petri dish bacteria test.
- đ The fruit and vegetable cleaner uses electrolysis to purportedly remove pesticides and is tested with pesticide detecting strips for its efficacy.
- đ The collapsible mini washing machine is tested by washing a stained shirt and compared to a shirt washed in a regular washing machine, showing comparable results.
- đȘ The smart window cleaner, resembling a Roomba for windows, is tested on a balcony window and shows the ability to clean autonomously but with some limitations.
- đ The video uncovers that many of the cleaning product videos on TikTok may be sourced from the same content, with repeated shots and narratives.
- đ The popularity of smart home devices in China is highlighted, with the country being the largest market for such gadgets, possibly driving the creation of these cleaning videos.
Q & A
What is the main focus of the video?
-The main focus of the video is to test out some TikTok viral cleaning products and explore the smart home ASMR cleaning trend.
What is the role of the robot cleaning the window in the video?
-The robot cleaning the window serves as a humorous introduction and is not the main focus of the product testing.
How does the video describe TikTok's algorithm?
-The video describes TikTok's algorithm as adaptive, capable of funneling users into different content silos with a simple interaction.
What are some of the unusual TikTok subcultures mentioned in the video?
-Some of the unusual TikTok subcultures mentioned include cat Tok, LOTR Tok, head spot Tok, croissant Tok, and Edgar Allen Poe Tok.
What is the 'smart home ASMR cleaning Tok' genre?
-The 'smart home ASMR cleaning Tok' genre consists of videos where the protagonist uses niche smart devices to clean their highly organized apartment, often with a focus on the sounds (ASMR) and the novelty of the gadgets.
What is the purpose of the Opera browser sponsorship mentioned in the video?
-The purpose of the Opera browser sponsorship is to promote Opera as a faster, safer, and smarter internet browser that can help keep the viewer's tabs and workspaces clean and organized.
What features of the Opera browser does the video highlight?
-The video highlights features such as Tab Island for grouping tabs, workspaces for multiple windows, built-in VPN, ad blocker, music apps, floating YouTube videos, and the AI tool Aria.
What is the significance of the blue light water sprayer cleaner in the video?
-The blue light water sprayer cleaner is a popular product in the smart home cleaning genre, purportedly used for rapid disinfection of various surfaces, including oneself, pets, and possibly even a chicken.
What was the outcome of the window cleaner robot (Hobot) test in the video?
-The Hobot window cleaner robot was able to cling to the window and navigate up and down by itself, but it did not seem as smart as a Roomba and required a second pass to clean up paint smearing.
How did the video address the origin of the cleaning gadgets shown in TikTok videos?
-The video suggests that many of the cleaning gadgets originate from China, with some accounts possibly aggregating content from the same source, and the popularity of smart home devices in China contributing to the trend.
Outlines
đ„ Introduction to TikTok's Viral Cleaning Products
The video begins with an upbeat intro song and a quirky scene of a robot cleaning a window, setting a playful tone. The host introduces the topic: testing TikTok's viral cleaning products. TikTok is described as a diverse platform with a powerful algorithm that can lead viewers down specific content 'rabbit holes'. The host confesses to being fascinated by 'smart home ASMR cleaning' videos, which feature organized apartments and niche cleaning gadgets. The allure of these videos lies in their mesmerizing sounds and the constant unveiling of innovative cleaning devices. The host feels compelled to investigate these products, possibly as a civic duty, and to determine their real-world effectiveness. Before diving into the main content, the host gives a shoutout to the video's sponsor, Opera, praising its features that enhance productivity and organization online.
đ The Quest for ASMR Cleaning Gadgets
The host discusses the difficulty of tracking down the gadgets featured in the ASMR cleaning videos on TikTok, which often come from China. They mention several accounts that post such content, including Douyin House and Eevan Home, but note the challenge of identifying the original creators. The host expresses intrigue about the narrative structures often used in these videos, which may involve scenarios like an unexpected visit from a mother-in-law or secretive late-night cleaning sprees. The video then shifts to the practical aspect of sourcing these gadgets, with mentions of websites like Ulikefit and SmartHome999. The host outlines the selection process for the products they plan to test, focusing on cleaning gadgets that are frequently featured in the videos.
đ Unboxing and Testing TikTok's Cleaning Gadgets
The host presents the first of the cleaning gadgets: a high-tech window cleaner named Hobot. Despite the hefty price and some initial apprehension due to the product's size and weight, the excitement is palpable. The unboxing reveals a sleek device with an app for operation, and the host humorously names it 'Hobert'. After charging the device for 24 hours, they conduct a test by dirtying a balcony window with washable paint. The Hobot is put to the test, and while it doesn't clean as efficiently as expected on the first attempt, it shows promise and successfully navigates the window on its own. The host concludes that the Hobot is not perfect but does a satisfactory job of cleaning the window after some manual adjustments.
đš Testing the ULV Sprayer and Vegetable Cleaner
The host moves on to test the ULV sprayer, a device that emits a fine mist with blue light purported to have disinfecting properties. Despite some skepticism, the host finds the sprayer's function to work well and even conducts a Petri dish bacteria test to evaluate its effectiveness. The results suggest that the sprayer, even when filled with just water, can have some disinfecting effect. Next, the host tests the vegetable cleaner, a device that bubbles and smokes when submerged in water with fruits or vegetables. The device claims to clean through electrolysis, producing hydroxyl ions to break down impurities. The host uses pesticide detecting strips to test its effectiveness and finds that while it may not be a miracle cleaner, it does seem to remove some pesticides.
đ Testing the Collapsible Mini Washing Machine
The collapsible mini washing machine is the next product to be tested. The host compares its performance to a regular washing machine by dirtying two shirts with ketchup, paint, and dirt, then washing one in each machine. The mini machine, despite its small size and lack of a rinse cycle, manages to clean the shirt to a comparable degree as the full-sized machine, albeit with some residual dampness and sudsiness. The host acknowledges the mini machine's portability and convenience but notes its limitations in terms of capacity and rinsing capability.
đ Investigating the Origins and Quality of Viral Gadgets
The host delves into the origins of the viral cleaning gadgets, noting the prevalence of similar clips and plot points across different accounts, suggesting that many posts may be sourced from the same content. They discuss the possibility that these videos are pulled from Douyin, the Chinese version of TikTok, and highlight the growing trend of smart home appliances in China, which may have contributed to the creation and popularity of these cleaning vlogs. The host expresses uncertainty about the quality and authenticity of the products they purchased online and decides against buying more without knowing their true origin and quality. The video concludes with a humorous reference to an upcoming visit from the host's mother-in-law and the cleaning challenges it presents.
đ Conclusion and Call to Action
In the concluding paragraph, the host thanks the viewers for watching and encourages them to like and subscribe for more content. They provide social media handles and a link to their merch website, teasing the possibility of future videos. The host's tone remains light-hearted and engaging, maintaining the video's overall playful and entertaining vibe.
Mindmap
Keywords
đĄTikTok viral cleaning products
đĄASMR cleaning Tok
đĄSmart Home Gadgets
đĄULV sprayer
đĄHobot window cleaner
đĄCollapsible mini washing machine
đĄSmartHome999
đĄPetri dish bacteria test
đĄElectrolysis
đĄDouyin
Highlights
Testing out TikTok viral cleaning products and exploring the smart home ASMR cleaning trend.
Safiya's fascination with niche smart devices used for cleaning every nook and cranny in highly organized apartments.
The video dives into the world of 'cleanTok' and its mesmerizing effect with ASMR elements and innovative gadgets.
Safiya's journey to track down and test these viral cleaning gadgets to see if they live up to their hype.
Introduction of Opera as the video's sponsor, a browser with features like Tab Island and workspaces for productivity.
The exploration of the origin of these cleaning videos, which seem to come predominantly from China.
Analysis of the narrative tropes often used in these cleaning videos to engage viewers.
Safiya's quest to understand who is making these videos and the potential reasons behind their creation.
The revelation that many of the cleaning gadgetsè§éąäžćșç°çäș§ć䌌äčéœæ„èȘćäžäžȘæș怎, suggesting a trend in content creation.
Testing the blue light water sprayer cleaner, a popular product for disinfecting various surfaces and objects.
Experimenting with the smoking/bubbling produce cleaner to disinfect fruits, vegetables, and even live seafood.
Trying out the collapsible mini washing machine designed for small spaces and convenience.
The use of a smart window cleaner, akin to a Roomba for windows, to clean high-up windows autonomously.
Results of the Petri dish bacteria test to evaluate the effectiveness of the blue light sprayer.
Chemistry behind the fruit and vegetable cleaning machine and its use of electrolysis to remove impurities.
Assessment of the mini washing machine's performance compared to a standard washing machine.
Reflection on the authenticity and quality of the smart home gadgets purchased online for the experiment.
Conclusion and thoughts on the future of smart home devices and the cleaning vlogs that feature them.
Transcripts
(upbeat music)
âȘ This is Safiya's new intro song âȘ
- Hello, friends, and welcome to another video.
This week, I'm gonna be testing out
some TikTok viral cleaning products.
Pay no attention to the robot cleaning the window.
Now, TikTok is a pretty crazy place.
Beyond being the home of the hamster rave,
the year-long cruise and founding father
bachelorette parties, it also has a very adaptive algorithm
that with the flick of a finger,
can funnel you into different silos
of content on the platform.
Like cat Tok, LOTR Tok,
head spot Tok, croissant Tok, Edgar Allen Poe Tok,
et cetera, et cetera.
And as some of you guys might know,
I watch a lot of content.
When it can be theoretically excused
as part of my job, it's very easy to hop down a rabbit hole
of "Bridgerton" memes or "SpongeBob" cosplays.
And a Tok that I've fallen in and out
of over the past couple of years actually
is this bizarre smart home ASMR cleaning Tok,
which is a genre of videos,
sometimes with characters and narratives and sometimes not
where the protagonist goes around
their highly organized apartment
and uses very niche specific smart devices
to clean every nook and cranny.
This is an offshoot from just normal clean Tok.
There are of course cleaning products
that go viral just generally on TikTok,
but the videos we're talking about here
are home optimizing, thousands of tiny packages,
ASMR cleaning Tok.
And I find these videos to be absolutely mesmerizing.
Not only do I enjoy the clicking
and clacking of the ASMR elements,
but I'm also always enthralled
by what gadget they're gonna pull out next
because it's always something
I've never even thought of before.
It's a shoe dryer, a toothpaste dispenser,
a crab disinfector, a window Roomba.
And after a while I realized
I wasn't the only person on this side of TikTok.
- She's taking the batteries out the door
so he can't get back in, and now she's going on Amazon.
- And it could be my civic duty as a YouTuber
to investigate this phenomenon as best as I can.
- Okay, now that is brilliant, what the hell does that do?
It's a washing machine?
- And see if I can actually track down
some of these gadgets and test them out
to see if they're really as satisfying as they seem,
or if they even do anything at all.
All right, so I think it's time
to get us some cleaning products and clean,
before TikTok gets banned for good.
But before we head off, I do wanna give a quick shout out
to the sponsor of this video
who helps keep my tabs and workspaces clean, Opera.
The faster, safer and smarter internet browser
that you should probably try.
Now, I've been using Opera for a little while now
and I honestly really like it.
There are a lot of cool features that Opera has
that make me feel like I'm operating
a little control room on my computer.
And since I do almost all of my work
on this laptop, from writing to researching to editing,
I can honestly say I feel more productive
and organized using Opera.
As one of the leading tab openers in the world.
I love Opera's Tab Island feature,
which groups together similar tabs
and allows you to collapse and expand them.
And also their workspace feature,
which allows you to have multiple different windows
that you can flip between,
like this is my TikTok Cleaning Products Workspace.
This is my laser hair regrowth helmet workspace.
This is my Sixers merch workspace, RIP Tyler.
And Opera also helps optimize your internet experience
with widgets like a built-in VPN,
an ad blocker, music apps, and floating YouTube videos.
As well as opera's own built-in AI tool Aria,
which can be a great resource to start your research from
because not only can you ask Aria questions directly,
you can also highlight any term you see online
and ask Aria what it means.
And it turns out Aria also thinks it's a good idea
to disinfect your crabs, or at least wash them.
The more you know.
So if you wanna support our channel
and check out Opera, it's totally free.
Just use my link in the description below
to download Opera today.
So with that, thanks again to Opera
and now back to cleaning.
Now I've been seeing these ASMR cleaning videos on TikTok
for at least a couple of years
and it's taken us about six months to track down,
order, receive, and test some of these gadgets.
So admittedly, we may be a bit late to the trend here,
but having spent the past few months screen recording
and gathering these videos,
I can confirm that there is a lot to unpack here.
Like there are a lot of tropes that the genre has,
which I find very intriguing.
First off, a lot of these videos do have
some kind of narrative that they start off with at least,
I guess to try and explain why you would need
to go on a cleaning spree.
For example, the protagonist might be sitting around
eating sunflower seeds and bam,
her rich mother-in-law is unexpectedly outside
and she's about to come upstairs,
and the apartment better be clean
by the time she gets there.
Or the protagonist is very angry
at her spouse for whatever reason,
maybe she found his ex's hair on him
using a lint roller.
And so to get back at him, she spends a bunch of money
and orders a ton of cleaning gadgets,
which she then opens and uses to clean their apartment.
Or the protagonist secretly has ordered a bunch of packages
and doesn't want her spouse to know about it.
So she has to cut off a piece of her hair,
sneak out of bed, and open the packages
and clean the apartment in the dead of night.
I think this is an angry mother-in-law
watching disapprovingly.
A lot of these videos are also framed
as just simple nighttime or morning routines,
like a simple, "This is what I do when I get home from work
to unwind, unbox a thousand packages,
clean, cook, use a foot bath, et cetera."
But even in these simple routine videos,
there are often absurd details included
to catch the viewer's attention
and drive comments and engagement.
For example, sometimes it's snowing in the hallway
of the protagonist's apartment building
or a rat runs across the screen
or there's money in the washing machine,
or say, the protagonist is a slender lady,
but for a quick shot, her leg becomes a hairy man's leg.
Top comment on that video, leg. Hook, line, and sinker.
So they use almost 5-Minute Craftian methods of seduction
to really lure you into their optimized cleaning world.
But after watching at this point, dozens of these videos,
my next questions were who is making these videos and why?
And also, how do I buy any of these things?
Now we did find these videos posted across
many accounts on TikTok,
and although there are a few repeat offenders
like Douyin House, Eevan Home, Household Goodies 5,
amongst others, that doesn't make it super clear
who exactly is making these videos
and where they're coming from.
And it doesn't help that like with many
content aggregator-type accounts on TikTok,
sometimes these accounts disappear
and reappear based on some of the account names
like Douyin House and Your Asian Home.
And text on screen and spoken lines in the videos,
we can deduce that a vast majority
of these videos come from China.
Douyin is basically Chinese TikTok.
We did find out a little bit more
about where exactly these videos come from
and the greater trend of why they might be being made,
but I'll save that for a bit later on in the video.
But in our quest to figure out how to actually get
some of these gadgets,
thankfully at least a few of these accounts
did have storefronts that they linked to
that had some of these products.
Some of them don't and seem just to be posting
this type of content for the views,
since it's a pretty popular genre.
But we were directed through the accounts Smart Home Gadgets
and Smart Home Toy Beta to the website's Ulikefit
and SmartHome999, which did seem to offer
a fair amount of the gadgets we had seen.
So that was a place to start at least.
And when deciding which products to actually get and test
from the basically hundreds of gadgets
featured in these videos,
we did try and take stock
of which products showed up the most.
Now, not all of these gadgets are just cleaning products.
There are a fair amount of them
that are like professional organization items
like shoe racks, lazy Susans and grain organizers.
Some that are smart decor
like the Bluetooth charging bedside table
and some that are cooking gadgets,
like self-cooking pots and steaming towers.
But I've always felt that the cleaning products
were the real foundation of this smart home genre.
So we focused on those,
and the first product we ended up pursuing
was this blue light water sprayer cleaner thing.
That's what we're calling it for now.
Now this genre of light cleaning products is very popular.
A common one is what looks like
a UV sanitizing utensil holder.
And there's also this illuminated
contact lens cleaner case.
But this just general blue light sprayer thingy
is featured a lot across these videos,
seemingly as a way to rapidly disinfect things and yourself
and pets and maybe a chicken.
I definitely understand the principle of wanting to be clean
inside of your house,
but I've never seen a disinfecting gun before,
so I was interested to try it out.
And we did find a listing for what looked like
one of these sprayer guns on the site SmartHome999.
Now though SmartHome999 is kind of a nice
and clean-looking website.
It does have some questionable internet retailer red flags.
You've got a lot of pretty big sales going on.
There are absolutely no reviews,
and this flame humidifier and aroma diffuser
is a pretty notoriously drop shipped product,
as I bought one from a TikTok ad like two years ago
and it's definitely not worth $40.
So although I would say that the items on this site
do not seem suspiciously cheap,
they may just be inflating the prices.
So though I would say to you, proceed with caution,
for the purposes of this video, it's full steam ahead.
So we went for the portable electric ULV sprayer
with blue light steam cleaner gun for 32.99.
Which apparently is supposed to come with
nano atomization disinfection technology
and six blue bacteriostatic lamps
which sounds pretty good.
So with that on the way, onto product number two.
Now for our next product,
we kind of had to get this smoking/bubbling produce cleaner.
This is an extremely popular product
across all of the videos that I've seen.
It's an almost inexplicable device
that you throw in with fruits and vegetables
and also live crabs and oysters,
I think to disinfect them as they soak.
This isn't necessarily a whole family of products,
though there are some smoking eyeglass cleaners we've seen,
but this specific product is so heavily featured
and it jumps out to viewers so much,
as you can see by these commenters
who are pretty mystified by it,
that it felt like we had to try it out.
It's also a good intersection of cleaning gadget
and cooking gadget.
You're still cleaning, but it's for food.
And there are a couple of different models of this item,
but we were drawn to the one
that looks like a Bluetooth speaker.
And we were able to find a listing
for what looked like it,
a fruit and vegetable cleaning machine
on SmartHome999 for 75.99.
Which is pretty expensive, especially for a gadget
that remains a complete mystery to me,
but we are gonna try and figure it out.
For now, I was happy to see
that it says it does not destroy food taste and nutrition,
which is always a good thing in my book.
So with this item added to the haul,
next up is the collapsible mini washing machine.
Now there are a lot of collapsible items
featured in these videos, besides shelves and racks
that kind of unfurl and stack.
There's also specifically a number
of collapsible mops and buckets and collapsible foot baths.
And a hugely popular item in these videos
is this collapsible mini washing machine.
They love this thing.
It's almost comedic, like as their mother-in-law
is ascending the stairs
or as their long-term crush is outside waiting for them,
they pull out this machine and start washing some socks.
But honestly, I do kind of see the appeal.
There are plenty of small apartments out there
that don't have laundry machines in-unit
and if this thing works, it could buy you some time
between laundromat visits.
So I'm gonna try it, and we did find a listing for one
on the website, Ulikefit.
Now compared to SmartHome999, Ulikefit's graphic design
and website layout is a little more AliExpress-ish,
a little less sleek and clean,
a little more throwing everything at you.
It does also have a wide sweeping super sale
across the entire website, which is a little questionable,
and a variation on the fake fire humidifier for sale.
This is a volcano humidifier, which is a red flag for me.
So once again, I'd proceed with caution.
But for us, we're diving right in.
So we picked up the portable foldable washing machine
with spin dryer automatic mini
underwear sock washing machine with Centrifuge for 65.99.
The reviews on this product do seem pretty positive
and they do also note
that you could take this on a business trip.
So I'm excited.
I was also hoping to pick up this crazy inflatable
drying bag, but after looking for a while,
we couldn't find it anywhere.
So our final product is a little bit of a wild card,
because it itself doesn't appear that often in these videos,
but there are a lot of mops, brooms, and mini vacuums
and a fair amount of smart or automatic products
like self-bagging trash cans, and self-stirring mugs.
So we felt like this one could be a good pick.
This is the smart window cleaner.
It is only touched upon very briefly,
so I couldn't get a huge sense of its capabilities
from what we saw, but I assume it's kind of like a Roomba,
but for your window.
And to be honest guys,
I just really wanted to try this thing.
I mean, it's pictured here being left to clean
this presumably high up window
with a beautiful view all on its own,
which seems like a big job.
So in order to find this product,
we actually did a reverse Google image search
using a screenshot from this video
and we're able to find what we think
is the same product on German Amazon.
This is the EZICLEAN Hobot 388 windscreen washer
and it is the most expensive item in this video
by quite a lot, at 400 euros.
And thankfully we were able to get it
despite what the screen recording implies.
So here's to hoping it doesn't fall off our window
and kill someone 'cause that would be bad.
So with that, we have our four TikTok
viral cleaning products,
or the closest things to them that we could find,
which I think altogether touch on
most of the types of products that you see in these videos.
Plus one smart window Roomba.
So the next time you see me, I'll have my haul.
All right, so many, many TikToks watched
and items reverse image searched later,
we have our haul, people.
We have four TikTok viral cleaning products here
to test, to try, and to see what's up.
There's also a secret one back here in case we have time.
If not, you'll never see it again.
It was cleaning slime and it exploded in the mail.
But the first product we're gonna be unboxing
is the Hobot window cleaner.
Now, as you guys remember,
this was our most expensive item by far.
- [Tyler] Oh damn!
- Oh, this bodes well.
And also our largest and heaviest package that arrived.
The electronics test, heavy equals quality.
And even though we ordered it via German Amazon,
it only took about two weeks to get to us.
Oh, oh, that's pretty sizable. This is as big as my head.
Now the instructions that it came with
were completely in French.
All right, we've got some Google Translate happening.
Let's see if we can understand these instructions.
For windows without a balcony,
a warning zone must be provided on the floor
to prevent people from approaching it.
Oh yeah, they do think it's dangerous.
Minus the potential peril to passerby.
It seems that you operate the Hobot through an app
and you do have to charge it for about 24 hours
before it's ready to go.
So I guess we're gonna have to wait for a while
before we can see how smart it truly is.
Is it more window Roomba or window Ken?
- [Tyler] I'm not sure if this has any thoughts.
- [Safiya] Yeah, no.
(both laughing)
- [Tyler] No thoughts.
- [Safiya] All looks, no thoughts.
- [Tyler] It's a himbo.
- It's a himbot.
So 24 hours later we were all charged up,
downloaded and ready to go.
And after breathing life into our Hobot.
(excited gasping)
Lift off.
- [Tyler] Does this fly like a drone?
- [Safiya] Yeah.
And also giving him a name.
What should we call him?
- Hobert. - Hobert?
Oh, that's cute, he's like Robert, but a ho.
(Safiya laughing)
We needed to design a test for him
to see what his cleaning prowess really was.
So we decided to dirty up our balcony window
with some washable paint to see what he could do.
- [Tyler] Okay, there you go.
- It looks like something I wanna get rid of.
I agree with that.
Now we do have a balcony,
which means we probably have less of a need
for a Hobot in the first place,
but it also means that we thankfully don't need
to worry about Hobot falling off the window
and dropping onto people.
That being said, there is a safety carabiner and cable,
so it does have a few precautionary features.
Then you just need to add some cleaning liquid
onto Hobot's pads before you place him on the window
and let him do his thing.
And he should suck himself to the door.
- [Tyler] He can suck himself.
- [Safiya] All right, let me go get my phone.
Now, right off the bat, I think Hobot passed the first test
of doing anything at all.
Is he going?
(excited cheering)
Hobert, my love. Oh my God, oh my God, he's walking!
- [Tyler] He's alive!
- [Safiya] As he did successfully cling to the window
and navigate up and down it by himself.
Oh my God, look at him!
From what we can tell, he isn't quite as smart as a Roomba
as it seems like he doesn't sense where the dirt is,
but rather has a set path that he wants to clean on.
And if he encounters the edge of the window,
he just goes back the other way.
Oh, I saw a squirt, he did a squirt, did you see that?
He's like a squid.
And even though the app does have
a directional control panel,
he doesn't totally listen to it,
but he does squirt on command.
Ready, spray! Spray!
Unfortunately on Hobot's first pass,
he did sort of smear a fair amount of the paint
around the window.
He thinks he's done, the answer is he's not.
So he gave him a fresh set of cleaning pads
to see if he could do better in a round two.
I may have over sprayed him
with the cleaning liquid here though,
as he seemed to have a hard time getting traction.
Come on, Hobert. Is he treading water right now?
And actually almost slipped.
Oh, oh, oh.
Which is probably one of the ways
this thing could be dangerous.
He is pretty sopping wet.
I didn't give him a shot in hell.
But after resetting him
with a normal amount of cleaning liquid,
Hobot did a pretty good job
cleaning up the paint smearing mess.
Oh, he's doing better already.
- [Tyler] He's zooming.
Oh yeah, he's in the top, he's in the top.
- [Safiya] Unfortunately there were a few smudges
near the edges of the window
and particularly one in the top-left corner
that Hobert seemed to want to ignore
when left to his own devices.
- [Tyler] Oh, he's not gonna get it.
- [Safiya] So I lifted him up and put him right next to it.
Here it goes, here it goes. - Come on!
- [Safiya] And then he finally got it.
(excited cheering)
Okay, pretty good. - Oh, I'll take it,
I'll take it. - I think it's pretty good.
Nobody puts Hobot in the corner except me
if I draw on the corner.
So is Hobot the smartest robot out there? No.
That'll do, bot that'll do.
But I do have to say that the window now looks really clean
even if it took a second pass.
So I'm decently happy with the Hobot.
Was it perfect? No.
But did it clean this door automatically? Mostly yes.
There is always the worry
that he's smarter than he's letting on.
- [Tyler] Oh shit, he's trying to open the door!
- [Safiya] He's trying to get in.
- [Tyler] He's like a velociraptor!
- [Safiya] But we'll just have to watch out for that.
All right, so next up I have the ULV sprayer.
Now this was our first product from SmartHome999,
and it did only take about 10 days for it to get here,
but unfortunately for it and us...
I have to say right off the bat, it is a light package.
There were a few drop shipping-y red flags.
- [Tyler] That's never a good sign
when it's the cardboard box, the outline.
(both laughing)
- [Safiya] And there he is with absolutely no fanfare,
not a piece of tissue paper to be found.
There were no labels, no instructions,
nothing at all in there besides the product itself.
And a single universal charger.
- [Tyler] That is a bad sign.
- That's, yeah, that's the Wish signature.
It's like Zorro Z, right?
But the product did at least turn on,
just firing off some warning shots.
- [Tyler] Cleaning the Holo Taco.
- [Safiya] So that's one box already checked.
And now that it's on,
we can see if this thing is just a placebo light
that just looks cool
or if it actually does disinfect anything at all.
Because right now I'm not so sure.
Regardless of whether the answer is yes or no,
I will be spraying everything in this house.
And after filling the sprayer bottle up
with some distilled water, I was ready to roll.
I'm locked and loaded, baby.
- [Tyler] Oh! Did you spray me?
- [Safiya] And can confirm that the spraying function
does seem to work pretty well too.
Oh! Oh yeah, okay. It is spraying, my hand is wet.
I think from a little further away. It's a little finer.
But yeah, it's misting.
This is the maiden of the mist.
I am the maiden of the mist.
And just for good measure.
Hold on, before we do anything,
I did do like they do in the videos and hosed myself down.
This is how you do it, right? I'm clean!
It's wet over here.
- You're soaked. - It's wet over here.
The floor is wet.
And I did also spray Tyler in the face a couple of times.
(loud spraying)
Like that? - We're soaked.
- Although it turns out
that looking straight into the blue lights
is not really advised,
so maybe don't try spraying people in the face with it.
All right, let's do some tests.
Can confirm water erupts,
can confirm light is on.
The question is does that matter?
So in order to see if this thing did anything at all,
we decided to set up a Petri dish bacteria test
on a nearby door handle.
This is one that adjoins our parking garage.
So there are quite a few hands
that touch it regularly that could have germs on them.
Oh yeah, look at that curve.
People be touching this curve, man.
With the idea that we would create three Petri dishes.
One with a swab of the uncleansed door handle,
germed from normal daily use.
Then one with a swab from the door handle
after spraying it with our blue light sprayer.
What do you think?
- Pretty sprayed! - Pretty spray-sprayed.
This did obviously make the handle a bit wet,
so we had to wait for it to dry before swabbing it
and putting our specimen on the after dish.
Then we did one dish with a control swab
from the door handle after cleansing it with a Clorox wipe.
It's supposed to kill 99.9% of viruses and bacteria, people.
Which I feel like represents a pretty normal level
of household disinfecting.
And after swabbing all of our swabs
on our three Petri dishes,
we stuck them in a special incubator,
which is supposed to help grow whatever bacteria
has been collected on the Petri dishes
over the next five days.
Ta-da, it's just me and my tiny humidifying cabinet
just hanging out, growing mold.
So we can see roughly how much bacteria
was collected after each treatment.
Now how this ULV spraying machine
is actually supposed to work is kind of threefold.
First off, ULV refers to the ultra low volume fog
that the sprayer emits, which is a very fine mist
that is meant to be able to spread,
cover and disinfect every inch of a specific area.
Second, after looking into it a bit,
it does seem that people think that blue light
at certain wavelengths can kill bacteria.
And the third fold is where we may have messed up a bit,
because based on this part of the original listing
and the fact that these sprayers were sprayed
so liberally on people, on pets, on this chicken,
we assumed that the liquid inside was just water.
But after asking Tyler's mom
to help translate this text on the actual box itself
and finding a few similar products on the Western market,
it seems that they might want you to fill the bottle up
with some kind of disinfectant,
which would make this just a disinfectant sprayer,
which probably should work.
But surprisingly enough,
we were actually able to get a decent result
just using blue light and water.
I see a little something there,
and I see a lack of something there.
As you can see here are the before spray, after spray
and control swabs of our Petri dish test.
And we were able to replicate the results
on a different handle.
So it kind of seemed to work for us,
but it probably would work even better
with some disinfectant inside.
I probably would still lean towards
getting a more legit version, seeing how this one arrived.
And for my purposes, I'm gonna stick with water for now,
just so I can keep spraying Tyler in the face with it,
as long as he keeps his eyes closed.
All right, so next up I have the vegetable cleaner.
Now this fruit and vegetable cleaning machine
once again came from SmartHome999,
and took about two weeks to arrive.
Let me in. Ta-da.
It's the DL-001 purifier, people. Donlim.
And thankfully, right off the bat,
it felt much more substantial than the ULV sprayer.
The box was bigger with some serious branding on it.
It came with a whole set of instructions
and the device itself came out looking
almost exactly like what it looked like in the videos.
It does have a little heft to it.
So it feels like there's something in there.
- [Tyler] Okay, what's inside of it?
- [Safiya] That.
It does have some weird coils going on on the inside.
It's kind of giving "Atlantis," right?
But after translating the instructions,
they don't really elaborate further
on how it's supposed to work,
and rather just basically say to charge your Donlim
and then stick it in some water
with some fruits or vegetables.
We chose strawberries because I was hungry.
You mess with the Don in the morning,
you sleep with the strawberries in the afternoon, right?
(both laughing)
Isn't that how it goes?
Now this device is obviously supposed to clean
and disinfect whatever you put it in water with.
Introducing this cast of beautiful berries.
Strawberries are going for a swim.
It's a witch, it's a witch!
And when we dropped in our Donlim...
All right, this is how they do it.
You press it, it's on, it goes in.
- Oh! - Oh shit!
- [Safiya] It did immediately start bubbling and smoking
just like in the videos.
So visually it was doing something.
Dude, it is releasing a mystery mist.
It is releasing a mystery mist.
But trying to figure out how it was supposed to be cleaning
was a little more difficult.
So bear with me here, as I attempt to explain some chemistry
as I have not taken a chemistry class since 2009.
So this thing claims that it cleanses items
through a process of electrolysis,
which roughly means when you break down
water molecules using electricity.
One of the byproducts of this process is OH negative,
AKA negatively charged hydroxyl ions,
which are then supposed to cling onto
and help break down bacteria,
pesticides, and other impurities.
It's done, it stopped misting. I think that's it.
Now it is also hard to figure out
how to test if that's true or not.
For this first round, we couldn't say for sure
if the strawberries were any cleaner
by just looking at them.
They look a little cleaner, but it could just be water.
Or tasting them.
It's good.
Do I taste less pesticides?
- [Tyler] It has less of that trademark Monsanto flavor.
Oh, I guess they sue hard, don't they?
- [Safiya] But we did figure out
another method to test out the Don.
So we found this video online
where someone was using these pesticide detecting strips
to try and see if a similar device to ours did anything.
So we attempted to recreate his experiment using our Donlim.
From our initial testing, these pesticide strips
are kind of finicky.
We had a hard time proving consistently
that before cleaning, our veggies
had pesticides on them to start.
So in order to make this as pure
of an experiment as we could,
we decided to buy an over-the-counter pesticide from Lowe's
and spray a head of lettuce ourselves.
And after spraying and letting the lettuce dry,
the strips did confirm that this lettuce
had pesticides on it.
Can confirm we put pesticides on there.
So now it was time to see if we could get them off.
For this, we tried three methods of cleaning our lettuce.
First was just a normal rinse underwater.
For context, this is what I normally do.
Second was a control like our Clorox wipe.
This veggie wash is supposed to help remove pesticides,
dirt and wax from your fruits and veggies.
But I've never tried it before, so I guess we'll see.
And third was our Donlim,
who took a little bath with our lettuce,
followed by a little agitation and rinse.
And after all of our lettuce slivers
were swiped on the strips,
our results were that surprisingly
all three methods did remove some pesticides.
It looks like rinsing with just water did remove
a fair amount, but potentially not all,
as the blue mark here is a little less strong.
Yeah, kind of blue.
But the veggie wash and the Donlim strips
seem to be quite clean,
as their blue dots were very pigmented.
- [Tyler] That's blue, baby!
- [Safiya] I would say these two results are pretty similar.
I think the Donlim strip may just have been wetter.
Now obviously this is just one test,
so we can't say for sure for sure
that this thing is just like a miracle pesticide remover.
We did do a silly extra test
where we just let the don lim soak with some lettuce
and compared it to lettuce just soaking by itself
to see if the water left behind
would look any different afterwards.
And the Donlim water did look ever so slightly foggier.
Honestly, it looks a little foggier.
It does look a little foggier, honestly.
But not way dirtier or anything like that.
So it's not like it cleaned off
way more debris than just soaking.
So I think our results are that the Donlim
does seem to clean and remove some pesticides
from at least lettuce, but so does this veggie wash
and to a certain degree, so does just using water.
So is it magic? No, but it does seem to do something.
All right, and then next up
is the collapsible laundry unit thing.
Now our portable foldable washing machine came from Ulikefit
and it also took about two weeks to arrive.
The packaging says AliExpress.
- [Tyler] Yeah, classic demon pants.
- [Safiya] But my heart says there's some promise here.
The box itself was big and semi-branded.
Oh, it's not just an unmarked cardboard box.
There were a fair amount
of graphics and text on there,
so it wasn't totally nondescript, but no company name.
So that's always a bit of an eyebrow-raiser.
But I was holding out hope that this thing would be good.
Oh, there are suction cups on the bottom.
Because honestly, I see a lot of potential.
- [Tyler] It's getting tall!
- Ta-da! It's pretty big.
Time to take it to the kitchen and try and use it.
Oh my God, I just hit myself in the face.
All right, should we go?
So to test this bad boy out,
we decided to purposefully dirty a couple of shirts
and then wash one in our mini machine
and one in our actual washing machine.
This is like the Tide commercial thing, right?
Like, "Here's the grass stain."
So I started off with some sprays of ketchup.
Imagine this, you're eating a fry, things go south.
It's traveling down my chest!
- [Tyler] You're speaking my language.
- [Safiya] My name's Tyler Williams,
I can't eat a single fry without this happening to me.
Followed by a smattering of washable paint.
- [Tyler] They love that in those commercials.
The kid just hand printing the mom.
- [Safiya] Yeah, that's pretty good, right?
- [Tyler] This is pretty good.
- [Safiya] And then finally I added on
some handfuls of dirt.
This is a new medium for me.
Lemme see, how do I work with this medium?
Now to give them a fighting chance,
I did also add a little stain treatment to the shirts,
but I did make sure to add equal amounts
to keep it a fair test.
And shirt A then entered
our apartment washing machine on normal.
And in.
And shirt B entered our mini foldable guy.
Ready? Cheers, in she goes.
And after just a teeny bit of detergent,
we turned it on to a 10 minute standard washing cycle.
- [Tyler] There it goes!
(Safiya laughing) - Oh my God.
And right away this thing started buzzing,
creating a sudsy mini whirlpool.
Oh my God! - I believe!
- Okay, it has turned on, something is happening.
It sounds like it's working hard.
Now clearly the pros of this machine
are that it is very portable and convenient
and that the cycles are pretty quick.
The cons that I can see are obviously the size.
It does actually even say on the website
that this thing can only fit one baby towel,
eight pairs of underwear, or two mom shirts in it.
And the other con that I can see
is that there's no rinse cycle.
As after the cycle was done
and we drained out the water from the machine,
the inside was still pretty soapy.
- [Tyler] Somewhere in there is our shirt.
- [Safiya] I'm not sure if they expect you
to do a whole nother cycle with just water,
so I just rinsed out the inside and the shirt a bit.
The shirt may be slightly sudsy still,
but I don't know what really can be done about that.
And then it was time for the drying cycle,
or sorry, the semi-dehydration cycle,
which happens in this little salad spinner thing.
Okay, all right, that's it.
- [Tyler] That's semi-dehydration?
- [Safiya] And is code for a lot of intense spinning
that really puts the machine suction cups to the test.
What is this? The car from "Titanic."
- [Tyler] It is moist in there.
- Now there's no heat with this process,
so it's not really drying anything,
but it seems like a decent way
to get some of the water out without damaging the clothes.
All right, there we go, it is done.
And moment of truth, though our test shirt
was still quite damp.
Okay, honestly things are looking okay.
- Okay? - Ready?
- Unfurl. - It did look pretty clean.
How is it? - Whoa, whoa!
- I see a vague hint of pink
in sort of the bottom-left quadrant,
but overall not too shabby.
This is what our control shirt looked like
after coming out of the real washing machine.
Ta-da.
And honestly I thought they looked pretty comparable.
The stains may not have had a ton of time to really set
before we washed them, but they both looked pretty clean.
It's about the same, about.
Here's what they look like after drying.
I did put the control shirt in the actual dryer,
so please ignore the fact that it definitely shrunk.
But in terms of the stains, not too bad.
So overall this thing isn't perfect
and I can't say for sure if it's the most legit,
best quality mini wash machine around,
but I think that you gotta say that that worked pretty well.
So here's to the mini washing machine.
It can fit eight underwears or two mom shirts.
Now I did promise that I'd share
some more of our findings with you
that we discovered as we explored the genre.
As we went through all of the videos
that we had screen recorded
and took stock of all of the accounts
that those videos came from,
we did find a fair amount of identically repeated shots.
Both of products like the grain organizer
or contact lens cleaner.
And also of plot points
like these shots of the mother-in-law getting out of her car
and even getting into the apartment
are identically repeated,
even though the shots in between are completely different.
Which points to this idea that many of these accounts
are ripping clips from the same source
and piecing them together to make the content they post.
And though we weren't able to find the source
of all of these clips,
we were able to find some evidence
of some of the less absurd
more vlog-style videos we found being ripped from Douyin,
AKA Chinese TikTok.
Like this video that features the Hobot,
and these creators and their apartments.
And though I won't claim that we were able
to verify a ton on Douyin,
like we couldn't find any of those mother-in-law's
approaching, it's snowing in the hallway type videos.
It does seem that smart home gadget
satisfying cleaning vlogs
are a pretty popular genre on Douyin.
And beyond just being satisfying to watch,
it is also worth noting that smart home appliances
in general have become a huge trend in China
over the past few years.
Partially accelerated by COVID,
China has become the world's largest consumption market
for smart home devices, with home appliance expos being held
to show off the latest products
and government departments issuing guidelines
on accelerating the development of digital homes.
Which could have led to the creation of these gadgets
and the rise in popularity
of these immersive cleaning
or home optimizing vlogs in general.
Now as for my experience trying to buy some of these items
and try them out, I definitely did get a kick
out of some of them.
But it's almost impossible for me to figure out
if the products I ended up buying
are the realest or most high-quality versions
of these smart devices that exist.
Obviously we did receive the items we ordered
and they all did function on some level
so they weren't scams, but I have no real idea
who the sellers are, the conditions under which
the items were made and what the long-term quality
of the items will be.
In fact, we actually read that a lot of consumers in China
actually prefer to buy their smart home gadgets
in store in person.
So the likelihood that I got the right ones is pretty low.
So though I did have fun,
I probably won't be buying any more of these gadgets online.
And this is actually bad news for me,
because Tyler's parents are visiting this weekend.
So my mother-in-law is fast approaching,
and I have no way of cleaning up
all these (censored) sunflower seeds.
Thank you guys so much for watching.
If you like that video,
make sure to shmash that like button.
And if you wanna see more videos like this,
make sure to shmash that subscribe button.
Here are our short-form/social media handles
and here's our merch website.
And with that, I will see you guys a-next time.
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