Soap-cutting videos are having a moment. The soothing viral videos feature people cutting bars of soap and making them smooth. They're a visual version of autonomous sensory meridian response videos, ...
Erin Carson covered internet culture, online dating and the weird ways tech and science are changing your life. Expertise Erin has been a tech reporter for almost 10 years. Her reporting has taken her ...
"Sharp feel" and "sound" by thinning the soap with a knife, cutter, etc. feel a pleasant feeling as if the brain can trouble "ASMRIt is gaining popularity as being ", and it is spreading by SNS etc.
ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response) has been taking social media by storm for a while. For some people cutting items just for fun can be seen as waste. Still, others find it highly satisfying, ...
Soap-cutting has been added to the list of things that can give you a 'brain orgasm' along with sizzling bacon and soft whispers. The newest social media video trend involves cutting or shaving pieces ...
If you type 'soap cutting' into YouTube or Instagram you will be met with countless videos that have amassed thousands of likes. And the term is not a euphemism or code for anything other than exactly ...
You’ve seen soap slicing before — but not like this. In this ASMR Soap Slice session, each bar is crafted to perfection: layered, swirled, and texturized for ultimate audio and visual satisfaction.
The latest trend in ASMR (Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response, for the uninitiated) is soap slicing. ASMR videos such as these have been some of the most trending ones of YouTube. We know internet is ...
We know how important it is to stay on top of the latest ASMR trends. Who wants the embarrassment of talking about whispering or slicing up sand when the world’s moved on to crushing bath bombs and ...
In Elite Daily's Life Behind the Likes series, we talk to the people you know on the internet to find out who's really behind the screens. In this piece, we get the inside scoop from the woman running ...
If you’ve ever experienced a tingling sensation on your skin in response to a certain visual or sound, you may have had an autonomous sensory meridian response—or ASMR as it’s more commonly known as.