Celebrity Eats Wrong: Social Media Loses Mind
Because apparently, in 2026, how you consume Turkish flatbread is grounds for national debate.
Celebrity Eats Wrong: Social Media Loses Mind
Turkish model Çağla Şıkel ate lahmacun with a fork and knife.
The internet exploded.
Because apparently, in 2026, how you consume Turkish flatbread is grounds for national debate. Şıkel — known for her strict diet and fitness obsession — committed the cardinal sin of not rolling her lahmacun like a proper human being.
The comments section turned into a cultural battlefield. Traditional food purists versus modern dining etiquette. East meets West over a piece of bread with meat.
Meanwhile, Can Yaman got trolled for being too tanned in Madrid. The Turkish actor fired back at critics with "harsh words" — because nothing says secure masculinity like getting defensive about your spray tan choices.
Over in reality TV land, Survivor contestant Bayhan mysteriously vanished from the competition. Health issues, they claim. But viewers are asking the real questions: elimination or medical emergency?
And former football star İlhan Mansız was spotted in Istanbul after a lengthy disappearance. Social media treated this like a Bigfoot sighting.
This is what passes for controversy now. Food technique scandals. Tan shade disputes. Celebrity hide-and-seek.
We're living in the age of manufactured outrage, where every mundane human activity becomes content for the algorithm. Every bite, every tan line, every public appearance dissected by millions of strangers with opinions.
The internet doesn't just watch celebrities anymore — it judges their basic motor functions.