Home Flashbox

This Year’s Hottest Holiday Trend Is Telling Your Mom Her Favorite Celebrity Just Died

TikTok was filled with shock and devastation as kids tortured their families and loved ones with erroneous celebrity deaths

Published by

Ahh, The holidays — a time for gathering with friends, families, and loved ones… and absolutely torturing them with fake news reports of celebrity deaths. 

With folks having ostensibly grown tired of reciting the Pledge of Allegiance at Thanksgiving, the trend that took off on TikTok this Christmas weekend found kids and young adults — having clearly already plowed through Emily in Paris — sloughing off their boredom with the celebrity death prank. The setup was simple: Record a video while pretending to look at the phone, gasp dramatically, announce a death, and capture the reaction. 

Admittedly, it’s a pretty low-rent, brute-force prank, an internet equivalent of a pie in the face (or a football in the groin). But there’s a reason the pie in the face bit is classic, and it’s because it’s hilarious when a person has pie on their face — just like it’s hilarious watching someone furiously cross themselves after “learning” that Bruce Springsteen “has died,” or smash a car’s center console when told Zac Efron has passed on. 

And it’s certainly as funny as watching several people scream in collective anguish after being told Tom Cruise has died while “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home)” blares in the background. 

But the real winners of the viral trend weren’t the kids who went with top-tier A-listers — especially the ones already pushing 70 or 80 — but the random celebrities their victims had a particular attachment to. For instance, two of the most devastating reactions captured on camera were from people told of the faux passings of Fox News and Business anchor Neil Cavuto and longtime Dateline NBC correspondent Keith Morrison. 

On a slightly more serious note, some people have been very put off by this trend, arguing that those perpetrating it are in for some serious karmic retribution. We here at Rolling Stone — especially those of us on the news desk — are inclined to agree. Not for any sort of cosmic reason but because the biggest thing we ask for every year is to get through the holidays without having to rush an obituary.  

From Rolling Stone US.

Recent Posts

Kanye West Confirms First India Show in March 2026

The New Delhi date adds India to his expanding global tour routing, placing him at…

February 16, 2026

3 Doors Down Were Post-Grunge Hitmakers. But the Band Couldn’t Outrun Tragedy

Singer Brad Arnold, who died this month at 47, is remembered by friends as a…

February 16, 2026

Casey Wasserman Selling His Talent Agency After Epstein Debacle: ‘I Have Become a Distraction’

A wave of talent severed ties with the agency after the revelation of emails exchanged…

February 16, 2026

Rob Halford Talks ‘Breaking the Law’ Inspiration in Clip From Judas Priest Documentary

See exclusive clip from The Ballad of Judas Priest, co-directed by Tom Morello, ahead of…

February 16, 2026

Tim Very, Manchester Orchestra Drummer, Dead at 42

Atlanta band pays tribute to their drummer since 2011: “The most beloved human being any…

February 16, 2026

John Mayer’s India Debut Showed That Skill Can Hit Just as Hard as Setlists

Skipping some fan favorites but never missing a beat, John Mayer’s India debut proved why…

February 14, 2026