We have just gone into 2019, and some suggest that it will be a strange year.
In any case, goes the story of a super-viral eggs right now around the world.
Yes, you read that right.
on Sunday struck a picture of an ordinary egg holds the record for the most 'likede' Instagram-image. So ever.
It writes the New York Times.
There is absolutely nothing special about the egg, which could have originated from any yard or counters.
It is also not a known egg with its own Youtube channel, or anything in that direction.
It is really just an ordinary egg.
Show this posting on Instagramlet's set a world record together and get the most liked post on Instagram. Beating the current world record luck by Kylie Jenner (18 million)! We got this #LikeTheEgg #EggSoldiers #EggGang
But when the picture was put up 4. January as the only postings on the Instagram page 'world_record_egg', it was with the text: 'Let us together beat the record and get the most likede posting on Instagram. Let us beat the world record held by Kylie Jenner (18 million)! We can do it'.
And it succeeded so Sunday.
The now famous eggs have at the time of writing been awarded a little over 23,6 million likes on the social media. And 'like'-the hearts pouring still.
No one knows, according to the New York Times, who is behind the egg-spread, why it has been laid up or why the record attempt on the whole ended in so wild a success.
Intl. well-known - 23. feb. 2018 - at. 09:11 the Potential totalsmadrer Snapchat
Kylie Jenner – the, until now the uncrowned queen of Instagram-likes - must, therefore, now see themselves beaten by a precursor to a fried egg.
Here is fødselsbilledet of Kylie jenner's daughter Stormi, who until Sunday night had the record:
Show this posting on Instagramstormi webster
And here is the 21-year-old realitystjernes first Instagram response, when she realized, that she had been overtaken:
Show this posting on InstagramTake that little egg
And for that it should not be a lie, so this is not the first story of wild records in the social media. Here you can meet japaneren, who have paid millions to turn a coveted Twitter-record.