10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him. Bad idea.

https://beehaw.org/post/22891583

10M people watched a YouTuber shim a lock; the lock company sued him. Bad idea. - Beehaw

Yeah, it’s the Streisand Effect. > “Opening locks” might not sound like scintillating social media content, but Trevor McNally has turned lock-busting into online gold. A former US Marine Staff Sergeant, McNally today has more than 7 million followers and has amassed more than 2 billion views just by showing how easy it is to open many common locks by slapping, picking, or shimming them. > > This does not always endear him to the companies that make the locks. > > On March 3, 2025, a Florida lock company called Proven Industries released a social media promo video just begging for the McNally treatment. The video was called, somewhat improbably, “YOU GUYS KEEP SAYING YOU CAN EASILY BREAK OFF OUR LATCH PIN LOCK.” In it, an enthusiastic man in a ball cap says he will “prove a lot of you haters wrong.” He then goes hard at Proven’s $130 model 651 trailer hitch lock with a sledgehammer, bolt cutters, and a crowbar. > > Naturally, the lock hangs tough. > > An Instagram user brought the lock to McNally’s attention by commenting, “Let’s introduce it to the @mcnallyofficial poke.” Someone from Proven responded, saying that McNally only likes “the cheap locks lol because they are easy and fast.” Proven locks were said to be made of sterner stuff. > > But on April 3, McNally posted a saucy little video to social media platforms. In it, he watches the Proven promo video while swinging his legs and drinking a Juicy Juice. He then hops down from his seat, goes over to a Proven trailer hitch lock, and opens it in a matter of seconds using nothing but a shim cut from a can of Liquid Death. He says nothing during the entire video, which has been viewed nearly 10 million times on YouTube alone. What happens next won’t surprise you!

"Sucks to see how many people take everything they see online for face value,” one Proven employee wrote. “Sounds like a bunch of liberals lol.”

Ugh. Leave it to Americans to push politics into everything…

Lol.

My parents told me when I was a teenager and starting to get involved in politics that anyone trying to sell me a product using politics or religion is scamming me. Even if they claim to be on my side.

Especially if they claim to be on my side.

I don’t think I’ve ever seen an exception to that rule, and that includes the rainbow capitalism stuff I really wanted to buy back then 😆

I might make an exception for publishers of religious texts. Seems solid otherwise.

I had to think about that for a minute.

And I think there’s a distinction between selling a product for religious use and selling a product using religion.

I mean, if a publisher is selling a $100 Bible, and its selling points are being a great big heavy book with quality paper, quality binding, old school illuminations, complete accurate text of (insert your sect’s favorite translation here), the kind of Bible your ancestors recorded births and deaths in, that’s one thing.

If a publisher is selling a $100 Bible, and its selling points are that it’s the most true and accurate translation of the Bible ever and reveals secret wisdom that YOU need to know to go to heaven - well, I’m going to look very skeptically at that Bible and its publisher 😆