Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Add Upworthy to your Google News feed.
Google News Button

A TikTok video once raised alarms about hotel room security after demonstrating a device that could open doors from the outside. User braccozz posted a clip showing how a simple twisted wire could be inserted under a door, looped around the handle, and pulled to open the door. The video gained over 13.4 million views before being deleted, but not before sparking widespread concern.

"If you ever see this come under the door, run IMMEDIATELY."

— @braccozz

One woman’s real-life encounter with the hotel door hack

Before the original video disappeared, it reached TikTok user josiebowers10, who shared a terrifying experience from her teenage years. Bowers, from Canada, recalled how someone tried to break into her hotel room using the same method when she was 15 years old and on vacation in Ocean City, Maryland.


 A person hanges a tag on a hotel door.  Representative Image: Using the chain and leaving a hanger are important steps. Canva

"I've actually had this happen to me before when I was on vacation," Bowers said in a TikTok video with over 10 million views. "I was staying in Ocean City, at the Hilton, right there on the waterfront, and I went to go shower before the rest of my family was done at the beach. So I was by myself. Before I could shower, I heard these noises. I went to see what it was, and it was this contraption. I was just standing there in my towel, and this man opened the door."

"I was just standing there in my towel, and this man opened the door."

— @josiebowers10

She immediately slammed the door shut and secured the deadlock, but she could still hear voices outside. Then, one of the men tried to trick her into opening the door by claiming to be hotel staff.

"They told me my 'key thing isn't working' and that they’d come to fix my 'keypad,'" she said. At first, she hesitated, but something didn’t feel right.

"Never let people know you are alone."

— @josiebowers10

Remembering advice from her stepdad, a police officer, Bowers quickly pretended to call out to her dad, saying someone was at the door to fix the keypad. The moment the men heard her, they left.

A similar case in San Jose

 

Bowers’ experience isn’t an isolated one. NBC Bay Area reported on a woman named Deborah who faced a terrifying situation at a Holiday Inn near the San Jose airport. She was in her room Wednesday around 9:30 PM when she noticed something strange: a long metal wire moving under her door.

 

"It looked almost like a coat hanger coming up under the door, but it had several pieces attached to it," Deborah said. "And then I saw that they were actually trying to move it over and reach for the door handle, and so that's when I tried to just stop it with my hand."

 
 

"I saw that they were actually trying to move it over and reach for the door handle."

— Deborah, via NBC Bay Area
 
 

Deborah immediately called the front desk, and hotel staff confronted a man and woman she had seen earlier that day. The couple claimed they had knocked on the wrong door while looking for a friend, but they escaped before police arrived.

 
 @nbcbayarea #SanJose #hotel room break-in attempt caught on camera • #bayarea ♬ original sound - NBC Bay Area 
 
 
 

The incident has made Deborah rethink her hotel safety habits. "So I think they were looking for any noise coming out of the hotel room, so I will definitely be more noisy. I will have more lights on, put the 'Do Not Disturb' sign on the doorknob, and hopefully those things will help in the future."

 
 

"I will definitely be more noisy. I will have more lights on, put the 'Do Not Disturb' sign on the doorknob."

— Deborah, via NBC Bay Area

Staying safe in hotel rooms

Both Bowers and Debra were lucky to escape unharmed, but their experiences highlight the importance of hotel security. Experts recommend always using additional locks, never opening the door for unexpected visitors, and keeping valuables secure. If something feels off, it’s better to trust your instincts and alert hotel staff or authorities.

With videos like the one from braccozz disappearing from social media, these firsthand accounts serve as critical reminders to stay vigilant while traveling.

More For You

A man and woman kissing in the kitchen

Welcome to the "Boy and Girl apartment" trend

Unsplash

Women living in beautiful apartments share their secrets to co-habitating with a boyfriend

Blending styles can be difficult. Naturally, when two or more people are brought together, their visions aren’t always going to mesh. Like getting a haircut then realizing, after they spin you around for the big reveal, that your barber actually didn’t “totally get” the inspiration photo you brought in. Or teaming up with some friends for a group project in school who you didn't realize were petrified of public speaking. Or, take One Direction for example. Five solo singers who at didn't get along at all at first, brought together only after Simon Cowell corralled them all into a boy band.


Keep ReadingShow less
airport, flying, airport travel
person standing with holding luggage bag

Psychologist reveals exactly why everyone acts weird at airports

Fewer places bring out weirder human behavior than airports. Sleeping on floors? Acceptable. Paying $8 for a bag of chips? Acceptable. And 9 a.m. beers? Totally acceptable. Time (and personal space) seems to suspend itself when you're traveling in them. And psychologist Steve Taylor, a Senior Psychology Lecturer at Leeds Beckett University, explained exactly why everything and everyone feels so weird when you're in an airport with The Conversation.

Simply put: airports cause disorientation. "Due to the haziness of time and place, airports create a sense of disorientation," he explains. "We define ourselves in terms of time and place. We know who we are in relation to our daily routines and our familiar environments. We also define ourselves in terms of nationality. Without such markers, we may feel adrift."

Keep ReadingShow less
10-year-old violin prodigy stuns airport travelers with flawless Vivaldi duet
Representative photo by Canva

10-year-old violin prodigy stuns airport travelers with flawless Vivaldi duet

A beautiful blend of talent, courage, and classical music left Rome Airport travelers in awe when a 10-year-old violin prodigy, Yeonah Kim (@yeonah_kim_violin on Instagram), performed an impromptu duet with pianist Julien Cohen. The duo’s breathtaking rendition of Vivaldi’s “Summer” turned the airport’s Terminal 1 into an unexpected concert hall, captivating both onlookers and millions of viewers online.

  Representative photo by Sebastian Mark | Unsplash 

Keep ReadingShow less
man in blue long sleeve shirt carrying baby in white onesie

Dad hacks!

Dad discovers hilarious new hack for calling his daughter downstairs

As every parent knows, getting your child to do the thing you want them to do can be an impossible, Sisyphean task. How can I get my child to say ‘please’ and ‘thank you’—and not just utter the words, but actually mean them? What could possibly entice them to help out more around the house? Is going to bed at a reasonable hour something kids actually do, or only an urban legend?

In a Reddit form on r/Parenting, @sabinesse1054 asked a question about the difference between productivity and pleasure.

Keep ReadingShow less
A mother scolds her child in a dim room.

Parents might be setting their children up for a lifetime of issues without ever realizing it.

Psychologist warns about 'eggshell parenting'—and why its effects last a lifetime

Children thrive in environments where they feel safe, secure, and loved. But when these feelings are unpredictable, it can create lasting emotional harm. Dr. Kim Sage, a licensed psychologist from Newport, California, has popularized the term "eggshell parenting" to describe this dynamic. Through her TikTok channel (@drkimsage), she has shared hundreds of videos explaining how eggshell parenting affects children and their future relationships.

What is eggshell parenting?

Eggshell parenting occurs when a child's emotional environment is dictated by a parent's unpredictable outbursts. Dr. Sage explains that this forces children to be constantly on high alert, suppressing their natural emotions and behaviors to avoid triggering a negative reaction. "Eggshell parenting and emotionally unpredictable, unsafe parenting often creates a lifetime of hypervigilance in us and a deep belief that there’s no such thing as real safety in relationships," she says.

Keep ReadingShow less