A woman went viral on TikTok after posting a 50-part series documenting the downfall of her marriage.
The entire saga is broken down into ten-minute segments, which social media users said they’re binge-watching like a TV show. The TikTok user, Reesa Teesa, racked up more than 122 million views on the “Who TF Did I Marry?” series. Each video clip has over one million views.
Reesa Teesa began the series by explaining how she met her ex-husband on a dating app. She identifies the man only as “Legion,” referring to a man possessed by demons in the Bible. Teesa explains how she got close to Legion during the COVID pandemic, leading to them moving in together and her becoming pregnant (though she said she later had a miscarriage). But after some time, Teesa said she began exposing many of her ex-husband’s lies.
Teesa said she posted the 50-part series so viewers could listen to her experience “like an audiobook,” per a report from Time.
“You can listen to all the times I made bad decisions, you can clearly listen to the good, the bad, the ugly, the embarrassing,” she said in a video posted Wednesday. “But most importantly, the redemption and the forgiveness that I am trying and learning to give myself. All in all, do not be dismayed that it is 50 parts.”
The first video in the series has 22.8 million views. Teesa has 2.3 million followers on the platform, thanks to the popularity of the series.
Teesa claimed that Legion lied about his job, employment history, finances, and family. She said she later found out that his family didn’t speak to him because of him being a pathological liar. Teesa called her ex “the United Nations of red flags.”
After the videos went viral, one viewer discovered the identity of her ex-husband, per Time. But Teesa said during a TikTok Live that she contacted that person and asked to have the information deleted. She said she didn’t plan to speak to her ex ever again.
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TikTok users love Teesa’s videos despite the time commitment it took to hear her whole story. One popular user comment addressed this phenomenon, which is unique compared to most short TikTok content. That user said Teesa “gave us our attention span back.”
Many commentators are calling for the saga to be turned into a movie, which is what happened to a 2015 Twitter thread that went viral and eventually became the basis for the 2020 film “Zola.”