People getting EXPOSED for their LIES - Summary

Summary

The content appears to be a comedic commentary on various social media posts where people are caught lying, exaggerating, or being dishonest. The narrator shares a series of examples of people getting called out for their false claims, including a person Photoshopping a six-pack onto their body, someone creating a fake Facebook profile to pretend to have a girlfriend, and another person lying about visiting Paris. The narrator also shares a personal experience of falling for a fake post about a phone being dropped in a cake. The video ends with the narrator acknowledging that it's okay to have a bad attitude, but not to post it on social media, and sharing a humorous exchange about someone's photo having a watermark.

Facts

Here are the key facts extracted from the text:

1. A person claimed to have a six-pack after a week of hard work, but the image was Photoshopped.
2. Someone created a fake Facebook profile to pretend to be their girlfriend.
3. A person Photoshopped Jay-Z's body onto themselves.
4. A person lied about their boss's dad dying to get out of a prior arrangement.
5. A person scored 85 on an IQ test, but claimed to have scored 125.
6. A person posted a picture of a phone in a cake, but it was taken from a YouTube video.
7. A person claimed to have visited Paris and locked a padlock on a bridge, but the image was actually from Australia.
8. A person posted a picture of their hairdresser, who was giving a compliment similar to one given by Robert Downey Jr. and Jimmy Kimmel.
9. A person posted a picture of a fingernail and a hair in their food, but the restaurant was not open yet.
10. A person was fired from their job and their Twitter hate messages to customers were used as evidence.
11. A customer service representative had a bad attitude and posted a message on Twitter that was printed out and used against them.
12. A person claimed to have ridden a horse, but the image had a watermark on it and appeared to be downloaded from a website.
13. A person claimed that the police arrested their dog, but it was unlikely to be true.
14. A person sent a picture of themselves with a ghost face, claiming it was a Latino selfie.