Posted on 02/14/2021 8:58:58 PM PST by Morgana
Gorilla Glue girl Tessica Brown’s GoFundMe page topped more than $20,000 in donations Thursday after doctors finally removed the sticky stuff through surgery.
The 40-year-old Louisiana woman — whose hair had been stuck solid for a month after she used the superglue as a hairspray substitute — started the fundraiser on Monday.
She raised more than $13,000 in just one day — and by Thursday afternoon, that number surged to $20,577.
The fundraiser — started by Brown and a relative and using a photo from her visit to the emergency room — did not detail what she’d use the cash for.
Beverly Hills plastic surgeon Michael Obeng offered to perform Brown’s surgery — a $12,500 procedure — for free after hearing about the hair-raising ordeal.
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
FIVE? I wonder if she's the one who supposedly complained to her doctor about the spermicidal jelly he gave her. She put some on her toast but it didn't taste very good. ;-)
i am saddened... i really wanted to watch her get roasted in court
they are dumber than she is?
More than enough to get her head shaved, buy a temporary wig and wait for it to grow back.
Yes she has 5 kids AND she’s a school teacher on top of that.
her kids have complained the kids and teachers at school are talking about this and laughing at her.
metmom I really wish you’d arth this, yes to answer your question before SHE HAS NO SHAME. She is the retarded kid in the classroom, a retarded child who put industrial strength glue on her hair and WHO IS TEACHING THE KIDS.
When the Blind really do lead the Blind, bad things happen.
there’s an article stating she’s donating the “go fund me” money to a charity that the doctor who helped her supports...
it is wise to stop jumping to conclusions...
do some research...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.