A MAN tried to enrage Prime Hydration lovers by pouring a bottle into the street – but he didn’t get the reaction he expected.
Tiktoker Saru Rajah posted a TikTok of him emptying what he claimed was a bottle of the viral drink Prime Hydration.
The soft drink has created a frenzy among young people after it was released by YouTube sensations KSI and Logan Paul.
Newsagents across the UK have even begun to sell bottles of the energy drink for upwards of £20 despite a retail price of £1.99 from Aldi.
However, TikTok viewers weren’t convinced that Saru had wasted an entire bottle of the popular beverage.
One commented: “Bros acting like he ain’t pouring water.”
Another wrote: “That water, good acting.”
“When you drink your prime, them fill it with water to make a tiktok,” a third agreed.
This comes after supermarkets witnessed hoards of customers and parents wrestling kids out of the way to get their hands on a bottle.
The drink sold out “in seconds” when it hit shelves in Aldi this week and had to be rationed to one of each flavour per customer.
One Aldi staff member told PlymouthLive that their store had sold 360 bottles in under six minutes.
Meanwhile, shocking footage emerged yesterday of adults pushing young children out of the way at an Aldi in Sydenham, East London to try and get hold of just a few bottles.
One dad even spent an eye-watering £1,000 on bottles of Prime for his two sons as a late Christmas present.
Wakey Wines in Wakefield has become a TikTok sensation and known for selling the drink at extortionate prices.
The owner Abdul posted a clip of the dad with his sons and asked: “So how much have you spent in total?”
The dad, clutching one of the packs, replied: “£1,000.”
One savvy school even used a bottle of the sought after energy drink to raise money in a raffle.
Ponthir Church in Wales Primary School cashed in on the mayhem by advertising a single bottle of Prime.
Sharing a picture of the drink, it said: “Have you seen the fuss this drink is creating in supermarkets at the moment? If not, see the link below…
“But we have one in our raffle!”
The event itself helped raise £257 for the group, which raises money for the primary school and community.