Reality Star Who Made $200,000 Selling Farts in Mason Jars Launches NFT Collection – Blockchain

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Recently, reality star, American YouTuber and Tiktoker Stephanie Matto made international headlines after she raised $200,000 by selling her jarred farts online. After Matto was hospitalized and a doctor told her that the fart idea caused her to be hospitalized, she decided to sell her fart glasses as a non-fungible token (NFT) collectible. Tiktoker Unveils Fart Jars NFT Collection Youtuber and Tiktoker Stephanie Matto made an interesting career choice when she decided to sell her farts in mason jars online to paying customers. The windbreaking entrepreneur managed to raise $200,000 for...

Reality Star Who Made $200,000 Selling Farts in Mason Jars Launches NFT Collection – Blockchain

Recently, reality star, American YouTuber and Tiktoker Stephanie Matto made international headlines after she raised $200,000 by selling her jarred farts online. After Matto was hospitalized and a doctor told her that the fart idea caused her to be hospitalized, she decided to sell her fart glasses as a non-fungible token (NFT) collectible.

Tiktoker Unveils Fart Jars NFT Collection

The Youtuber and Tiktoker Stephanie Matto chose an interesting career choice when she decided to sell her farts in jars online to paying customers. The windbreaking entrepreneur managed to raise $200,000 for her canned farts, but the idea took a physical toll on her body. That's what a doctor says told She took issue with the fart idea after Matto was recently hospitalized. In order to be more conscious of her body, Matto now relies on blockchain technology to continue her career as a fart seller.

Windbrechende NFTs: Reality-Star, der 200.000 US-Dollar mit dem Verkauf von Furzen in Einmachgläsern verdient hat, bringt NFT-Kollektion auf den Markt
Einige der Fart Jars NFTs von der Website von Tiktoker Stephanie Matto wurden letzten Mittwoch gestartet.

Matto, the former reality star of TLC's "90 Day Fiancé," decided to start fartjarsnft.com and sell their work in the form of non-fungible tokens (NFT). The site launched last Wednesday and to mint a Fart Jar NFT it costs 0.05 ETH or about $155 per NFT at the time of publication. “Imagine the smell,” the website says, and Matto is pretty sure it gives people exactly what they want.

“For the first time, an NFT project is giving people what they want: Fart Jars,” the website says. "Combine this with the deflationary mechanics, real-world redeemable items, and utility in the form of access to the extraordinary Stephanie Matto's Fart Jar via a private Discord channel for all holders. We're sure Fart Jars will blow your mind."

Fart jars are NFTs with utility, Matto is not the first to bring farts to the NFT stage

According to the website, the NFTs grant NFT holders special privileges such as access to a private Discord channel with Matto, Zoom meetings with the reality star, a mentorship program, and people can also use Matto's fart glasses as social media profile pictures. “For as long as I can remember, it’s been assumed that girls don’t poop and girls certainly don’t fart,” Matto says. “Today we are changing the narrative about what women can and cannot do and what women should and should not do.”

The Youtuber and Tiktoker further added:

Fart Jars are all about taking ownership of your body, your inner worth, with an added touch of creative genius! Making a statement and making an impact isn't about making a fart - it's about pushing yourself to do whatever you set out to do.

However, Stephanie Matto isn't the first to take farts into the world of NFTs, as Alex Ramírez-Mallis, 36, from Brooklyn has a 52-minute “Master Collection” NFT audio file his farts. At the time, Ramírez-Mallis was able to sell some of his NFT fart recordings for $85 to $183 in Ethereum.

What do you think of Matto's Fart Jar collection? Let us know your thoughts on this topic in the comments below.

Jamie Redman

Jamie Redman is News Lead at Bitcoin.com News and a Florida-based financial technology journalist. Redman has been an active member of the cryptocurrency community since 2011. He is passionate about Bitcoin, open source code and decentralized applications. Since September 2015, Redman has written more than 5,000 articles for Bitcoin.com News about today's emerging disruptive protocols.




Photo credits: Shutterstock, Pixabay, Wiki Commons, fartjarsnft.com