Love's true test? Why is the internet obsessed with peeling oranges

From TikTok to X, internet users believe your relationship’s health depends on oranges

After the ‘bird test’ and the ‘ketchup test,’ the ‘orange peel test’ is the latest trick in the market to check if your romantic relationship is going to last forever. Forget the building of the great Taj Mahal as a royal gesture of love or the starcrossed lovers fated to meet a tragic end.

Years after Jack from Titanic embraced a hypothermic death upon saving Rose, the internet is retiring the millennial angst of love. As relationship experts and theories crop up everywhere, thanks to social media’s ever-increasing reach, it appears the true marker of a successful romance is not on a wrecked ship, but in your own kitchen.

Gaining momentum on social media, the trend dubbed "Orange Peel Theory" is prompting users to consider small acts of service. From cleaning up spilled ketchup on a countertop to peeling an orange for your partner, these everyday gestures of care appear trivial but may be the key to a lasting relationship.

Acknowledging the underlying wisdom of the “Orange Peel Theory,” many social media users are discreetly filming their partner’s reaction to being asked to peel an orange. One of the most popular clips to emerge with over 24 million views on TikTok finds a woman asking her boyfriend for an orange.

“I really want it but I hate peeling it,” the TikToker says, only to be met with a “Tough luck buddy” from her partner much to her (and the comment section’s) dismay. “As if I don’t do enough…figure your life out, dude. It’s not all about what your man can do for you,” replies the boyfriend, before he launches into a short speech on how he’s being a “great boyfriend” by making her self-sufficient.

@shelbyywilfong

failed attempt. #fyp

♬ original sound - shelby

Per the comments section, the couple’s relationship has clearly failed the “Orange Peel Test,” with many asking the girl to “run.” The popular video clip also underscores another important facet of the theory: a partner’s willingness to peel the orange. If being asked to perform such a minor task results in an argument, that might put a big, red question mark on the whole relationship.

Conversely, another side of the internet is busy trolling the trend for idolising the bare minimum. One user on X (formerly Twitter) penned, “‘Peeling oranges,’ ‘peeling pomegranates’...I'm finding out that you guys have really low bars for people who love you.”

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