8 BYU Chicks Got Catfished By A Woman Pretending To Be A Mormon Man, Proving Love Knows No Boundaries

A 24-year-old woman from Texas has convinced eight (yes, eight) Brigham Young University students that she was a Mormon man. That was the easy part. The difficult part was making them fall in love with her/him/human being. And that’s exactly what happened.

According to the Brigham Young Universe, the lady used two different aliases with the girls, one named Hyrum Young and the other named Hunter Anderson (so douchey it has to be made up), and claimed they met through a mutual friend at a party.

She was eventually outed when the girls compared notes and realized that Hunter was not the Vineyard Vines wearing super hunk they thought he was.

Lady or Man or whatever you claim to be, if you’re out there and you’re reading this, please take a break from being the Catfish Queen, and come take over my Tinder conversations. I’ll give you full control. You set ’em up, I knock ’em down. Because my opener of “Sit on my face and I’ll eat my way to your heart” has gotten me nothing by a restraining order. So do what you do, pull at their heartstrings, talk about how upset you are that that dude left One Direction, ask them if they’ve pinned anything recently on Pinterest. I guess me telling you how to do your job is like the ball boy trying to give Tom Brady tips on throwing a spiral. So I’ll fall back.

But hit me up via email if you’re interested: BigBlackAndBeautiful@gmail.com

Via Cosmopolitan

Matt Keohan Avatar
Matt’s love of writing was born during a sixth grade assembly when it was announced that his essay titled “Why Drugs Are Bad” had taken first prize in D.A.R.E.’s grade-wide contest. The anti-drug people gave him a $50 savings bond for his brave contribution to crime-fighting, and upon the bond’s maturity 10 years later, he used it to buy his very first bag of marijuana.