She’s a real potty animal.
Popping bottles at the club left this partygoer flushed with embarrassment.
“When you go too hard on Saturday night and wake up locked in the nightclub toilets at 8:30 a.m. Sunday morning,” said Eloise Paull, 19, in a trending TikTok tell-all, admitting that she’d drunkenly fallen asleep in the bar’s bathroom.
Viral visuals of the Gen Z stumbling out of the venue and setting off its blaring alarm system, has amassed over 1.7 million views.
“[It] was the most embarrassing thing ever,” she penned in her own comments section.
Paull, a waitress from the UK, where the legal drinking age is 18, had hit up Havana nightclub, a local hotspot, in celebration of her friend’s 18th birthday on the fateful night of June 15.
But rather than sticking close to her gal pals, the carefree carouser kept wandering off to dance and drink away from her clique.
“My mate told me that I said to her I was going to the toilet,” Paull explained to Kennedy News. “I’d been disappearing throughout the night, so she didn’t think so come look for me because I’d been disappearing.”
“They never saw me after that,” she said. “The next thing, I woke up in the toilet and there were alarms going off.”
But Paull’s far from the only inebriated belle to recently sound the sirens of serious insobriety.
Amanda Scheller, a newlywed from Canada, toasted her May 2024 nuptials with more than her fair share of spirits. The not-so-blushing beauty flashed her G-string undies at wedding guests and crowned herself the “drunkest bride ever” to a tickled online audience of over 2.6 million TikTok watchers.
However, not every intoxicated incident is a laughing matter.
Georgia couple Alyssia Langley and fiance, Timothy Stephens, both 27, allegedly passed out drunk on a Florida beach while their five- and seven-year-old children wandered off unsupervised in March. Volusia County deputies reportedly tried eight times to wake the tipsy twosome, who, once they came to, were unsure of their brood’s whereabouts.
Paull was, too, confused when she woke up in the club’s dark bathroom stall after a night of unabashed debauchery.
“It took me a little while to figure out where I actually was,” she confessed. “I was really dazed and confused because I’d been drinking two days in a row.”
“I was wandering about this big dance floor thinking, ‘What is this place?,” added the brunette. “All the lights were off so I couldn’t see anything.”
After approximately 20 minutes of sheer bewilderment, a disoriented Paull finally got her bearings.
“I walked downstairs and I saw the ticket booth where you get the wristbands and thought, ‘That’s the Havana ticket booth,’” she recalled.
“I went and stood behind it just looking around thinking, ‘What?,’” Paull continued. “That’s when I realized where I was.”
She then had to figure out how to make her great, yet noisy, escape.
“Every time the alarm went off I’d go back into the toilet but I thought ,’I have to set the alarms off, what else can I do?,’” she remembered. “‘I need to get out.’”
“I went out and then I realized I’d left my bag in the building so I had to get back in,” added Paull.
She ultimately called a cab to take her home, where she confessed her tipsy transgressions to the Havana nightclub owners via Instagram Direct Messages.
“After that I got a taxi home, the walk to the taxi was so bad. I still had my heels and my dress on, it was so embarrassing,” said Paull — who was pleasantly surprised by the venue’s chill response to her impromptu sleepover.
“I went home and messaged Havana. They said sorry and, ‘Hop you had a good night’s sleep,’” she said, advising other young partiers to “drink responsibly” in effort to avoid similar mishaps.
“I thought all pubs checked the toilets and had cleaners who would have come in and mopped up,” added Paull. “But somehow no one noticed me.”
Head honchos at Havana nightspot have since vowed to do their due diligence when it comes to its guzzling guests.
“We are aware of the incident and we are investigating how this has happened,” owners told Kennedy News, “and will be putting in procedures to ensure this does not happen again.”