Rachel Buck found out about her husband’s infidelity and there was only one place where she could go to genuinely vent. That was TikTok. She explained what transpired when her husband was in Las Vegas by posting as @mother.buck.er.
Social media users were divided over Buck’s videos, with some congratulating her for trying to stand up for herself and drawing attention to her husband’s behavior and others criticizing her for bringing up private matters in such a public setting. Since then, Rachel has had to lock up her account to protect it from the throngs of haters who have shown to troll her.
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Who is Rachael Buck?
Rachael Buck is a tiktoker who has recently come under scrutiny for posting her personal relationship details on the social platform.
Buck posted a video of her husband recovering his clothes from their front lawn on Monday. “LADIES: don’t let your man go to Vegas without you,” read the caption of the TikTok. The video had been viewed 8.7 million times as of Wednesday afternoon.
Millions more people watched Buck’s three-part follow-up because they were keen on finding out more about her husband’s infidelity. In the ensuing recordings, she claimed that her husband had traveled to Las Vegas for business, gone to a strip club with coworkers, and remained there after his colleagues had left. According to Buck, her husband afterward claimed he had been drugged by a stripper and had passed out, but insisted “nothing happened.”
Buck, though, had doubts about his narrative, so she turned to TikTok because she “needed validation that I wasn’t crazy.”
She was accused by many of fabricating the events to gain attention. Others wrote offensive remarks about her, calling her annoying or implying that she deserved to be cheated on.
Although Buck swears that her narrative is true, she wishes it weren’t. As viewers criticized how she described her experience, Buck responded, “Women can’t win. It doesn’t matter what we do. People are going to tell us it’s wrong.”
“I understand the backlash, because, you know, not everything needs to be made public, but it’s public now,” she added. “And there’s no taking it back.”