A sexuality professor shut down a 'misogynistic' student in a viral TikTok, saying she has 'more experience sexually than anyone in this class'

Advertisement
A sexuality professor shut down a 'misogynistic' student in a viral TikTok, saying she has 'more experience sexually than anyone in this class'
@sigmundfried420/TikTok
  • TikTok user and Temple University student Sabrina Pulli is going viral after posting a video of her professor shutting down a student who made misogynistic comments in the human sexuality course's Zoom chat.
  • In the video, Professor Mylina Andrew addresses a student who made an offensive comment about female sexuality, telling him that she had "a whole lot more experience sexually" and could refute his claims.
  • Andrew also told the student that his words were "misogynistic" and he was not free to say "whatever" he wanted in the class.
  • The video racked up over 7 million views and the professor has developed a loyal TikTok fanbase which Pulli calls "The Mylina Hive."
Advertisement

TikTok users are heralding a college professor as an "icon" after she shut down a disrespectful student in a viral video.

Sabrina Pulli, a student at Temple University, posted two videos from what she said was her human sexuality class — in which professor Mylina Andrew took on the misogynistic comments posted in the virtual class's Zoom chat.

In the first video, Andrew addressed the course's "class clown" who, according to Pulli, previously made offensive comments about women's bodies and followed up his comments with the assertion that he could say "whatever [he] wanted."

"So let me start out with the one comment, Omar, and I wanna make sure you're still there and hearing me," Andrew can be heard saying in the clip. "You said, and I quote, 'I can say whatever I want and I don't give a f--- how you feel.' Well, guess what, Omar? You cannot say whatever you want in this classroom, and I do give a f---."

@sigmundfried420

I’ve never seen somethin like this

♬ original sound - Ur worst nightmare

The clip racked up over 700,000 views and over 1,000 comments from impressed viewers, who Pulli has dubbed the "Mylina Hive."

Advertisement

"I knew it was good when she said 'and I quote,'" one commenter joked.

"SHE DID NOT SKIP A BEAT," another wrote.

In Pulli's second video, the professor of human sexuality went on to address the student's comments about women's temperaments and sexuality

"Let me make it perfectly clear to you that women do not 'thrive on d---.' It just doesn't work that way," Andrew can be heard saying to the student, seemingly quoting his prior comments. "I happen to be older than any of you and have a whole lot more experience sexually than anyone in this class, and I can tell you that I can live without penis."

"I can have a really happy life, if that be the case," she continued. "But to say that a woman is being irritated — or whatever the insinuation was — because she's 'not getting enough d---' is misogynistic."

Pulli, like many of her classmates who can be seen reacting to the professor's rebuttal, was impressed.

Advertisement

"Part two of my queen of a professor ending this boy's career before it even begins," the university freshman captioned the clip.

@sigmundfried420 ♬ original sound - Ur worst nightmare

The video went viral almost immediately, racking up over 7 million views and 24,000 comments in just one day — and Andrew has seemingly developed a TikTok fanbase.

"WHAT'S HER CASHAPP?" one commenter asked.

"She isn't your professor anymore, she's ours," another wrote.

"Misogyny has NO place here," the verified TikTok account for the dating app Bumble commented.

Advertisement

The now-viral professor has developed a reputation among students for her candor and commitment to her field

According to The Temple News, the school's editorially independent weekly newspaper, Andrew has been teaching the university's human sexuality class since 2009 and has become involved with on-campus groups dedicated to preventing domestic violence and sexual assault.

Her aim in the classroom, she told the publication back in 2014, is to encourage students to keep an open mind and having a thorough understanding of human anatomy.

"I just have that comfortable attitude about [sex]," Andrew said. "I put great emphasis on what I think students – what everybody – will have to know in their lifetime."

Read more:

A student says test proctoring AI flagged her as cheating when she read a question out loud. Others say the software could have more dire consequences.

Advertisement

TikTokers in college are turning on their cameras in Zoom lectures so their professors don't have to teach to blank screens

The TikTok time warp scan filter lets you create fun visual illusions — here are the biggest trends around the effect

{{}}