Sometime in late 2023 to mid-2024, a clip began circulating on TikTok and Facebook Reels. The video, often carrying gibberish filenames like kivqcmnt1d5p.mp4 (suggesting a raw server upload or repost from a content delivery network), showed Kamangyan demonstrating a shampoo.
In the now-infamous 47-second clip, Kamangyan:
The combination of fake science, physical comedy, and accidental ASMR (the sound of squishy foam) turned the clip into a copypasta template. kivqcmnt1d5p - Viral - Shampoo Ni Kamangyan -Fu...
Netizens quickly isolated frames from the video:
So where does the alphanumeric string kivqcmnt1d5p fit in? Sometime in late 2023 to mid-2024, a clip
During our investigation, we found this code appended to mirrored versions of the “Shampoo Ni Kamangyan” video on less-moderated platforms and private Telegram channels. Further digging suggests three possibilities:
| Possibility | Explanation |
|-------------|-------------|
| 1. Content ID hash | Some third-party tracking services assign a unique hash (kivqcmnt1d5p) to a specific upload to avoid copyright flags. |
| 2. Shared database key | A fan archive or meme repository (e.g., a Notion database or AirTable) uses this as a primary key for the video asset. |
| 3. Shortlink redirect remnant | A URL shortener (like bit.ly or shorte.st) generated kivqcmnt1d5p as an internal slug for the video; the link later expired, but the code survived in cached posts. | The combination of fake science, physical comedy, and
Our analysis confirms the string does not lead to an active malware domain or phishing page. It is inert—likely a leftover identifier from a now-deleted shareable link.
At its core, “Shampoo Ni Kamangyan” is a low-fi, comedic, and surprisingly catchy user-generated song by a Filipino content creator known as Kamangyan (real name: Camille Mendoza). The video typically features Kamangyan in a bathroom or casual setting, pretending to wash her hair while delivering deadpan, exaggerated lyrics about the struggles of dandruff, hair fall, and the "magic" of an unnamed shampoo.
Sample lyric (translated from Taglish):
“Isang hugas, bango ng hair / Kahit walang conditioner, keri na ‘to, swear.”
The production quality is intentionally amateurish—think karaoke backing track, off-beat claps, and a repetitive chorus. That raw, unpolished aesthetic is precisely what made it a comfort meme during the post-pandemic era, resonating with Gen Z and Millennial Filipinos tired of overly polished influencer content.