TikToker Dbon973_ — real name Devan Bonagura — recently posted a November 3 TikTok of a Walmart worker, identified by her nametag as Nola, as she sat alone in the Walmart break room."I'd accept it, but I'd still have to work until I get the other $60,000 paid off the house," she told him, seemingly nonplussed at the donations raised.Bonagura has posted additional philanthropic content — including a video where he tips a waitress $500 for a cup of water — to his 132K followers after Nola's video, but the TikToker's acts of charity are on a relatively smaller scale when compared to major online creators.Beast (who Bonagura tagged in other videos) grew a massive 110 million following for filming gameshow-like money giveaways and philanthropic acts in which he gave away millions of dollars.But, critics say filming people experiencing poverty and benefit ting from "acts of kindness" can dehumanize the subjects by focusing solely on their perceived pain and, while useful in the short-term for collecting funds, oversimplifies the root causes of the societal ills they depict."