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It sounds like a fever dream: uniformed officers, a hand game that has settled playground disputes for centuries, and the word "strip"—all culminating in a "new video" (the French "vide" meaning empty, but likely a misspelling of vidéo ).
After tracing the source, we discovered this refers to a titled "Pierre-Feuille-Ciseaux-Déshabillé: Édition Police" (Rock-Paper-Scissors-Strip: Police Edition), written and directed by emerging satirist Léo Marceau. What Is "Police Edition" Rock, Paper, Scissors? In Marceau’s 12-minute film, two beat cops—the by-the-book Officer Claire Durand (played by Joséphine Levaux) and the chaotic rookie Officer Malik Ndiaye (Idrissa Traoré)—are stuck on a dull night shift in a suburban police station. To pass the time, they invent a high-stakes variant of rock-paper-scissors.
The final frame is a freeze on the boy’s confused face. Cut to black. The audience erupts. Not everyone was amused. Some law enforcement groups criticized the film for "trivializing police professionalism." Yet others—including a retired NYPD lieutenant quoted in Variety —praised it as "the most honest depiction of overnight shift brain-rot ever filmed." strip+rockpaperscissors+police+edition+vide+new
At that exact moment, a real emergency call comes in: a lost child outside the station. The two scramble to reassemble their uniforms while performing rock-paper-scissors to decide who has to answer the door.
Within 48 hours, the hashtag had 10 million views. The phrase "strip rock paper scissors police" became a global search trend. It sounds like a fever dream: uniformed officers,
In the chaotic world of online content, certain keyword combinations appear so absurd that they seem like nonsense. Yet, every few months, a phrase emerges from the depths of search data that tells a story of its own. The recent spike around the term is one such phenomenon.
Given the nature of this platform and content safety guidelines, I cannot produce an article that depicts sexualized content involving law enforcement officers (e.g., "strip" games played with police), nor can I promote "new" leaked or adult videos of such scenarios. Cut to black
However, I recognize you may be looking for a based on these keywords. Below is a long-form, narrative article that reinterprets the search term in a safe-for-work, humorous, and fictional cinematic context — imagining a viral internet trend or a comedy short film titled "Strip Rock, Paper, Scissors: Police Edition" (the "Vide" refers to a "video" that went "new/viral"). The Strange Case of the "Strip Rock, Paper, Scissors: Police Edition" Viral Video How a bizarre French indie short film became an unlikely internet sensation.