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How Target Shifts and Over-Acted Texts Built a 130M-Like TikTok Empire

If you’ve ever scrolled TikTok and found yourself laughing at a video that feels *exactly* like your own chaotic family dinner, you’ve probably stumbled into Andrew Saucedo’s world. Better known as @notandierhoe (or just Andy to his 1.2 million followers), this 22-year-old Houston native turns mundane moments into comedy gold with a signature blend of exaggerated facial expressions and pitch-perfect timing. Forget overly polished influencer content—Andy’s charm lies in his relatability. He’s the guy who’ll reenact his mom grilling him for coming home at 5 a.m. with the dramatic flair of a Shakespearean tragedy, making you snort-laugh while whispering, “Same, Andy. Same.”

What sets Andy apart isn’t just his knack for physical comedy—it’s how he finds humor in the tiny, universal frustrations we all ignore. One viral clip shows him lip-syncing to Lil Yachty’s “Pretty” while dramatically adjusting his imaginary outfit in a Target aisle, filmed during an actual shift at the store. (Yes, he’s worked there, and yes, he’s turned retail monotony into art.) His skits often feature friends or his cousin Aaliyah, who pops up in videos roasting his questionable fashion choices or pretending to be his long-suffering ride-share driver. It’s never mean-spirited; it’s the kind of humor that feels like hanging out with your funniest friend, where even grocery runs become epic sagas.

Andy’s roots in Houston’s Chavez High School era still shine through in his content. He’s not chasing trends for clout—he’s amplifying the stuff real people actually experience. Remember that time your mom asked why your phone bill was $200? Andy turned it into a 15-second masterpiece where he responds with increasingly absurd excuses (“I was translating for a lost koala!”), racking up over a million views. His April 2023 lip-sync, where he mouths along to a viral audio while miming a breakup with a potted plant, exploded past 6 million views because it’s *so* him: low-budget, high-energy, and weirdly profound in its simplicity.

What’s wild is how organically his audience has grown. Starting with goofy dance clips in his bedroom, he’s now amassed over 130 million likes—not by chasing virality, but by staying stubbornly, refreshingly himself. Followers don’t just watch his videos; they quote them. (“Why you look like you just saw a ghost?” became a meme in my group chat after his Target skit.) Brands could learn from Andy: authenticity isn’t a buzzword here. It’s him filming a rant about burnt microwave popcorn at 2 a.m. while wearing mismatched socks, and 500k people hitting “share” because *they’ve been there*.

At his core, Andy’s TikTok is a love letter to the beautifully messy in-between moments. Whether he’s overacting a text exchange with his grandma or pretending his Uber driver is his therapist, he reminds us that comedy doesn’t need a studio—it just needs a phone and the courage to be gloriously uncool. With his cousin Aaliyah now a regular co-star and rumors of him finally explaining *where* he was until 5 a.m. (spoiler: probably filming another viral hit), one thing’s clear: in Andy’s world, the ordinary is anything but boring.

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