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A teenager’s viral prom video caught the eye of an unlikely viewer — the U.S Department of Education.
High school student Lizbeth Rivas recently uploaded an extravagant prom video to her Twitter page that showed her posing in front of a Mercedes-Benz and dancing to Offset and Cardi B‘s song “Clout.”
It’s a well-produced video that easily captured the attention of those on Twitter, raking in more than 4.4 million views since it was posted on March 25.
“Thanks for all the love on our prom video we just wanted to something different and fun for us,” Rivas, 17, wrote on social media in a follow-up tweet.
In the replies to the post, as first reported by BuzzFeed News, Twitter user @_Ferrg first joked that FAFSA — the office of the Department of Education that grants loans and work-study funds to students in college or trade school in need of financial help — could see the video, too.
“FAFSA looking at this like…” he wrote with a GIF of rapper Birdman rubbing his hands together.
pic.twitter.com/4XrNrxwL6X
— Federal Student Aid (@FAFSA) March 28, 2019
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Surprisingly enough, just a day later, FAFSA’s official Twitter account responded with a GIF of their own, showing a little boy watching and sipping on a cup of coffee.
FAFSA’s tweet received nearly 14,000 likes, and many replied back in shock that they actually responded to the video.
But for some, the tweet was anxiety-inducing as they realized the department was actually on Twitter — and could see what they posted as well.
I’m mad the actual FASFA account responded… they ain’t playing no games pic.twitter.com/wvA4rgJMuE
— ???King_Solomon? (@treycjonsolomon) March 29, 2019
pic.twitter.com/BmUVlpwd77
— Giovana (@_nitzaa) March 28, 2019
Her lookin at fasfa with the verified mark. Oh they watchin watchin ? pic.twitter.com/YbihEO90Uu
— CJ (@Christinacpht87) March 29, 2019
Some took the time to ask the FAFSA account some student loan-related questions, which the department actually answered.
But with so much attention coming her way, Rivas told BuzzFeed not all of it was welcomed.
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“People assumed my parents had all this money to spend when in reality I have a job, I saved up and paid for my dress, did my own makeup and hair, and the car was my date’s father’s car,” she said. “I was receiving a lot of hate and foul things were being said… But hey, that’s the internet for ya!”
Meanwhile, FAFSA told Buzzfeed that they are often flagged to high school students’ posts, but they do not “monitor people’s [online] activities.” They replied to Rivas’ thread because they “thought it was a relevant opportunity to embrace the channel’s humor.”
FAFSA did not immediately respond to PEOPLE’s request for comment.