Deviled Eggs mascot — a smiling egg with little devil horns and a halo Anonymous · Kind, never preachy · Launching July 1

Pull up a chair.

The low-drama way to get a reel, clip, or video in front of someone who stopped listening — without starting a fight.

You send something worth watching, wrapped in a quick note. It reaches them anonymously, from us — so they actually give it a look, instead of bracing for round twelve with you.

Two Deviled Eggs mascots in a boxing standoff
Round twelve. Nobody wins.

Remember the holiday dinner — the whole spread, all the trimmings, the deviled eggs — back when the family could still sit down together? This is a small way back to that table.

Many of us have lost touch with parents, children, cousins, childhood friends — because we ended up on opposite sides of one of those arguments that splits people into camps.

Deviled Eggs is a small way to reach back — not to win an argument, but to finally be heard by someone you love, without it becoming one.

How it works

Three steps. Your name never shows up.

1

Grab a link

A reel, a video, a clip — or an article, if you must. Whatever you wish they'd actually watch.

2

Pick who, add a line

Choose your person and add a quick note — or borrow one of ours. No lecture, no gotcha.

3

We deliver it

It arrives from Deviled Eggs, not you — so the idea gets a fair look, with no face to argue with.

What you send. What they see.

Choose how your note is worded on the left, and watch the message your person receives take shape on the right — warm, anonymous, and hard to pick a fight with.

What you send
What they see
Deviled Eggs · just now
to you · anonymously
Someone who cares about you wanted you to see this. No agenda — just something worth a few minutes. 🤍
A 2-minute video worth watching
2:04
deviled.social/a/7Qk2
Not a bot, not a mass email — someone who cares arranged for this to be sent to you.
They tap, take a look, and can choose to stay open to more. Your name never shows up — they only know a real person who cares, not a bot, wanted them to see it.

Why anonymity helps

When the messenger disappears, the message gets a fair hearing.

No messenger to dismiss

"Here we go again with Uncle Mike" never happens. There's no relationship to defend — only an idea to consider.

Lower defenses

A gentle note from someone who cares is easier to sit with than a debate. Curiosity replaces combat.

The relationship survives

The disagreement never has a face, so dinner next week is still pleasant. Minds open one at a time.

The house rules

Anonymity only works if nobody abuses it. These aren't up for debate.

Why allow the hard stuff at all? Because being honest about the world sometimes means sitting with uncomfortable, real material — that's not the goal, it's the cost of a conversation that actually matters. We just won't host anything illegal or meant to harm.

The door swings both ways

You can always block someone — even anonymously. But Deviled Eggs gently asks one thing: look before you slam the door. You can't ask the people you love or care about to stay open if you won't. And a heads-up: we take no side on the issues, so people may send you things you'd never click on your own. That's the deal — keep an open mind. If better information changes a mind, wonderful — that's a real win. And if it just helps two people find a little middle ground, that's a win too. Nobody gets forced anywhere.

👀

Hear it out

Open something before you dismiss it. You never have to agree — just give it a glance.

🚫

Block freely & safely

Block any anonymous sender, instantly and permanently. Reporting abuse is always free and never counts against you.

🤝

Stay open to share

Refuse to even look, over and over, and your own sharing quiets down — until you give a few things a real chance.

It's never a lockout, never forces you to agree, and never penalizes protecting yourself from a bad actor — it just asks the fair, minimal thing: look before you refuse.