Campbell Hunt Puckett stands with herhusband, Jett, showing off her outfit.

He stands slightly behind her, gazing adoringly as she sets the scene.

Friday-night date night, shesays, in the viral video that now has more than 10 million views.

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Puckett isnt the only man whose behavior has been dissected and cross-examined by users online.

Boyfriends in cishet couples across the world have become subjects of examination on TikTok.

Its no longer enough to be an off-camera character.

The Instagram husband was something to aspire to.

He existed solely to the side, rather than take up space onscreen.

Basically, Instagram boyfriends now need to offer something else besides pretty pictures.

The theory goes that if their boyfriend hears their plight and peels it for them, he loves them.

If he refuses, he doesnt.

Viewers can decide the nuances of the reactions in between, giving the ultimate thumbs-up or fatal thumbs-down.

Walrich posted her version, in which she does not hold an orange.

Lover, she says in the video.

Will you peel it?

He responds in confusion.

You want me to go to the store and buy you an orange?

She furrows her brows and repeats the question.

Will you peel the orange?

Fans shared their final take on the test.

I think you did it wrong but I think he passed the test, one wrote.

Another said, Well, round of applause for his willingness to find a compromise and understand.

Cleaning up after him is not something I do regularly, because we almost always clean together.

Culture writer Noella Williams, 24, tellsGlamourthat she believes these trends are designed for engagement.

This is just another chronically online competition of who has the most thoughtful significant other, she says.

I think its some sort of internet bait for women to prank their golden-retriever-esque boyfriends.

Ultimately, it doesnt matter if the boyfriend passes or failsall engagement can be turned into profit.

Walrich says she ended up making $3,000 off the messy-room video.

I wanted to take it down, but he encouraged me to leave it up, she says.

Also, Walrich says most of the time she is joking when she participates in these trends.

I try my best to make it obvious when I am being comical versus genuine, she says.

Still, these are real relationships, and Walrich says its something shes conscious of when posting.

She and her partner usually have a discussion before participating in any trend.

Strangers dont have the full picture of reality.

I cannot complain.

Having a public relationship is what Ive always wanted.

And many see real value in some of these litmus tests.

If they dont know what to do or clean it up poorly, then its a bad sign.

Now put your boyfriend onscreen, and let the internet decide whether hes worth keeping.

Steffi Cao is a culture writer based in Brooklyn.