“Walking into Random Houses, Let’s Go” It was the line that made a nation double-take.
In May 2023, Bacari-Bronze O’Garro — better known as Mizzy with his catchphrase “We outside” — filmed himself strolling through the front door of a family home in Hackney.
He walked downstairs, parked himself on the sofa and chirped, “Is this where the study group is?” while the stunned homeowners told him to leave. It wasn’t a skit with actors. It was a real family, in a real house, suddenly turned into content. The woman sounded afraid, the man did too, pleading “I’ve got kids man”.
Mizzy left quickly, but it must have been scary for the parents and their young children, especially as Bacari was with a few of his friends.
What the Court Said
The video quite rightly sparked outrage, and Mizzy ended up in court.
A magistrate didn’t buy the “just a prank” defence. Mizzy was hit with a two-year Criminal Behaviour Order (CBO) that banned him from:
- Uploading original social videos that featured anyone without their consent,
- Trespassing on private property (homes, businesses, schools, shops),
- Entering Westfield Stratford City.
He also had to pay fines and costs. The message was simple: no more ambushing strangers for views.
Within hours of the order being made, Mizzy was back online. Clips appeared showing him at Westfield and posting people without consent — exactly what the court had just banned.
Prosecutors called it deliberate; a judge later agreed, saying he’d flouted the order almost immediately. The result? An 18-week stint in a Young Offender Institution and another bill to pay.
Why the Home Invasion Hit Harder Than the Rest
Mizzy had a rap sheet of outrage-bait already: grabbing a woman’s dog and running off on camera, ripping up library books, hopping into strangers’ cars, riding the roof of a moving bus, even cycling into a supermarket stockroom. All obnoxious.
But walking into a family’s living room crossed a different line — privacy and safety. It wasn’t shock in a public space; it was a stranger in your hallway with a phone.
People hated this kid, and they let him know it online.
The Clout Machine Behind It
Mizzy’s rise is a case study in how the algorithm rewards escalation. Each stunt had to top the last. Annoy commuters? Old news. Spook shoppers? Yawn. The “random house” clip was engineered to be the jaw-dropper — the moment everyone shares because they can’t believe someone would actually do it.
And for a while, it worked. Views, follows, headlines. He was even interview by Piers Morgan among other people. Then the handbrake: court orders, convictions, and a very public ceiling on how far “pranks” can go.
Turning Over a New Leaf
Since serving time and facing the weight of his Criminal Behaviour Order, Mizzy insists he’s changed course. He’s spoken about cringing at his old clips, admitting many weren’t even pranks but crimes dressed up as content. Now he says he wants to focus on college, acting classes, and creating videos that don’t come at other people’s expense.
Whether that reinvention sticks remains to be seen, although to be fair to Mizzy (who is now a Dad of two), he seems genuine in his regret and has clearly been working on himself. So for now, Mizzy is presenting himself less as the TikTok terror who walked into strangers’ homes, and more as a young Dad trying to figure out what to do after his fifteen minutes of infamy.
This post is part of our Influencers Gone Wild series.

