Charming Corgi Is Fully Convinced Puppy Eyes Can Get Her Anything
Dogs are really good at getting what they want, especially ones who have perfected the whole "puppy eyes" thing. It's when a dog looks up at you with their eyes as big as possible, saying please without saying a word, and it's nearly impossible to say no to.
There's one Corgi who knows how well this trick works when she wants to get a treat. But she seems to be a little confused about who that trick works on.
@theblondecorgi So who's going to tell her that puppy eyes only works on humans? #corgi#corgisoftiktok#furbo#dogsdoingthings#dogsoftiktok
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TikToker @theblondecorgi follows the lives of Beau and Ruby, two fluffy Corgi siblings who look to be living their very best lives.
In the clip, we briefly see Beau, Ruby's older brother (who's actually her uncle), before the camera pans to focus on Ruby. She's standing in front of an AI treat dispenser, it looks like, and is doing her best to give the cute puppy eyes, hoping that will work in her favor for a treat. It doesn't work exactly the way she thinks it will, but it might still work out because it's so adorable and silly.
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In the comments, people joked about what they see Ruby doing in this clip of her "begging" AI to give her a treat. Some comments include, "LOL, this was my exact fear," "This is too funny," and "Your Corgis are beautiful."
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Why Dogs Make 'Puppy Eyes' and How They Learn How Humans Respond to the Expression
Ruby is such a silly puppy, and seeing her try to get treats out of the AI automated treat dispenser shows how smart and adorable dogs are, and that they know they're both, too. But are they doing this on purpose? Do dogs know their "puppy eyes" work? Short answer is yep!
According to a team of researchers at the University of Portsmouth, dogs have developed this "puppy eyes" look because they've grown so close to people. The study, which was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, according to the BBC, shows evidence that dogs have developed a muscle that allows them to do the "puppy eye" movement because it's been shown to work in a dog's favor to get what they want.
The BBC also shares that this finding is consistent with previous research, which had shown dogs use "puppy eyes" when people are looking at them, or in the case of cute Ruby, AI tools, too.
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This story was originally published June 3, 2026 at 9:45 PM.