A Florida man who pulled a juvenile bull shark from the Atlantic Ocean with his bare hands and posed with it for a video posted to Facebook is facing scorn as the video goes viral.

The video, posted to Facebook Saturday by WPTV anchor Ashleigh Walters, shows a shirtless tattooed gentleman with a man bun pulling what appears to be a juvenile bull shark from the water by its tail before pinning the fish to the sand as onlookers snap pictures.

At the beginning of the video it seems the tattooed man and another man in a grey shirt are hauling the shark to shore with a fishing line. A fisherman holding a rod stood nearby.

Once on shore, the man bun beachgoer holds the shark down by the tail and head while going through a series of silly, manly poses. The other men on the beach, as well as three women who appear to be tourists, take several pictures.

Shark Capture, Release on Palm BeachVIDEO: Shark capture, release on Palm Beach(Shark was put farther into water after end of video. It did not resurface for several minutes.) WPTV #amcrew #wptvwx #beach #shark

Posted by Ashleigh Walters on Saturday, February 20, 2016

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The video ends with the shark wrangler and his grey shirted accomplice attempting to get the shark to swim back into open water.

“Shark was put farther into water after end of video,” Walters wrote in the video description. “It did not resurface for several minutes.”

The Brevard Times reports:

Bull sharks are common along the east coast of Florida and juvenile bull sharks frequent the coast from Palm Beach, Florida to Daytona Beach, Florida.

That’s because the Indian River Lagoon, which extends along Florida’s east coast from southern Volusia County to Palm Beach County, is an important nursery habitat for baby bull sharks. When fully grown, bull sharks reach 7 to 11 feet in length and weigh between 200 and 300 pounds.

The news site also pointed out that, along with tiger and great white sharks, bull sharks are considered by the International Shark Attack File to be among the most top three most dangerous sharks to humans.

Bull sharks, which live in both fresh and salt water, have killed at least 27 humans, the Times reports.

In April, a spear fisherman was attacked by what he believes was a bull shark about three miles off the coast of Jupiter, Fla., while a charter boat captain hauled in a 500-pound bull shark “not far from the Pinellas County shoreline” in June, WPTV reports.

Virtually all of the folks commenting about the recent bull shark video on Facebook were unimpressed by the stunt.

“Yeah, so brave so manly … or whatever,” Gonza Veron posted. “Now try to selfy IN the water with the shark.”

“Wow. Can anyone see wildlife without having to put their filthy hands on it to take a picture?” Jeancarlo Avila Siciliano wrote. “Too many guys like this think they are so manly for the wrong reasons. I swear to God their children.”

“The animal cruelty aside, this is quite a duchy move. Of course it’s probably going on Tinder with all the other manbun/beard-donning simpletons ….,” Vernon Green wrote. “Someone should hold his head underwater and take a few … dozen underwater portraits then maybe just maybe let him resurface to get some air. Then do it again because the pose wasn’t quite right.”

“You know this guy is a douche already,” Mike Glass posted, “look at his ‘man’