Odell Beckham Jr.’s long yearning for the New York Giants came true on June 1, 2026,when he signed a one-year, $1.3 million contract with them. How is he enjoying his offseason? Probably by spending some quality [read: cozy] time with Greek model Polyxeni Ferfeli.
Giants WR Odell Beckham Jr linked to Greek model Polyxeni Ferfeli all over again
“Cjay” shared a cozy picture of Odell Beckham Jr. and Polyxeni Ferfeli on X, carefully captioning it: “Odell Beckham Jr hits the beach in Cancun with girlfriend Polyxeni Ferfeli.” The thing is: the picture probably belongs to a 2017-2018 outing. When Beckham had that blonde hairstyle and dated that Greek model. At the moment, he is single, according to the WHO’S DATED WHO website. Anyhow, since he is single, he is being linked to someone! And that someone’s name is Polyxeni Ferfeli. Her name in Greek means: “very hospitable” or “kind to strangers.” But her name became viral content! After an X account called “Commander” tagged Cjay’s post on OBJ and Ferfeli cunningly captioned: “M*f dating a prescription drug.”The post went viral, with over 5 million views in just a day’s time! Her name surely sounds like a prescription drug, but it is not a medicine in real. It just sounds like “Polymyxin,” “Paroxetine,” “Felodipine,” “Ferfula,” or “Ferfol.” But since the medication/genus names and her name sound “same, same but different,” the confusion caught cybercitizens’ eyes! And they surely had several opinions to share…
Polyxeni Ferfeli belongs in a pharmacy commercial
“Could you imagine introducing ibuprofen to your mama?” wrote one user. “Mom, Dad! This is my first love, Xanax!” commented another.“Side effects of Polyxeni include weakness in the knees and poor financial decisions,” speculated a user.A post read, “I’m crying because that name absolutely belongs in a pharmacy commercial. That name sounds less like a human and more like something listed under side effects.”“I was wondering what you meant by that caption. till I saw the name. Who names their child that?” asked one user.One wrote, “It’s a Greek name, you guys.” Another said, “Just an average Greek name btw.”
Is Polyxeni Ferfeli a prescription drug?
No, it is not. Polyxeni is a name, and Ferfeli is a surname. Under the ResearchGate of Antonis Galanos, an MSc, PhD, and Statistician at the Laboratory for Research of the Musculoskeletal System, both the name and the surname are mentioned.In his 201 publications, search for “polyxeni,” and under the “World Journal of AIDS” article, a fellow researcher’s name comes up. Her name is Polyxeni Pikea. Next, search for “ferfeli,” and under the “Journal of Musculoskeletal & Neuronal Interactions” article, a fellow researcher’s name appears. Her name is Sofia Ferfeli.
