Tag: viral
I’m a 4’11 and 95lb redhead – I tried the viral TikTok dress and loved the way my butt looked in it
FINDING the pretty spring dress that makes everything look good can be tough, but one influencer has found the perfect fit.
The TikTok personality showed off her find for her 22,000 followers who get fashion tips and country girl advice from her videos.
One TikTok influencer found the best-fitting dress[/caption]
The influencer shared it in a video, highlighting the back of the dress[/caption]
Lifestyle influencer Belle (@cheerful.bellee) recently shared a video of her trying on a viral TikTok dress.
The thin, slip-style garment featured spaghetti straps and a low-cut back.
The fabric itself was made of a gorgeous light green with blue flowers printed all over.
“4’11 95 lbs tatted redhead trying on this viral TikTok,” Belle wrote in the short video.
“Wait until you see the back,” she wrote in the post’s caption, adding a peach emoji – often used to refer to someone’s bottom.
Several TikTok users flooded the video’s comment section gushing about the outfit.
“Woooow,” one user wrote.
“I’m in love with you,” another said.
“Gorgeous,” a third said, while a fourth chimed in saying: “Thank you for being the spark of joy in my day.”
“Absolutely beautiful,” another commented.
Belle has been posting country lifestyle, dating, and fashion TikToks to the social media platform since November 2022.
Since then, she has amassed over 22,000 followers and more than 88,500 likes on the app.
While the influencer didn’t reveal where she purchased the dress from, The U.S. Sun has previously reported on outfits going viral on TikTok, including this popular dress.
Plus, check out this try-on and review of another viral dress from on YouTube influencer.
Viral snowboarder who was found buried alive in thick snow breaks his silence on dramatic rescue
Chloe Bailey Dishes on Debut Album ‘In Pieces’, ‘Swarm’ Viral Scene, & More on ‘Big Boy in the Neighborhood’
All roads lead to March 31 for Chloe Bailey.
For, the 24-year-old will unleash her solo album ‘In Pieces’ on the masses on said date.
Ahead of its arrival, the ‘Body Do’ belter stopped by ‘Big Boy in the Neighborhood’ and dished on a whole host of topics.
Ever candid, Bailey unpacked the concept of the LP’s title –
The post Chloe Bailey Dishes on Debut Album ‘In Pieces’, ‘Swarm’ Viral Scene, & More on ‘Big Boy in the Neighborhood’ appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. – Thirsty?.
ChatGPT: how to use the viral AI chatbot that everyone’s talking about
Clip of Lance Reddick terrifying Eric Andre goes viral as the actor’s fans pay tribute
This Viral Kindle Stand Makes Reading in Bed So Easy
If you’re an avid reader, how great a Kindle can be. Your books are delivered instantly, you can access a new book at any time, and it’s travel-friendly. But if you often read in bed, a Kindle can become cumbersome. Thankfully, TikTok has the answer.
Read This Article on LifeSavvy ›
Welcome to the Kings League, Gerard Piqué’s New Soccer ‘Circus’ Going Viral on Twitch
Code.org Celebrates 10th Anniversary With Fond Memories of Its Viral 2013 Video
Remember this?” asks tech-backed Code.org on Twitter as it celebrates its achievements…. “It’s the viral video that launched Code.org back in 2013!” Code.org also reminds its 1M Twitter followers that What Most Schools Don’t Teach starred tech leaders Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Jack Dorsey, Tony Hsieh, and Drew Houston.
But 10 years later, the promise of unlimited tech jobs and crazy-fun workplaces promoted in the video by these Poster Boys for K-12 Computer Science hasn’t exactly aged well, and may serve as more of a cautionary tale about hubris for some rather than evoke fond memories.
“Our policy at Facebook is literally to hire as many talented engineers as we can find,” exclaimed Zuckerberg in the video. But ten years later, Facebook’s policy is firing as many employees as it can — 11,000+ and counting. Houston, who sang the praises of working in cool tech workplaces in the video (“To get the very best people we try to make the office as awesome as possible”), went on to make remote work the standard practice at Dropbox, cut 11% of his employees, and reported a $575M loss on unneeded office space. Under pressure, Gates left Microsoft, Dorsey left Twitter, and Hsieh tragically left (Amazon-owned) Zappos, and the companies they co-founded recently unveiled plans for massive layoffs and halted ambitious office expansion plans as tech employees push back on return-to-the-office edicts.
Still, there’s no denying the success of what the National Science Foundation called the “amazing marketing prowess” of tech giant supported and directed Code.org when it comes to pushing coding into American classrooms. The nonprofit boasts of having 80M+ student accounts, reported it had spent $74.7M to train 113,000+ K-12 teachers to deliver its K-12 CS curriculum, and has set its sights on making CS a high school graduation requirement in every state by 2030.
Interestingly, concomitant with Code.org’s 10th anniversary celebration was the release of a new academic paper — Breaking the Code: Confronting Racism in Computer Science through Community, Criticality, and Citizenship — that provocatively questions whether K-12 CS, at least in its current incarnation, is a feature or a bug. From the paper: “We are currently seeing an unprecedented push of computing into P-12 education systems across the US, with calls for compulsory computing education and changes to graduation requirements….
Although computing creep narratives are typically framed in lofty democratic terms, the ‘access’ narrative is ultimately a corporate play. Broadening participation in computing serves corporate interests by offering an expanded labor supply from which to choose the most productive workers. It is true that this might benefit an elite subset of BIPOC individuals, but the macroeconomics of the global labor market mean that access to computing is unlikely to ever benefit BIPOC communities at scale. […] There are several nonprofits invested in the growth of computing, many with mission statements that do explicitly cite equity (and sometimes racial equity, in particular). Some of the larger nonprofits, though, are mainly funded by (and thus ultimately serve) corporate interests (e.g., Code. org).
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Exclusive: Angela Bassett on Being Honored This Award Season & “Did The Thing” Viral Moment
Angela Bassett did the thing – and has been doing so for decades!
This award season has seen the legendary actress honored in earnest for her stunning performance as Queen Ramonda in ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever.’
The latest accolade to be bestowed upon Bassett was the Best Supporting Actress Award at the AAFCA Awards 2023 in Los Angeles.
The post Exclusive: Angela Bassett on Being Honored This Award Season & “Did The Thing” Viral Moment appeared first on ..::That Grape Juice.net::.. – Thirsty?.