@kidsuki: ✩┆#SANJIROPUS — someone PLEASE make a plushie of this || #onepiece #onepieceanime #anime #animeedit #sanji #sanjionepiece #sanjiedit #fyp #foryou #foryoupage #edit

Ina ★
Ina ★
Open In TikTok:
Region: CA
Friday 20 December 2024 09:25:39 GMT
84102
18006
122
1030

Music

Download

Comments

k1rby_1sc001
Nevian!! 🏳️‍⚧️ || he/they :
anai pfp spotted + sanjiropus mentioned
2024-12-20 09:44:45
77
nonchalantukai
𝙍𝘼𝙑𝙄 :
I will never stop laughing in the scene where he just stares into the screen for minutes 😭😭
2024-12-20 12:39:48
915
dora.exp_
dora 🌊 :
he's so cute 😍 i'm not caught up yet, can smb please tell me which episode is this from?
2024-12-20 09:34:23
540
.chaosphobia
Dami 🐟 :
I NEED MORE OF SANJIROPUS ☹️☹️
2024-12-20 18:37:56
73
amo_a_law
mondongo :3 :
Yo si me hubiera quedado a ver esas 29 horas ✨💖
2024-12-21 04:22:47
121
zhenathy
Zer0 :
watching all of the 29 hours and 59 minutes 🙏
2024-12-30 07:28:49
106
tinykageyama
quinn 🦋🌀🦌 :
ANAI PFP
2024-12-20 14:15:21
4
layschl3e._
H3ARTS4AI :
AWWWH ONLY THAT LONG? 29 hours and 59 minutes is not enough 😭🙏
2024-12-20 11:42:09
73
To see more videos from user @kidsuki, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

J.D. Vance’s memoir hits a little a different eight years later. During the election and its immediate aftermath, critics declared Vance’s personal account of his impoverished childhood in Ohio an urgent sociological text. The memoir was nearly universally praised, becoming a staple of university reading programs and critics’ best-of lists. “Hillbilly Elegy” wasn’t just good; it was “essential.”   Vance was “a palatable messenger for information that people were sort of starting to figure out that they needed in that time. They needed to understand the Trump base, the Trump voter,” recalled Meghan Daum, who reviewed the memoir for the New York Times.   Within a couple of years — before Vance declared his intent to run for office in the 2022 elections, and even before Ron Howard’s film adaptation came out in 2020 — the public mood seemed to sour on the book.   “At a certain point, everyone just turned on it,” Daum said. “It’s hard to say why, though. People were mad at him because he was sort of doing the ‘up by the bootstraps’ thing. And showing any kind of understanding at all of people from those communities was suddenly so taboo.”   The criticism was bipartisan, Smith said. “I think on the right, it was more like, ‘Oh, wait, it’s just too simple and glib to say that J.D.’s book explains Trump. The Trump supporter isn’t just living in Appalachia.’”   As the Republican National Convention unfolded this week, some critics noted Vance’s shift away from the beliefs he’d espoused in the book.   Caption from article by Sophia Nguyen.
J.D. Vance’s memoir hits a little a different eight years later. During the election and its immediate aftermath, critics declared Vance’s personal account of his impoverished childhood in Ohio an urgent sociological text. The memoir was nearly universally praised, becoming a staple of university reading programs and critics’ best-of lists. “Hillbilly Elegy” wasn’t just good; it was “essential.”   Vance was “a palatable messenger for information that people were sort of starting to figure out that they needed in that time. They needed to understand the Trump base, the Trump voter,” recalled Meghan Daum, who reviewed the memoir for the New York Times.   Within a couple of years — before Vance declared his intent to run for office in the 2022 elections, and even before Ron Howard’s film adaptation came out in 2020 — the public mood seemed to sour on the book.   “At a certain point, everyone just turned on it,” Daum said. “It’s hard to say why, though. People were mad at him because he was sort of doing the ‘up by the bootstraps’ thing. And showing any kind of understanding at all of people from those communities was suddenly so taboo.”   The criticism was bipartisan, Smith said. “I think on the right, it was more like, ‘Oh, wait, it’s just too simple and glib to say that J.D.’s book explains Trump. The Trump supporter isn’t just living in Appalachia.’”   As the Republican National Convention unfolded this week, some critics noted Vance’s shift away from the beliefs he’d espoused in the book.   Caption from article by Sophia Nguyen.

About