@nabilaaselek: Ni kali la last post pastu three gintu🙊🐒 #fyp #capcut #bismillahfyp #fypage #fypsarawak #fypシ゚viral🖤tiktok #fypageシ #foryoupage #foryou #xybca #4u #jj #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp

Nabila🕸️🕷️
Nabila🕸️🕷️
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Monday 04 August 2025 15:47:08 GMT
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soleh_turu
𝙨𝙤𝙡𝙚𝙝🧬 :
aduhh incas
2025-08-04 16:39:35
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blankedspace6
blankedspace6 :
one two three takpe jangan one two one two 😜
2025-08-04 23:33:01
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zandergaming27
SkyJack27 :
Menyalaaa 🔥
2025-08-06 10:49:08
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azirul_iffan
ipan koroyy𖣘 :
epp🤭
2025-08-04 21:47:38
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imie2234
Imie :
cantiklk nya awak
2025-08-06 12:33:59
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putrashahrul7
putra shahrul :
😉😉
2025-08-26 15:34:52
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elly9205
elly92 :
😳
2025-08-09 16:55:14
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fiqnkmilo1
𝙛𝙞𝙦 𝙩𝙧𝙪𝙨𝙩𝙚𝙙 :
ungrrr💋
2025-08-06 13:09:18
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#greenscreenvideo  In Freakier Friday, Janet Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan deliver a playful, four-way body-swap comedy—no curses required. Sure, the characters visit a psychic, but she’s clearly a satire: the scene’s humor lies in how she hawks everything from Fortune readings to Reiki, business advice, and financial coaching. It’s a jab at spiritual entrepreneurs everywhere—sound familiar? Yet a viral Christian critic claims the movie is “demonic,” triggered by fear rather than the actual content. That’s not critique—it’s religious trauma, activated and projected. Neuroscience shows us that fear is rooted in past conditioning—dysregulated nervous systems, amygdala hijacks—and a 25-second scene can feel overwhelming to someone laced with supernatural guilt or trauma. Meanwhile, I watched this movie with friends—we walked out laughing in the parking lot. I wasn’t scared; I was amused, regulated, grounded. That’s because deconstruction and healthy reflection free you from knee-jerk fear responses. This isn’t about canceling beliefs—it’s about calling for accountability: If religious reviewers call entertainment “witchcraft,” or target Beyoncé, troublemakers get a reach too far. Studios should consider legal routes when defamation crosses into public harm. Bottom line: Freakier Friday isn’t evil. It’s comedy. And if you’re afraid of that, it might not be the movie—it might be what the movie reveals. #freakierfriday #christiantiktok #deconstruction #deconstructiontiktok
#greenscreenvideo In Freakier Friday, Janet Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan deliver a playful, four-way body-swap comedy—no curses required. Sure, the characters visit a psychic, but she’s clearly a satire: the scene’s humor lies in how she hawks everything from Fortune readings to Reiki, business advice, and financial coaching. It’s a jab at spiritual entrepreneurs everywhere—sound familiar? Yet a viral Christian critic claims the movie is “demonic,” triggered by fear rather than the actual content. That’s not critique—it’s religious trauma, activated and projected. Neuroscience shows us that fear is rooted in past conditioning—dysregulated nervous systems, amygdala hijacks—and a 25-second scene can feel overwhelming to someone laced with supernatural guilt or trauma. Meanwhile, I watched this movie with friends—we walked out laughing in the parking lot. I wasn’t scared; I was amused, regulated, grounded. That’s because deconstruction and healthy reflection free you from knee-jerk fear responses. This isn’t about canceling beliefs—it’s about calling for accountability: If religious reviewers call entertainment “witchcraft,” or target Beyoncé, troublemakers get a reach too far. Studios should consider legal routes when defamation crosses into public harm. Bottom line: Freakier Friday isn’t evil. It’s comedy. And if you’re afraid of that, it might not be the movie—it might be what the movie reveals. #freakierfriday #christiantiktok #deconstruction #deconstructiontiktok

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