@rique_sound_oficial: ➤ ᴍúꜱɪᴄᴀ ᴅᴏ ᴠíᴅᴇᴏ ᴅɪꜱᴘᴏɴíᴠᴇʟ ɴᴀ ʙɪᴏ

Rique Sound Oficial
Rique Sound Oficial
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Friday 03 April 2026 22:00:53 GMT
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tu.blanquito195
tu blanquito :
una locura 😍😍
2026-04-12 17:01:45
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vitorrz252
Vitor_do_grau :
Nossa senhora 🚀🚀🚀
2026-04-21 03:40:05
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rique_sound_oficial
Rique Sound Oficial :
Quer músicas assim no seu pen-drive? 👉 Clica no link da Bio
2026-04-03 22:01:59
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samuel.sx20
Samuel.sx14 :
pressão 🔥
2026-04-21 02:08:47
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douglasbarbosa4290
Douglas Barbosa :
bota top ✨👏👏
2026-04-17 22:28:16
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lucas.fiuza19
Lucas🤟 :
✌️✌️✌️🙌
2026-04-04 12:23:46
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Peter Popoff went bankrupt in 1987. By 2006, his ministry was pulling in $35 million a year. The scam in this clip ran for years. Before each revival, Popoff's wife Betty would walk the crowd collecting prayer request cards — names, ailments, addresses. During the service, she read them to him through a radio transmitter on 39 megahertz, straight into an earpiece hidden in his ear. Popoff would then
Peter Popoff went bankrupt in 1987. By 2006, his ministry was pulling in $35 million a year. The scam in this clip ran for years. Before each revival, Popoff's wife Betty would walk the crowd collecting prayer request cards — names, ailments, addresses. During the service, she read them to him through a radio transmitter on 39 megahertz, straight into an earpiece hidden in his ear. Popoff would then "receive" this information from God. The investigator you hear is James Randi — a professional magician and skeptic who had been watching Popoff for months. When he identified the frequency, he hired someone with a radio scanner to record the transmissions. The result was a cassette tape of Betty whispering: "Hello, Petey, can you hear me?" Randi brought the tape to Johnny Carson. When it played on The Tonight Show in 1987, Popoff's ministry collapsed within weeks. He filed for bankruptcy the same year. He came back in the late 1990s under a new name: People United for Christ. The new product was "Miracle Spring Water" — sourced from Costco, repackaged, and mailed to followers alongside requests for donations. He now targeted elderly and low-income viewers through late-night infomercials. By 2009, his personal monthly salary was $100,000. No criminal charges were ever filed. The remarkable thing isn't that a man faked miracles on television. It's that after being exposed, bankrupted, and played on national TV — millions of people needed to believe badly enough that he came back richer than before. #PeterPopoff #JamesRandi #Televangelist #FaithHealer #Exposed #TrueHistory #DeadWrongHistory #History

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