@reshfxbgm21: 𝐓𝐚𝐠 𝐘𝐨𝐮𝐫 🤌🤍 #vadivelu #tamilstatus #1millionaudition #100k #tamilmuser @Rajes @kanna1125 @RYA🤍🧿 @APPI MAAQ 💥

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mr.rockymathu
🥀💫Mr.Rolex....🦂👿 :
😘✨Malaaa malaaa....🙂‍↕️💖
2026-04-23 04:52:34
12
varahisareesvs
Varahisareesvs :
How I thought I was going to train my husband but he trained me instead 😭 he’s kulpedi but I love him he does behave the best too 🩷😘
2026-04-22 16:47:59
1
fatimanasria
fatimanasria :
😄😄😄😄😄y😀😀😀😀😳😳😳😳
2026-04-24 21:24:39
1
adenram24_forklift
adenram24_FORKLIFT :
After 3days on call after hwavy woek
2026-04-24 16:32:33
0
s.sxktiii
Pista🚀_31💎 :
Ok Mala 😍
2026-04-24 16:53:31
0
krissloges
KRISS LOGES :
2026-04-24 08:24:07
0
sasikala0205
Risaji :
2026-04-22 07:13:51
2
pirashana4
❤pirashana❤ :
2026-04-22 17:25:00
1
sangeethsangeeth450
jaffna 𝘀𝗮𝗻𝗴𝗲𝗲𝘁𝗵 🔥💀 :
😂
2026-04-27 06:50:26
0
iamsatish01
𝑆𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑠ℎ 𝑅𝑎𝑗 :
Vadivelu is prime 😂
2026-04-24 09:52:37
1
rajue.rajue
Rajue Rajue :
hi
2026-04-22 13:07:18
1
user1798851381559
சத்யன் :
2026-04-22 17:58:43
5
thilu_1
🧿Kayal🧿 :
2026-04-22 10:59:03
4
abdurrahman123123123
🄶🄾🄾🄳 🄱🄾🅈 💚💚💚 :
movie name
2026-04-24 17:44:23
0
papaya_0021
Papaya_21🤡🔥 :
@$#@ᖇᐯᗴ$#_2Oᑎᗴ🔥🐊 @திவா @𝓢𝓪𝓻𝓪𝓿𝓪𝓷𝓪𝓷._🤍 @Kecikk_Boii•4🇫🇮⚡... @B|6🕉️
2026-04-26 09:56:58
3
nantha0844
MONEY MAKER 🤑🎱💸 :
@BOY 2148😎🇮🇹 😂😂
2026-05-14 04:44:01
1
mursee291
ᵘⁿˡᵘᶜᵏʸ🇶🇦 :
@N I T H A N 👀
2026-05-20 17:38:33
1
sasivicky1407
♛சசிகலா குமார்♛ :
@Vicky Nesh Vicky U also follow me like this can ah maaa
2026-04-25 05:43:48
2
nxnthx_08
นันทกุมาร 🐊🤍 :
@MR NTG @MARTIN_GARRIX @🇮🇹 KISHEN ²¹🇮🇹 @B O S S💸 🤣🤣
2026-04-26 07:06:12
2
tosse_21
TOSSE_21👆🏻 :
@Nxvin_16 @Vv Swag_21 @Gabriel @Mohan @Yuvaa
2026-04-25 12:01:01
1
_shaa2701_
“ஷா🌙🌻. :
@⚡. @26:30🥺🫶🫵
2026-04-24 09:35:11
1
mr.crackzz
MOHAN RAJ❤️🖤 :
@MATHENN4
2026-05-09 12:38:39
0
exe_boy11
Sᴀꜱᴜ֟፝ᴋᴇ࿐ :
@Sᴀᴋᴜ֟፝ʀᴀ࿐ baby🤭🫣😘
2026-05-01 15:01:09
0
1329krishan
K|13🤍 :
@B|29🎀🤍mah 🥺🖤
2026-04-24 16:04:20
0
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On 7:32 PM, tornado sirens went off in Oklahoma, but something wasn’t right. There were sirens in every city. From Oklahoma City to Tulsa, alarms screamed nonstop as emergency alerts flooded phones across the state. At first, people didn’t think too much of it. Most believed it was just another false alarm or a system error after the earlier “Texas Tornado” outbreak that had already devastated parts of northern Texas. Restaurants stayed open, families kept eating dinner, and drivers continued down rain-soaked highways. But little did they know this day would be remembered forever. At 6:48 PM on May 26th, meteorologists noticed a supercell southwest of Chickasha rotating faster than anything ever recorded. Radar operators watched in disbelief as velocity scans climbed beyond 400 mph. The storm continued growing larger, darker, and more violent by the minute. Lightning flashed endlessly inside massive black clouds while blinding rain swallowed the horizon. Then, at exactly 7:19 PM, the tornado touched down. Witnesses said the ground shook before they ever saw it. Power flickered across entire counties. Dogs barked uncontrollably. The air became hot and difficult to breathe. Then lightning illuminated the storm for the first time. People froze in terror. It wasn’t a funnel. It was a wall. A gigantic 12-mile-wide wedge tornado stretched across the horizon, completely rain wrapped and hidden within black curtains of wind-driven rain. Many survivors later said they didn’t realize it was a tornado at first because it was simply too massive to understand. Some believed the sky itself was collapsing. The National Weather Service would later estimate wind speeds inside the tornado reached an impossible 595 mph, while the storm moved forward at speeds up to 185 mph, destroying entire towns before people could escape. Witnesses described the sound as “the Earth tearing apart.” Others compared it to “thousands of freight trains screaming underground.” One storm chaser said it sounded “alive.” The tornado tore directly through Chickasha, Moore, Norman, Oklahoma City, Edmond, Tulsa, Broken Arrow, and dozens of smaller towns across Oklahoma before crossing into Kansas and Missouri. Entire neighborhoods vanished within seconds. Cars flew through the air like toys. Skyscraper windows shattered before the tornado even arrived from the pressure alone. Highways became graveyards of overturned vehicles and debris. The storm should have weakened after a few hours. Instead, it grew stronger. Day after day, “The Goodbye” — the nickname given to the storm after a dispatcher’s final radio message saying “Tell everyone goodbye” — continued across the United States maintaining violent strength for 8 straight days. Its debris cloud became visible from space. Rain wrapped darkness hid the tornado constantly, making survival nearly impossible. By the time “The Goodbye” finally dissipated, it had become the deadliest tornado in human history. Final statistics horrified the world: 12 miles wide. 595 mph winds. 185 mph forward speed. 8 days long. 125,000 deaths. 430,000 injuries. 4.2 million homes destroyed. Over 8 million buildings damaged or destroyed. $6.2 trillion in damage. Over 43% of Oklahoma suffered direct destruction from the storm. Entire towns were erased so completely they were never rebuilt. And every year on May 26th at exactly 7:32 PM, tornado sirens across Oklahoma sound for one minute in remembrance of the day the sky became a monster. The day known forever as: “The Goodbye.” . . . . . . #fyp #viral #tornado #tornadotok #goviral
On 7:32 PM, tornado sirens went off in Oklahoma, but something wasn’t right. There were sirens in every city. From Oklahoma City to Tulsa, alarms screamed nonstop as emergency alerts flooded phones across the state. At first, people didn’t think too much of it. Most believed it was just another false alarm or a system error after the earlier “Texas Tornado” outbreak that had already devastated parts of northern Texas. Restaurants stayed open, families kept eating dinner, and drivers continued down rain-soaked highways. But little did they know this day would be remembered forever. At 6:48 PM on May 26th, meteorologists noticed a supercell southwest of Chickasha rotating faster than anything ever recorded. Radar operators watched in disbelief as velocity scans climbed beyond 400 mph. The storm continued growing larger, darker, and more violent by the minute. Lightning flashed endlessly inside massive black clouds while blinding rain swallowed the horizon. Then, at exactly 7:19 PM, the tornado touched down. Witnesses said the ground shook before they ever saw it. Power flickered across entire counties. Dogs barked uncontrollably. The air became hot and difficult to breathe. Then lightning illuminated the storm for the first time. People froze in terror. It wasn’t a funnel. It was a wall. A gigantic 12-mile-wide wedge tornado stretched across the horizon, completely rain wrapped and hidden within black curtains of wind-driven rain. Many survivors later said they didn’t realize it was a tornado at first because it was simply too massive to understand. Some believed the sky itself was collapsing. The National Weather Service would later estimate wind speeds inside the tornado reached an impossible 595 mph, while the storm moved forward at speeds up to 185 mph, destroying entire towns before people could escape. Witnesses described the sound as “the Earth tearing apart.” Others compared it to “thousands of freight trains screaming underground.” One storm chaser said it sounded “alive.” The tornado tore directly through Chickasha, Moore, Norman, Oklahoma City, Edmond, Tulsa, Broken Arrow, and dozens of smaller towns across Oklahoma before crossing into Kansas and Missouri. Entire neighborhoods vanished within seconds. Cars flew through the air like toys. Skyscraper windows shattered before the tornado even arrived from the pressure alone. Highways became graveyards of overturned vehicles and debris. The storm should have weakened after a few hours. Instead, it grew stronger. Day after day, “The Goodbye” — the nickname given to the storm after a dispatcher’s final radio message saying “Tell everyone goodbye” — continued across the United States maintaining violent strength for 8 straight days. Its debris cloud became visible from space. Rain wrapped darkness hid the tornado constantly, making survival nearly impossible. By the time “The Goodbye” finally dissipated, it had become the deadliest tornado in human history. Final statistics horrified the world: 12 miles wide. 595 mph winds. 185 mph forward speed. 8 days long. 125,000 deaths. 430,000 injuries. 4.2 million homes destroyed. Over 8 million buildings damaged or destroyed. $6.2 trillion in damage. Over 43% of Oklahoma suffered direct destruction from the storm. Entire towns were erased so completely they were never rebuilt. And every year on May 26th at exactly 7:32 PM, tornado sirens across Oklahoma sound for one minute in remembrance of the day the sky became a monster. The day known forever as: “The Goodbye.” . . . . . . #fyp #viral #tornado #tornadotok #goviral

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