@babydance6823: #embedangyeu #xuhuongtiktok #embenhaytiktock #ai #douyin

Babydance
Babydance
Open In TikTok:
Region: VN
Monday 22 June 2026 01:18:05 GMT
20383
1084
38
405

Music

Download

Comments

shamsiah010
tuff0132369576 :
nice bag
2026-06-23 22:29:20
1
panya0234
ยูโซบ :
ทำอะไรก็น่ารัก🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-22 02:16:00
2
user854138715
Wawan :
ha ha ha .......
2026-06-22 11:40:35
1
user40767912868690
しばいぬ :
可愛すぎて笑笑〜😆👍
2026-06-22 03:14:44
1
user4434051699400
อัมพร ลาวิชัย :
น่ารัก
2026-06-22 07:45:13
2
mamertoalarconiii
mamertoalarconiii :
❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-22 07:21:47
0
user3960891420569
user3960891420569 :
🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰เต้นท่าไหนก็น่ารัก
2026-06-22 03:59:15
1
user5817840635227
لمياء الإدريسي :
🤣🤣🤣🤣☺️☺️💋
2026-06-22 18:38:27
1
user9061610265497
Hào Hùng :
2026-06-24 20:01:48
0
user6523483736723
ハルポン :
タコさん顔が可愛いね!笑顔を有り難う!
2026-06-22 13:01:23
1
modmyway
มด เดินทาง❤️‍🔥 :
😂😂😂
2026-06-22 01:56:39
1
vadim.persistyi
Vadim Persistyi :
2026-06-22 04:52:44
0
shamsiah010
tuff0132369576 :
love u cute gurl
2026-06-23 22:28:33
1
gabor.levai1
Gabi :
😂😂😂😂🥰🥰
2026-06-22 07:33:39
1
pranee.phromma
Pranee Phromma :
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-24 06:20:22
1
sirlei.zigoski
Sirlei Zigoski :
🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-22 01:25:46
2
amay.cabido
Amay Cabido :
😂😂😂
2026-06-24 08:44:21
1
uotstkbl4209
🪷💯 út 💯🪷 :
😂🥰🥰
2026-06-24 00:02:35
1
m634268
مم :
😁😁😁
2026-06-23 05:13:12
0
gulsen_isikk
Gülşen ışık :
🥰🥰😘
2026-06-22 07:51:48
1
hongkimmmm
thắng tử tế :
@❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
2026-06-22 04:43:20
1
To see more videos from user @babydance6823, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

Kris Kristofferson died peacefully on September 28, 2024, at his home in Maui, Hawaii. He was 88, and the quiet ending felt gentle for a man who had spent his life choosing storms. Before the songs, before the movies, before the outlaw-country image, he had already built the kind of perfect life most families would never ask a son to risk. Kris was born on June 22, 1936, in Brownsville, Texas, into a military family where discipline was not a performance. His father, Lars Henry Kristofferson, became an Air Force major general, and Kris grew up around order, expectation, and duty. By the time he reached Pomona College in the 1950s, he was not drifting. He was shining. At Pomona, he studied literature, boxed, played football and rugby, and graduated in 1958 with honors that made his future look decided. He was 22, and the world seemed to be telling him, “Stay on this road, wear the respect well, and do not gamble with a life this polished.” Then came the Rhodes Scholarship in 1958. Oxford was not a detour for Kris. It was another golden stamp on a life already full of promise. At Merton College, he studied English literature, wrote fiction and songs, and earned his degree in 1960. Picture that contrast. A Texas-born military son walking through Oxford’s old stone halls, carrying books in his hand and country music in his blood. In 1960, he joined the U.S. Army. He became a captain, completed Ranger training, and learned to fly helicopters. By his late twenties, Kris was an Oxford graduate, a Rhodes Scholar, an Army officer, and a trained pilot. It was the kind of résumé that did not whisper success. It saluted. West Point wanted him to teach English. That offer could have sealed everything. A respected classroom, a stable uniform, a proud family, and a future that made perfect sense. “Here was the son any father could brag about, the scholar any college could claim, the soldier any institution could trust.” But Kris had a problem. The songs would not leave him alone. In 1965, at about 29, he made the choice that turned his life into legend. He left the Army path, gave up the West Point teaching appointment, and went to Nashville. His family did not celebrate it. Security disappeared. Prestige disappeared. The man who could have taught cadets ended up working as a janitor at Columbia Recording Studios. That detail still hits like a movie scene. An Oxford-educated Army captain pushing a broom in Nashville because he wanted to be near the rooms where songs were born. “He did not fall from success because he failed. He climbed down from success because the ladder was leaning against the wrong dream.” The janitor years were not cute while he was living them. They were lonely and uncertain. But Kris kept writing. He wrote like a man who had seen discipline, loneliness, desire, and regret from the inside. His songs did not sound polished for politeness. They sounded lived in. Then the words found their people. “Me and Bobby McGee” became a road song with a broken heart. “Sunday Morning Coming Down” turned a hangover into a prayer. “Help Me Make It Through the Night” made need feel human. “For the Good Times” gave goodbye a soft place to land. Hollywood came later, but it never swallowed the songwriter. In
Kris Kristofferson died peacefully on September 28, 2024, at his home in Maui, Hawaii. He was 88, and the quiet ending felt gentle for a man who had spent his life choosing storms. Before the songs, before the movies, before the outlaw-country image, he had already built the kind of perfect life most families would never ask a son to risk. Kris was born on June 22, 1936, in Brownsville, Texas, into a military family where discipline was not a performance. His father, Lars Henry Kristofferson, became an Air Force major general, and Kris grew up around order, expectation, and duty. By the time he reached Pomona College in the 1950s, he was not drifting. He was shining. At Pomona, he studied literature, boxed, played football and rugby, and graduated in 1958 with honors that made his future look decided. He was 22, and the world seemed to be telling him, “Stay on this road, wear the respect well, and do not gamble with a life this polished.” Then came the Rhodes Scholarship in 1958. Oxford was not a detour for Kris. It was another golden stamp on a life already full of promise. At Merton College, he studied English literature, wrote fiction and songs, and earned his degree in 1960. Picture that contrast. A Texas-born military son walking through Oxford’s old stone halls, carrying books in his hand and country music in his blood. In 1960, he joined the U.S. Army. He became a captain, completed Ranger training, and learned to fly helicopters. By his late twenties, Kris was an Oxford graduate, a Rhodes Scholar, an Army officer, and a trained pilot. It was the kind of résumé that did not whisper success. It saluted. West Point wanted him to teach English. That offer could have sealed everything. A respected classroom, a stable uniform, a proud family, and a future that made perfect sense. “Here was the son any father could brag about, the scholar any college could claim, the soldier any institution could trust.” But Kris had a problem. The songs would not leave him alone. In 1965, at about 29, he made the choice that turned his life into legend. He left the Army path, gave up the West Point teaching appointment, and went to Nashville. His family did not celebrate it. Security disappeared. Prestige disappeared. The man who could have taught cadets ended up working as a janitor at Columbia Recording Studios. That detail still hits like a movie scene. An Oxford-educated Army captain pushing a broom in Nashville because he wanted to be near the rooms where songs were born. “He did not fall from success because he failed. He climbed down from success because the ladder was leaning against the wrong dream.” The janitor years were not cute while he was living them. They were lonely and uncertain. But Kris kept writing. He wrote like a man who had seen discipline, loneliness, desire, and regret from the inside. His songs did not sound polished for politeness. They sounded lived in. Then the words found their people. “Me and Bobby McGee” became a road song with a broken heart. “Sunday Morning Coming Down” turned a hangover into a prayer. “Help Me Make It Through the Night” made need feel human. “For the Good Times” gave goodbye a soft place to land. Hollywood came later, but it never swallowed the songwriter. In "A Star Is Born" 1976, Kris became a screen face for wounded masculinity, fame, damage, and tenderness. He looked like a man who knew how expensive dreams could be because he had already paid the bill. Kris Kristofferson did not reject education, rank, or respect. He simply refused to let them become a cage. He used Oxford, the Army, the cockpit, the broom, and the blank page to become the man he was chasing. He gave up the safe life and found his true voice. Photos below are: Kris and Jeff Bridges Kris and Rita Coolidge

About