Emily Jashinsky
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
From there, high school basketball superstar and social media influencer Taylin Kinney posting a video rating a Starbucks drink as a 6, 6'7", while making the now infamous hand gesture, each palm face up, bobbing up and down in a weighing motion.
Kinney then posting more videos with the song and gesture to his TikTok account, boasting 1 million followers.
The rest is history, the viral meme taking off like wildfire, popularized on the mega-hit video game Roblox, perplexing parents feeling left out of the joke, much to the delight of Gen Alpha.
Even Vice President J.D.
Vance, afflicted by the humor...
posting Tuesday to X, quote, "'Yesterday at church, the Bible reading started on page 66 to 67 of the Missal, and my five-year-old went absolutely nuts, repeating six, seven, like 10 times, and now I think we need to make this narrow exception to the First Amendment and ban these numbers forever.'"
That'll do it for your AM update.
I'm Emily Jashinsky, host of After Party.
Catch the Megyn Kelly Show live on Sirius XM's The Megyn Kelly Channel, 1-11 at noon east on youtube.com slash megynkelly and all podcast platforms.
No, not usually.
Vince, I'm unlike you.
I just I give all of myself to the American people.
Well, I'm sure you're like me in that you've heard from people in Minnesota over the last decade plus, really two decades, who have been screaming into the void about the assimilation problems in the Minneapolis area, and nobody has been listening to them.
And it's kind of crazy, Vince, how big stories like the New York Times'
expose on the alleged $1 billion fraud operation where most of the people charged, we're talking dozens, are Somalis.
That story has changed everything.
And suddenly what people were talking about forever is a national news story.
It kind of is sad and pathetic that it took The New York Times wading into it.
For the people in Minneapolis who have been screaming into the void about the story, you've probably heard it, but it's like forever to finally be taken seriously because the New York Times looked at federal charges against literally dozens of people that happened over the course of years and years to the tune of an alleged $1 billion.