![]() Subscribe & Follow Side Talk & The Oh Hell No Podcast Jump start your way to positivity with some amazing free gifts from Michele for our Side Talk listeners visit Michele has co-written and created over 80 books, music CDs, audio programs, TV shows, and videos on positive thought, mind transformation, and meditation. In addition to creating Magnet To Success™ products and seminars worldwide, her public Mystical Success Events have been held in over 26 countries. These songs cover healing, success, money, joy, confidence and they uplift the person immediately. This is why millions of people worldwide have downloaded her Affirmation Power songs. Lyrics, the left hemisphere, and melody and music, the right hemisphere so the new, positive messages go straight to the subconscious mind. These Affirmation songs affect the left and right hemispheres of the brain. Michele was a rock singer in Australia and after a near fatal car accident, she created positive Affirmation Songs which not only healed her body but also took her to worldwide success. Michele Blood is a successful, multi-talented lady. Since the illustrations display animal families of different species, it is not only a book for all adoptive families, but for interracial, single parent, gay parent, and step-parent families. It has garnered rankings on Amazon of #1 in new releases of children’s adoption books, #1 in new releases of children’s alphabet books, and #1 in new releases of children’s stepfamily books. Linda is the author Leonie Little-Lex the illustrator. Linda has published essays, articles, short fiction, and poetry in The New York Times Magazine, The London Guardian, The New Republic, The Boston Globe, THINK! NBC, Pangyrus, Wired, SalamanderMagazine, Lithub, The Drum, Silver Birch Press, The Beacon Book of Essays by Contemporary American Women, WBUR’s Cognoscenti, and Cosmopolitan Magazine.Ī IS FOR ALWAYS: an Adoption Alphabet in verse was published by Familius on August 2, 2022. The two simple syllables capture a vibe that goes beyond real words.A former concert pianist and college teacher, Linda turned to writing full-time in fall, 2017. Like “yeet” and other standalone internet catchphrases, it’s hard to define what “bing bong” really means. I texted a few of my friends to see how they would translate “bing bong,” and their answers ranged from “liberation” to “that’s what’s up” to “get fucked.” That said, its exact meaning varies depending on whom you ask. What does bing bong mean to you? - “Bing bong” encapsulates a certain New York irreverence - the pride in being emphatically yourself with little regard for what the rest of the world thinks. “Bing bong” isn’t the only Sidetalk soundbite to develop a viral life of its own the audio “ what do you want to tell Joe Byron right now?” has been used as a sound in 39,000 TikTok videos and counting. Just as you grasp what’s going on, the video cuts to something just as nuts. Take, for example, the 5-second clip of a man in a hard hat and sweatpants holding two dogs and urging Ariana Grande to visit Coney Island. The account’s clips have complex layers of weirdness that you could unpeel like an onion - if you had more than a few seconds to process them. Sidetalk captures a gritty and uninhibited side of the city. Since Sidetalk’s first YouTube video in October 2019, the duo has reliably uploaded minute-long dispatches from the wild sidewalks of New York and amassed over 370,000 YouTube subscribers, a million Instagram followers, and 2.8 million TikTok followers. ![]() Created by a pair of NYU film students named Jack Byrne and Trent Simonian, the channel opens each video with the “bing bong” sound of subway doors closing. The spirit of New York - That utterance is a nod to Sidetalk, the social media channel that calls itself “New York’s one-minute street show,” which recorded and posted the original video. Amid the euphoric chaos, a camera captures the berserk fans’ quotes, like “we have de Blasio, we have Cuomo, it was rough shit, but we have the Knicks!” At one point, the video cuts from a joyful fan releasing a guttural squawk to another crowd member who delivers the golden words: “ Bing bong!” But what does it mean? - The catchphrase comes from a viral video shot October 20 outside of Madison Square Garden in which a raucous crowd of screaming fans celebrates the Knicks beating the Celtics in double-overtime. ![]()
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