celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TikTok
Tag:

TikTok

How Did 'Yes King' Michael Willis Heard Die? What We Know About the TikTok Star's Death
Celebrity News

How Did ‘Yes King’ Michael Willis Heard Die? About TikTok Star’s Death – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Getty Images

Social media personality Michael Willis Heard, known for coining the popular “Yes King” meme, died, according to multiple outlets, which referred to a statement from a family member. Other content creators also paid tribute to Heard while grieving his death.

Here is what we know about the late social media personality known for his “Yes King” meme and his death.

Who Was Michael Willis Heard? About the ‘Yes King’ Meme

Heard was famous for sharing a positive outlook on life with his social media followers in addition to creating the viral “Yes King” meme.

Did the ‘Yes King’ Meme Creator Die?

According to Heard’s daughter, yes, he died. Multiple outlets have cited the Facebook user known as Mykel Crumbie, who announced his death on November 9, 2025.

“My daddy man.. I’ma miss you so much king this is crazy to me and you really messing up the family with this one [sic],” she wrote in a Facebook post that day. “IDC who didn’t love my father and didn’t like his lifestyle and WISHED DEATH ON HIM! THIS WAS THE GREATEST MAN TO LIVE ON THIS EARTH! The love and compassion he had is unmatched.”

Heard’s daughter added that he “came to everyone with LOVE and touch soooo many lives [sic]!” calling herself a “blessed girl so blessed to have him as MY DAD!”

“This is so hard for us as a family but this too shall pass and we will grow stronger,” she concluded. “I just know my dad is up in glory having an amazing time. I love you daddy ima see you again dont worry about me [sic].”

How Did ‘Yes King’ Personality Michael Willis Heard Die?

No one from Heard’s family has revealed his cause of death, though rumors about his health spread on social media. Fellow social media personality Dayvon Augustus paid tribute to Heard in an Instagram post, claiming they had known each other for years and that Heard allegedly suffered from an asthma attack and a subsequent heart attack before he died.

“RIP, Michael Willis Heard! Some of you may know him as a content creator of many sorts, he was a life coach as a well as a pastor,” Augustus wrote alongside photos of Heard, including one of him appearing to be in a hospital bed. “I’ve known him for years and got news this morning that he died from [an] asthma attack that led to a heart attack that led to him being brain dead. As shocked as I am about this news I also know this is one man who lived his life as freely and fully as possible so I have no doubts that he has transitioned without many regrets!”

Augustus added that So DebNair, Heard’s husband, informed him of the “Yes King” creator’s death. “Light & Love to his family and his ex-husband @SoDebNair​, who broke the news to me this morning! MAN! Life is literally crazy!” The caption also included a note claiming that Heard’s daughter “provided” images of him in the hospital.

As for DebNair, he referred to Heard as his husband in his own Instagram post, which read, “My heart is so broken, I don’t have alot of words but my husband passing away is insane. Thank you for everyone for reaching out. If you know, you know. I’ll miss him forever.”

November 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
36 Best Advent Calendars for Teens, According to TikTok 2025
Fashion

36 Best Advent Calendars for Teens, According to TikTok 2025

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Many of which are already selling out.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
TikTok Is NOT the Leading Social Media Platform for Microdramas: Study
TV & Streaming

TikTok Is NOT the Leading Social Media Platform for Microdramas: Study

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

TikTok, you’re on the clock.

A new study from Ampere Analysis has found that YouTube is the most popular social-media destination for viewers of microdramas, with nearly half (44 percent) of those who have consumed the trendy format doing so on YouTube. While vertical video may feel like the domain of TikTok (and to some degree it is: TikTok captures 38 percent of all microdrama views), YouTube’s sheer scale makes it so difficult to overcome. In September, YouTube accounted for 12.6 percent of all “TV” usage, according to Nielsen. Netflix was second with 8.3 percent — no one else claimed even five percent.

So, combined, YouTube and TikTok make up 82 percent of the microdrama viewership on social — Instagram is in there somewhere, trailer by X (formerly Twitter), Facebook, Snapchat, Twitch and Threads. But who is watching these short-short drama episodes of 10 minutes or less? If not you, someone in the same room as you, statistically.

Twelve percent of internet users have consumed a microdrama on social media, Ampere found through a survey of more than 100,000 consumers. (Ampere polled 56,000 internet users aged 18-64, in two different waves, across 30 global markets.)

Leading shorts apps (and not social media ones) like DramaBox and ReelShorts have taken notice. Both are using social media platforms as distribution channels as well as feeder systems.

What should come as no surprise is the demo consuming these vertical videos. Viewers aged 18-34 are 21 percent more likely than the average viewer to have watched one of these “mini-dramas” in the past month. Nearly half (46 percent) of internet users that age watch microdramas.

The APAC (Asia-Pacific) region leads in consumption, which should also shock exactly no one. Nearly all of the existing microdrama platforms hail from China — the market is soon to be flooded with exceptions to that rule — but it is Thailand, Malaysia and the Philippines, specifically, with the strongest engagement numbers.

October 28, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Radiohead react to 'Let Down' going viral on TikTok
Music

Radiohead react to ‘Let Down’ going viral on TikTok

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Radiohead have reacted over ‘Let Down’ becoming the band’s fourth US hit, 28 years after its release.

The track, which came out as a promotional single in 1997, and appeared on Thom Yorke and co’s landmark studio album ‘OK Computer’ that same year, entered the Billboard Hot 100 in August following an increasing resurgence on TikTok.

Radiohead have previously featured in the Hot 100 with the ‘In Rainbows’ track ‘Nude’ in 2008 (Number 37), ‘High And Dry’ in 1995 (Number 78), and ‘Creep’ in 1993 (Number 34). The latter remains the band’s most successful single in the States.

‘Let Down’ also spent seven weeks on the UK singles chart upon its release, peaking at Number 85.

Speaking about the feat in a new interview with The Sunday Times, Yorke said: “I find that especially bizarre. Because I fought tooth and nail for it not to be on the record, but Ed O’Brien was, like, ‘If it’s not, I’m leaving.’”

The guitarist has now said the song is the “emotional heart” of ‘OK Computer’.

Despite that, he was surprised by the reaction on TikTok. “Still, I was astonished. So I told my kids, who are 18 and 21, and they said, ‘What do you expect? Teenagers are depressed. It’s depressing music!’” O’Brien added.

Drummer Philip Selway also opened up about his own experience of cross-generational appreciation for the band.

“I was at the station the other day,” he said. ‘And schoolboys were playing ‘Everything In Its Right Place’ [from Kid A] on a piano. Then they played Bohemian Rhapsody.”

Elsewhere in the interview, they also confirmed that their forthcoming shows will be played in the round, and they revealed that they have whittled down their back catalogue to a shortlist of approximately 65 tracks, which Jonny Greenwood said they are “all frantically learning”.

Radiohead are returning to the stage for the first time in over seven years in the coming weeks, with four-night residencies in each of Madrid, Bologna, London, Copenhagen and Berlin set to take place between November 4 and December 12. All of the tickets sold out very quickly.

The band also recently revealed whether fans can expect new material from the band after they play their UK and European dates.

Meanwhile, Radiohead spoke at length on their stance on Israel and Palestine. In 2017, they encountered a backlash when they played a show in Tel Aviv, Israel despite protests urging them to cancel the gig from the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, as well as criticism from Roger Waters, Thurston Moore, Young Fathers and others.

Last year, Yorke clashed with a protester during a solo show in Melbourne, arguing with an individual from the crowd and storming off stage, before later issuing a lengthy statement explaining his decision.

Yorke said he will “absolutely not” return to Israel and he “wouldn’t want to be 5,000 miles anywhere near the Netanyahu regime”.

Greenwood, meanwhile, has come in for criticism for making records with Israeli musician Dudu Tassa, and saw two UK gigs with Tassa cancelled earlier this year after protesters called for a boycott. Greenwood, who is married to an Israeli artist, also played with Tassa in Tel Aviv last year.

On the subject of whether he would play in Israel again he said: “I would also politely disagree with Thom. I would argue that the government is more likely to use a boycott and say, ‘Everyone hates us – we should do exactly what we want.’ Which is far more dangerous.”

“It’s nuts,” he added. “The only thing that I’m ashamed of is that I’ve dragged Thom and the others into this mess – but I’m not ashamed of working with Arab and Jewish musicians. I can’t apologise for that.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Can TikTok Brainrot Make You a Marxist?
Music

Can TikTok Brainrot Make You a Marxist?

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Shambhala element is absurd, but these editors aren’t totally off-base. Trying to get kids bred on Cocomelon, corecore, and Rizzler clips to read radical literature is a herculean task, so why not meet them where they are in the algorithmic insane asylum? Vril and Agartha have thrived in part because of the way the editors mix brainrot and bigotry, disguising their ideological assaults in the fried fog of GifTok rap gibberish.

The Marxist and Shambhala edits have grown to such a point that there’s now chatter about a so-called “alt-left pipeline,” where jacked dudes with southern accents are talking about how they love “man-to-man” things like working on cars but also fully support abortion and Black liberation and detest United States imperialism. This has rankled some even further-left creators, who see these newcomers as posers with no actual culture outside the party line. “The libs are stealing it,” says leftist0. “It’s annoying seeing libs call themselves alt-left.”

Perhaps the biggest current editor is thomasankarafan, an 18-year-old from Texas who’s hooked on radical politics despite (or because of) his very conservative parents. Since starting channels earlier this year, he’s racked up over 37,000 followers across platforms with education lessons where he has the cossack girlie narrate the greatest achievements of Russian feminist revolutionary Alexandra Kollontai and read chapter one of Mao Zedong’s Little Red Book while Subway Surfer gameplay loops in the backdrop. He’s also raised money for Gazans, shat on lib commander Gavin Newsom, and urged his fellow comrades to ditch Discord and get burner phones. “The feds listening and they finna do a sweep like Future,” the anime girl warns.

The creator told me over Discord that he thinks a lot about the line between parodies and praxis and isn’t entirely sure where he falls, but does feel like he’s fighting a modern infowar. He wants to inspire the brainrot sheeple, galvanize them to care about the world and make leftist TikTok edits. “I’ve given people book recommendations. People need to get back in the library, bro.” He’s incredibly paranoid about Palantir and internet surveillance and owns multiple burner phones. “To a degree it’s like, yo, we’re cooked—but the revolution keeps me optimistic,” he says.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Droptines on Hard Work, TikTok, and Texas Country Music
Music

The Droptines on Hard Work, TikTok, and Texas Country Music

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Droptines were used to playing simple dive bars and rock rooms. Their worldview changed this summer when they went on an amphitheater tour with Whiskey Myers.

By the time the Texas roots-rock band’s opening run for Whiskey Myers ended with a sold-out show in Nashville earlier this summer, the five-piece — named after a deer’s antler that, through genetics or injury, grows downward — nearly had whiplash over how far they had come.

“It feels like an acid trip,” Conner Arthur, the band’s singer, tells Rolling Stone. “There will be a lot to unpack after it’s all done. I need to start journaling, because I feel like I’ve forgotten a lot already.”

The Droptines are Arthur, bassist Dillon Sampson, drummer Johnny Sheets, pedal steel player Tony Rincon, and guitarist Donny Parkinson. Collectively, they are a group of veteran musicians from the Texas Hill Country, heavy on Texas and Red Dirt, with a wildly prolific catalog they are hell-bent on sharing at every concert.

“If you look at our setlist, there’s a shitload of songs on there,” Arthur says. “We’re not dragging out a song that should be three minutes and making it nine minutes, relying on every lick our guitar player has. We punch in, and we punch out. We’re trying to sell the songs.”

A native of Concan, Texas, Arthur grew up “at the foot of the state” at House Pasture Co., a major venue in the Texas music scene, run by Arthur’s parents. He started taking music seriously as a teenager, leaving home at 18 and busking around the country for the better part of a year. He formed the Droptines in 2019 and released an EP, but the pandemic shelved any real growth until 2021.

The first few years of the band were “filled with dumb shit” as Arthur recalls now. The band took nearly any gig it was offered, even when travel costs outweighed the pay. Their approach, he says, was grassroots, aiming to win over fans one-by-one. The first place he recalls it taking hold was in Lubbock, Texas. The band celebrated the release of a single, “Bill of Sale,” at the Blue Light — a music room on Buddy Holly Ave. — in 2023, and were greeted with a full house.

Editor’s picks

“The biggest chapter turn was in Lubbock,” Arthur recalls. “We walked in the damn door and it was sold out. That’s when I went, ‘God almighty, this is working.’ People started paying attention after they saw that.”

“Bill of Sale” made it onto the band’s self-titled 2024 album, one which raised the group’s profile significantly. Once impressive shows — such as an afternoon set at the 2024 Jackalope Jamboree in Pendleton, Oregon, to an overflow crowd — became routine. This year, the group landed a slot at Bonnaroo as well as a pair of afterparties at Lollapalooza (one with Luke Combs and one with Wyatt Flores), plus runs with Dwight Yoakam and American Aquarium.

The Lollapalooza show, the group says, was apparently manifested by the guitarist Parkinson.

“We got the news we were gonna play Lollapalooza, and Donny was still asleep,” Sampson says. “I go upstairs, and I wake him up and say, ‘Donny! We’re gonna play Lollapalooza!’ and he opens his eyes and says, ‘I always knew I’d play Lollapalooza,’ and rolls back over and goes back to sleep.”

Such confidence did not extend across the group. Ahead of their show at Nashville’s Ascend Amphitheater, Arthur admitted he wasn’t “used to this type of shit.” Success, he said, felt “like I stole something.” In the wake of the Droptines’ self-titled record, the calls from record labels began. Major outfits like Warner Records felt too big, but when representatives from Big Loud Texas showed up to a bar show in College Station, the group found its match.

Related Content

Big Loud Texas was co-founded by Miranda Lambert and Jon Randall in 2023, and, a year later, the imprint named Brendon Anthony, then director of the Texas Music Office, as vice-president. Immediately, Anthony and Randall realized they both had the Droptines on their radars.

“Conner is a special songwriter and frontman,” Anthony tells Rolling Stone. “That comes across to me on the releases and onstage. His mind and interests and talents — beyond music as well — are so unique. The band behind him is tightly in tune and gets more locked in as they tour.”

The group announced their signing by the label at their Nashville show, which coincided with the release of the single “Take Too Much.” The song combines love at first sight, drugs, and death. Arthur’s initial delivery of, “I met a girl and it’s too soon to talk about her,” over heavy electric guitar, is a chilling tone-setter.

At the end of September, the Droptines released the follow-up “Calling All Cars,” a cover of a Mike McClure (The Great Divide) song about an alcohol-fueled fatal car crash and its impact on the first responders. The group will spend the rest of 2025 alternating between a headlining tour of theaters, along with more of those high-profile opening slots, including dates with the Turnpike Troubadours, plus another show with Whiskey Myers at the rockers’ annual Moon Crush festival in Miramar Beach, Florida, on Nov. 7.

For the Droptines, it’s all the result of their on-the-grind mentality.

Trending Stories

“Hard work is hard for a reason. I’m not mad at anybody who went from TikTok to a tour bus right away,” Arthur says, “but I feel like what we’re doing has a little bit more dignity.”

Josh Crutchmer is a journalist and author whose latest books, Never Say Never and Red Dirt Unplugged are available via Back Lounge Publishing.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Ben Simmons’ Sister Olivia Mocks Kendall Jenner In Viral TikTok | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Ben Simmons’ Sister Olivia Mocks Kendall Jenner In Viral TikTok | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Olivia Simmons, sister of NBA star Ben Simmons, recently shared a snarky TikTok video in which she took aim at his former girlfriend, model Kendall Jenner. In the clip, Olivia recalls a game night where they played Cards Against Humanity and Jenner announced she’d bake cookies, but according to Olivia, it didn’t go well. She mocked Jenner for attempting to cut ready-made dough unevenly and referenced a past viral moment in which Jenner awkwardly sliced a cucumber.  

“I have never seen so many uneven cookies,” Olivia says in the video. “You rich b****. If you don’t call your chef to come and cook these cookies for you?” She went on to label the Kardashian-Jenner family as “weird b****es.”  

The video has stirred a mixed reaction online. Some viewers found it entertaining, but many criticized Olivia for what they viewed as an unnecessary and mean-spirited dig at Jenner over something trivial. One commenter wrote: “This is so weird of you” and another added: “Bullying is so normalized.”  

Ben Simmons’ Sister Olivia Mocks Kendall Jenner In Viral Tiktok 2

Neither Kendall Jenner nor Ben Simmons publicly responded to the post yet. The relationship between Kendall and Ben was short-lived, dating from 2018 to 2019, and both have moved on in their careers and personal lives.  

Regardless of intent, Olivia’s TikTok has reignited interest in the Jenner-Simmons past and raised questions about how feuds between celebrity families are shared and perceived in the social-media age.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
I Just Saved $1200 By Shopping This TikTok Viral COS Sweater
Fashion

I Just Saved $1200 By Shopping This TikTok Viral COS Sweater

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

As a fashion editor, I must admit, I love a good deal.

But it can’t just be any type of run-of-the-mill deal. I’m talking about the kind shopping steal that hits that rare sweet spot between quality, cut, and price. The kind of deal that feels like a secret handshake between fashion insiders. So when fashion TikTok began buzzing about a certain COS cashmere sweater, likening it to a very high-profile designer version that’s quietly sat at the top of every fashion person’s wishlist, I dropped everything to investigate. Frankly, I had to see what the hype was about.

Spoiler: the hype is very, very real for the COS Chunky Pure Cashmere Crew-Neck Sweater.

Technically, I ordered the navy version online the moment I saw it—but my patience lasted all of 36 hours. The buzz was too loud and the stakes were too high, so a few days before my package was even set to arrive, I made a beeline to the COS store in SoHo on my lunch break, hoping to try it on in person. Fashion emergencies happen, and in this New York City, same-day gratification is a luxury of its own.

On Bobby Schuessler, Who What Wear Market Director: COS Chunky Pure Cashmere Crew-Neck Sweater ($350).

Hanging on the rack, the COS Chunky Pure Cashmere Crew-Neck Sweater in Beige immediately stood out. There’s a noticeable difference when cashmere is actually thick—the weight, the plushness, the drape. This wasn’t the flimsy, borderline see-through cashmere you often find at lower-price points (of which my closet is already filled with.) As a cashmere snob, I have high expectations and, with the last sweater in my size hanging discreetly at the back of the rack, I made a beeline for the fitting room.

COS Chunky Cashmere Sweater Review

Who What Wear editor Ana Escalante wears COS Chunky Crewneck Sweater.

Fabrication: 100% GCS‑certified (recycled) cashmere

Fit: Relaxed silhouette with dropped shoulders and wide ribbed trims at crew‑neck, cuffs & hem.