@this_luvi: Belum mandi tapi udah Bondol eraaaa aja😜🫣#trend #bondol #fypage #fyppppppppppppppppppppppp #tiktokviral

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Region: ID
Saturday 18 October 2025 05:00:19 GMT
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anandadara144
Dara :
knpa rambut orang bagus2 kalo potong Bondol lengkung kedalam gitu,kalo rambutku di salon doang dirumah jadi cutbray 😭
2025-10-22 11:40:40
1428
piaaa0011
piaaa :
hidup bondolll😭🤣
2025-10-24 06:48:47
82
uniii.h
h. :
Bondol juga nich🥰
2025-10-24 09:23:05
29
callme.taa
titakrussita :
Kangen bondol era 😌
2025-10-25 09:03:51
12
gulajawa013
Gulajawa :
bertahan sejak 2018🥰
2025-10-26 16:08:20
8
littlebuterflly_andmoon
𝐵𝒶𝒷𝓎𝒷𝓁𝓊𝑒🪕🦢🪷🪞✨ :
rambut panjang ngeliat rambut bondol pengen bondol,giliran rambut bondol ngeliat cewe rambutnyaa panjang jadi pengen panjang lagi😭😭 pernah gini gasi kaliann
2025-10-22 12:34:06
125
itsmee_2303
Itsdaisy :
Berasa lebihh bocil gasiiii🤣😭
2025-10-25 13:57:41
8
seftian691
S :
Mengusahakan agar tidak ikut2an bondol setelah melihat ini😭
2025-10-21 02:46:48
487
bettysitumeang0
Betty Situmeang51 :
habis lahiran pokoe harus bondolll lagee
2025-10-30 00:54:41
0
ulumbae.comm
アクマル :
ntar jadi bondol cutbray nggak sh?
2025-10-20 23:18:12
152
aldaardilla
Aldaardilla :
Hidup bondol era🤭
2025-10-30 01:23:00
0
husnul.husnul43
hatiiii❤️‍🔥 :
Godaaan rambut panjang 😭😭
2025-10-26 10:05:44
0
thomasconen567
Robi putra s :
𝐆𝐮𝐚 𝐘𝐚𝐧𝐠 𝐇𝐚𝐛𝐢𝐬 𝐖𝐝 𝟑5𝐣𝐭 𝐁𝐢𝐥𝐞𝐤 🔥🔥
2025-10-23 07:26:50
138
sukacoklatt430
RA♈️ :
Udahhh mulai panjang ni seng😍
2025-10-21 12:34:37
7
wenotnot5
🖤 :
hidup Bondol
2025-10-25 08:11:26
6
yusufhanifudin26
Yusufhanifudin. :
Rambut bondol 😍
2025-10-19 08:30:08
26
mentarii382
Windy :
Sama ka hehe
2025-10-22 13:11:53
12
yulitasari0606
Yulita Sari :
aku juga bondol
2025-10-23 13:07:10
3
nurnafisah97
Nafisahaja :
Kak aku juga bondol tp ngembang bgt jadi kek mangkok🥲
2025-10-22 10:53:45
19
aukeen22
N.H :
kalo potong bondol bgtu trus di smooting kira2 bagus gak ya guys🙏
2025-10-22 09:52:58
2
sarimoy28
sarimoy28 :
Ikutan
2025-10-26 05:53:19
4
aptry6
ek🅰️ :
sbnernya rambut bondol tuh bikin enteng bgt kepala, trs bikin lebih pede jga tpi bikin males nya tuh knpa kalo pake helm suka jdi cutbray 😭😭
2025-10-22 11:30:43
45
tuan_lunik
🔥Angling Dharma🔥 :
sukaaaaa
2025-10-24 08:47:57
1
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While some headlines claimed a “$30 billion” loss after hiring a consultant-CEO, that figure has no clear verification. The more reliable figure: Starbucks dropped approximately US $11 billion in market value, and several respected outlets tie this decline to a combination of poor sales, labour strikes and global boycotts — particularly after the Middle East conflict.   Here’s what we know: 	•	Over about three weeks, Starbucks’ shares fell roughly 8.9 % — wiping out nearly US $11 billion of market value.   	•	Analysts link part of this drop to consumer backlash and boycott campaigns in various markets following the brand’s perceived position in the Gaza conflict and events involving its union.   	•	In Muslim-majority countries, declines in footfall and revenue were reported amid boycott sentiment, making it clear this was not just a Western consumer phenomenon.   That means one of the world’s most iconic brands faced not just a sales stumble — it confronted the economic power of ~1.9 billion Muslim consumers, with a combined spending power exceeding US $2 trillion annually. This is not a niche market — it is a major chunk of global consumer GDP. For decades, brands have adapted to Western and Asian cultural forces, aligning their positioning accordingly. But too often the Muslim consumer segment has been sidelined or treated as secondary. Starbucks’ ~US $11 billion hit is a wake-up call: To ignore this segment is not merely a misstep in marketing — it’s a measurable economic miscalculation. Let this be the lesson “Recognize the Muslim consumer not only for ethical inclusion, but because they move markets”.
While some headlines claimed a “$30 billion” loss after hiring a consultant-CEO, that figure has no clear verification. The more reliable figure: Starbucks dropped approximately US $11 billion in market value, and several respected outlets tie this decline to a combination of poor sales, labour strikes and global boycotts — particularly after the Middle East conflict. Here’s what we know: • Over about three weeks, Starbucks’ shares fell roughly 8.9 % — wiping out nearly US $11 billion of market value. • Analysts link part of this drop to consumer backlash and boycott campaigns in various markets following the brand’s perceived position in the Gaza conflict and events involving its union. • In Muslim-majority countries, declines in footfall and revenue were reported amid boycott sentiment, making it clear this was not just a Western consumer phenomenon. That means one of the world’s most iconic brands faced not just a sales stumble — it confronted the economic power of ~1.9 billion Muslim consumers, with a combined spending power exceeding US $2 trillion annually. This is not a niche market — it is a major chunk of global consumer GDP. For decades, brands have adapted to Western and Asian cultural forces, aligning their positioning accordingly. But too often the Muslim consumer segment has been sidelined or treated as secondary. Starbucks’ ~US $11 billion hit is a wake-up call: To ignore this segment is not merely a misstep in marketing — it’s a measurable economic miscalculation. Let this be the lesson “Recognize the Muslim consumer not only for ethical inclusion, but because they move markets”.

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