


“To confront bullying to confront anything. Kat is worried about the silencing of TikTok and believes other measures should be looked at first. On a device or on the web, viewers can watch and discover millions of personalized short videos. According to legal experts, a nationwide ban could face similar legal challenges. TikTok has filed suit against the law citing a violation of the First Amendment. users that are on this app.”Īs Congress continues to debate a potential ban, Montana has become the first state to ban the app approving such legislation in May. “I think banning TikTok instead of regulating TikTok, um, think seems a little un-American,” she said, “It’s kind of hard to conceptualize because it’s over $150 million U.S. Congress and the Biden Administration have recently renewed efforts to ban the Chinese-owned app due to data security, misinformation, and mental health concerns. She says can’t imagine what it would do to the millions of diverse communities formed on the app. Kat’s referring to talks of a potential ban on TikTok in the United States. “Let’s be vulnerable, let’s be funny, let’s talk about life, let’s about the good, let’s talk about the bad,” she recalls about her TikTok experience. Through a shared account, Kat and her husband shared their lives with anyone who would watch and slowly built a large following. Like thousands of others, Kat joined TikTok during the height of COVID-19 as a way to connect with the outside world as we collectively experienced lockdowns. It’s different from all other platforms,” she said. You can reach so many people and that forms a different type of community. “The beautiful part of TikTok is you’re able to connect with literally everybody. “This is my safe space to film when I’m not doing comedy,” she said about her office space in her Tampa home dedicated to curating short videos for social media.įrom our one-on-one chat to life’s everyday moments with her toddler MK, Kat shares just about everything on the popular yet controversial video app TikTok. (WFLA) - In the privacy of her home, under the glow of bright vanity lights, and with only her reflection staring back, Kat Stickler presses record on her phone and shares her life with the world.
