“[TikTok is] probably like 90 percent of my business – where I’ve gotten my business from,” Claudia Fiorello said.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Kentuckians are weighing in on the legal battle over TikTok as the fate of the popular app sits in the hands of the U.S. Supreme Court, just days before a nationwide ban is set to take effect.
Kentuckian Claudia Fiorello, like many social media content creators, is keeping a close eye on Washington D.C. this week.
“Crossing my fingers, and I hope it doesn’t get banned,” she told WHAS11.
A bipartisan federal law makes TikTok illegal on Jan. 19 if its Chinese parent company, ByteDance, doesn’t sell. The deadline falls a day before president-elect Donald Trump is sworn back into the White House.
“[TikTok is] probably like 90 percent of my business – where I’ve gotten my business from,” Fiorello said.
Her wedding makeup service, Fiorello Beauty based in the Louisville area, has taken off in the last few years — …