Amanda Nunes walks away from MMA in June 2023, fresh off choking out Irene Aldana at UFC 289 to cap one of the sport’s most brutal resumes. She holds double-division gold, featherweight, and bantamweight straps that crushed legends like Ronda Rousey, Cris Cyborg, and Valentina Shevchenko across 10 title wins.

Family calls loud, with wife Nina Ansaroff and two young kids pulling her toward normalcy after years of cuts and camps. Fast forward to June 2025, and boredom bites: Nunes announces her comeback, hungry to reclaim the 135-pound throne vacated by her old rivals.

UFC jumps quickly, matching her against Kayla Harrison, the undefeated judo beast who snatched the belt from Julianna Peña in a bloody June 2025 scrap. Their history adds layers; both trained at American Top Team until Nunes split in 2022 over awkward vibes with Harrison’s crew.

UFC 324 shapes up as the co-main event on January 24 at T-Mobile Arena in Vegas, under the Justin Gaethje versus Paddy Pimblett lights, promising women’s MMA fireworks.

Nunes hits Vegas early, grinding pads and posing for fan pics, her power punches echoing off gym walls as bettors flood lines favoring the Brazilian at minus-150.

This bout sells as legacy versus future, Nunes’s knockout streak against Harrison’s 19-1 grind with Olympic golds in 2012 and 2016. Fans pack socials with memes pitting Lioness claws against judo grips, hype peaking right as fight week kicks off. ​

Neck Scare Derails Vegas Showdown

January 13 drops the hammer: Harrison, just 35, needs neck surgery after scans reveal herniated discs pressing nerves from her aggressive style. UFC docs push the procedure during a New York checkup, slapping a six-month recovery minimum and tanking her first title defense.

Nunes feels it coming, noticing Harrison’s Instagram goes quiet on training clips, even dreaming her rival calls with bad news. She lands in Vegas regardless, hits ESPN’s pre-fight desk gutted but steady, turning interviews into master classes on patience.

No interim belt tempts her, nor stand-ins like Peña or Holly Holm; Nunes wants the real prize or nothing. Dana White scrambles timelines, hinting at rescheduling once Harrison heals, calling it the biggest women’s matchup since Nunes-Cyborg.

What Happened to Amanda Nunes’ Comeback? The Harrison Rematch Complication - 1

Amanda Nunes (Credit: NBC)

Volunteers like Raquel Pennington pitch in, but Lioness waves them off, eyes locked on undisputed glory. This echoes her past curveballs, like Peña’s rib injury before Aldana stepped up for the 2023 finish.

The card pivots hard, fans grumbling online about diluted value, but Nunes’ class shines through, posting support for her foe while plotting her path. Her camp stays locked in South Florida, sparring rounds keeping rust off as rumors of a summer redo swirl. ​ ​

Lioness Eyes Gold Rush Resurrection

Nunes breaks quiet on UFC’s Instagram Live January 21, clear as day: she’ll wait out Harrison’s rehab for the strap shot. If the champ sits idle past six months without stripping, the door swings wide; otherwise, Nunes pounces on the next window.

Her ledger hits 23-5, pound-for-pound peak with records for most finishes and defenses in women’s history, joining McGregor as UFC’s only double-champ female. Off the octagon, her net worth is over $10 million from paydays, endorsements with Venum and Bud Light, and ventures like her Lioness gym chain.

Motherhood grounds her, a second child born post-2023, adding stakes to every camp return, blending diaper runs with heavy bag sessions. At 37, doubters question ring rust, but her frame stays shredded, 145 pounds of power primed for bantamweight wars.

2026 looms loaded, with a potential UFC 350 slot in July if the stars align, or a title eliminator against Pennington’s crew. Nunes flips scripts like nobody else, and Peña is upset about the rematch domination, showing her killer instinct.

Fighters nod in respect; Harrison heals up or fresh blood, and the roar returns thunderous. That fire in her eyes says retirement was just a pit stop; the octagon is calling her back home, where she owns the night.

TikTok has teetered on the edge for years, starting with Trump’s 2020 push for a ban over China spy fears that fizzled in courts. Biden signed a law in April 2024 demanding that ByteDance sell US assets by January 19, 2025, or shut down nationwide.

The app goes dark for 12 hours that day; users freak out on Twitter while creators panic over lost gigs. Trump swept in on January 20, issuing an executive order pausing it for 75 days, then another to June, buying time for talks.

Negotiations drag through 2025, with Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX circling with Trump allies pitching stakes. ByteDance holds firm on algorithm secrets; lawmakers scream no backdoors to Beijing data grabs.

The January 23 deadline looms like the UFC 324 main card, a pressure cooker with 200 million American scrolls at stake. Creators stockpile Reels backups, brands pause ad spending, and schools eye Plan Bs minus viral lessons.

Deal drops January 22: TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC is born, grabbing user data, apps, and moderation reins under strict privacy walls. ​

Power Shifts Hands Reins to Yanks

The new crew boasts Oracle at 15 percent, Silver Lake at the same, MGX matching, and ByteDance capped at a 19.9 percent non-voting slice. Shou Chew keeps the CEO seat on a mostly US board, licensing global TikTok while retraining feeds to cut China ties.

No algorithm sharing allowed, addressing gripes that CCP tweaks could sway elections or spy via likes. Trump blasts it as a “beautiful conclusion” on Truth Social, claiming credit for saving the scroll.

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TikTok (Credit: CNN)

Valuation whispers hit $14 billion per JD Vance, way under ByteDance’s $480 billion tag, but investors bite for creator economy gold.

Data stays stateside, and cybersecurity audits ramp up, pleasing hawks who eyed Montana’s mini-ban as a preview. Users see little change on day one, for You pages chug on with dances and skits, global reach intact for US stars.

Critics nitpick ByteDance’s lingering toehold, but lawmakers nod approval as a national security win. ​

Creators Cheer, Doubts Linger Long-Term

Over 200 million keep dueting, and 170 million monthly actives breathe easy after the outage scare. Influencers like Charli D’Amelio pivot back full throttle, and brands flood budgets for viral hooks minus ban blues. Schools resume lesson plans on trends, and politicians test election memes without hack fears. ​

ByteDance licenses tech pre-retrain, sparking suits if influence slips through. Oracle handles updates, and Silver Lake eyes profits from ads exploding past $20 billion yearly. The Trump administration touts sovereign fund ties, but the Chinese embassy stays mum on Beijing buy-in.

Gen Z shrugs and scrolls unbroken, while boomers debate if it’s truly free. TikTok morphs America; algorithm tweaks promise fresh feeds; creators grind harder knowing the rug stayed put. Drama fades, dances rage on, but watch for boardroom shakes that flip the next viral wave.