Hello from The Goodsâ resident internet culture reporter, Rebecca Jennings! On Tuesdays, Iâll be using this space to update you all on whatâs been going on in the world of TikTok. Is there something you want to see more of? Less of? Different of? Email me at rebecca.jennings@vox.com.
Hereâs a bit of news that would likely be a bigger deal were it not for an ongoing pandemic: Youtube is currently developing a TikTok competitor called Shorts, which will include a main feed of videos and a music catalog. Itâs âthe most serious effort yet by a Silicon Valley tech company to combat the rise of TikTok,â according to [the Information](, which first reported the news.
There have been other attempts to do this: [Instagram Reels]( is currently testing in Brazil, while since 2018 its parent company Facebook has had Lasso, which hasnât really contributed anything significant to online culture so far. Byte, which [launched in January]( by the founder of Vine, hasnât seemed to make much of a dent in TikTokâs domination of infuriatingly watchable shortform content, either.
Youtube, however, is already a place people go to spend hours watching videos. But Josh Constine, editor-at-large at TechCrunch, makes a [pretty good point]( on why even Youtube probably canât break into the field in a meaningful way: the âcontent network effect.â
Basically, Constine argues that because the joy of TikTok comes from the ability to react to, build on, or take inspiration from its infinite supply of videos, TikTokâs massive back catalog gives it a huge advantage. Features that allow you to use the same sound as or post side-by-sides of a certain video lower the barrier to producing engaging content, and each new video provides source material for another one in the future. TikTok already has millions of popular creators and viral videos, and even though it isnât as much of a household name as Youtube or Facebook, itâs created a highly valuable and interconnected universe, with its own quirky vernacular that doesnât exist anywhere else on social media.
Ultimately, itâs unclear what Youtubeâs Shorts will build that TikTok isnât already doing better. But hey, if thereâs a bunch of weird teens goofing off in their house during quarantine (if thatâs still a thing by the time it launches), Iâll probably be watching.
Hereâs what else is going on with TikTok, most of which is (surprisingly) non-coronavirus related!
TikTok in the news ðï¸
- Thirstiest rapper in the world Drake has released a [song that comes with its own dance instructions](, and if it sounds like music that was perfectly engineered for TikTok, thatâs because it was. Toosie, the Atlanta-based dancer who choreographed the âToosie Slide,â [told Rolling Stone]( that earlier this year, Drake called him up and asked if heâd come up with a dance to go alongside a hook he was working on. I have yet to see a single person doing the âToosie Slideâ on my For You page.
- Douyin, TikTokâs sister brand and Chinese counterpart, temporarily banned several creators for speaking Cantonese rather than Mandarin on their livestreams. Pop-ups on usersâ accounts reportedly advised creators to âPlease speak Mandarin to involve more users from other areas (of China).â Read David Paulk of China-focused news site Sixth Toneâs [full Twitter thread](, which was originally intended to be published as an article, but, according to Paulk, was dropped after pressure from Bytedance (TikTok and Douyinâs parent company).
- More proof that TikTok stars are going to be very, very rich and very, very famous soon: [Taylor Lorenz talked]( to a bunch of agents at Hollywoodâs top talent firms, all of whom confirmed that TikTok is where the industry is looking to source for its next big stars. Says Greg Goodfried, co-head of digital talent at UTA, âIt used to be, I want to get famous on YouTube or Vine, so I can have a career in traditional entertainment. Now, this is a career.â
- The [âquarantine cutieâ story]( that I previously wrote about my suspicions of wasnât exactly as serendipitous as it seemed. [Mediumâs OneZero]( spoke to creator Jeremy Cohen, who admitted that the video was somewhat staged; he had a friend on said cutieâs roof the entire time who helped with the production. Love remains dead!
abbyrartistry/video/6811897611784604933
Meme watch ð
All the popular kids on TikTok are posting their mugshots. The trend started last week, when a bunch of makeup artists and influencers on the app filmed themselves applying smudged or fake-tear-soaked mascara and fake blood and then posted the results to Instagram. The #mugshotchallenge isnât about posting your actual mugshot: Itâs what your mugshot might look like if you happened to look very cute while getting in a lot of trouble.
No, itâs certainly not great that a bunch of mostly white and largely privileged kids are pretending theyâve been beat up and arrested, because theyâre statistically the least likely people for that to happen to. (Also because [mugshots donât actually look like this](.) Thereâs a lot of [cultural weirdness happening here](, but because weâre talking about mostly minors, Iâm going to chalk it up to probable ignorance.
What I really think is happening is that extreme makeup transformations are all over TikTok right now, and challenges like these are a way to participate in a meme while by yourself, and one that in the Before Times, you may not have had time for. The decades challenge, where you dress up like someone from the '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, and '00s? Thatâs a several-hour project! There are worse ways to spend an afternoon in quarantine. Just donât do the mugshot thing.
One last thing ð
Remember bars? I miss bars. Watch [this video]( of a disinterested hot girl taking your order and relive the good old days.
[TikTok image](ak40heaven/video/6810468053747256581)
TikTok/@otakoyakisoba
Thanks for reading, and see you next week! In the meantime, email me with what you'd like to see more of at [rebecca.jennings@vox.com](:rebecca.jennings@vox.com).
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