Hello from The Goods' resident internet culture reporter, Rebecca Jennings! On Tuesdays, I'm using this space to update you all on what's 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.
What do boomers and zoomers have in common? Hating millennials. Over the weekend, [screenshots of TikTok comments](from Gen Z users clowning on millennials went viral, describing those born in the '80s and '90s as avocado toast and coffee-obsessed Potterheads with drinking problems. âTheyâre worried about their harry potter house but they live in a 1 bedroom apartment ⦠yâall worried about the wrong houses,â read one, which was very funny.
While I stand by my long-held conviction that generations are fake â I have not heard a single descriptor of Gen Z that sounds any different from what millennials are supposed to be (âcares about authenticity!â âwants to feel part of something!â It is not an accident that [these descriptors are literally only of use to marketers](!) â I think whatâs actually going on is that some millennials are reaching their late 30s now, which is not usually a particularly cool time in oneâs life. Youâre past the âfiguring it outâ years but not yet at the âfuck itâ years, which means youâre just sort of stuck with whatever youâve got going on and thereâs no end in sight.
Of course, this is a massive generalization. All of these things are generalizations, which is why people take it so personally when you talk about this stuff. The hilarious part is that the general response from millennials to the screenshots of the comments has been, âitâs true.â Millennials are so brow-beaten and desperate for the approval of those younger than us that weâre ready to agree with anything they say. To be fair, most millennials know a 28-year-old woman whose personality is coffee and wine and has a Harry Potter tattoo. Am I only writing about this because Iâm turning 28 in exactly nine days and have absolutely considered a Harry Potter tattoo (well, before [J.K. Rowling ruined it with her terrible opinions]() at several points in my life? Whoâs to say! Anyway, let the teens live. Weâre all in this economy together.
TikTok in the news ðï¸
- Record labels are spending more money in digital marketing on TikTok, and influencers are cashing in. According to [sources in Rolling Stone](, Charli DâAmelio, who has more than 60 million followers, can charge as high as $30,000 to $40,000 to promote a song.
- This is a [very fun dive]( into whatâs known as âElite TikTokâ or âDeepTok,â which is sort of like the âWeird Twitterâ version of TikTok. Basically, 13-year-olds are pretending to be sentient retail stores and dating one another. Donât worry about it.
- An alligator in [Florida named âSweetieâ](is going viral on TikTok. However, alligators are scary and bad, and this is nothing but pro-alligator propaganda.
- In [his daily column](, Verge tech reporter Casey Newton admitted that heâd underestimated TikTok. Kids ages 4 to 15 now spend an average of 85 minutes per day on Youtube and 80 minutes on TikTok, and their time on TikTok has grown 200 percent in 2020. Thatâs thanks to mountains of ad revenue and in-app purchases on an app that keeps finding new users â many of them in an older age bracket than the appâs stereotypical teenagers.
- Female TikTokers keep getting arrested in Egypt for âattacking the family values of Egyptian societyâ through their videos. [The Guardian has the horrifying story](of one 17-year-old who filmed herself sobbing and with a bruised face saying that she had been gang raped. She was arrested for âpromoting debauchery.â
Meme watch ð
Last week, [Emma Alpern in Curbed]( explored the mystifying world of the TikTok home tour, which is essentially an anthropological study on kitchen appliances of the nouveau riche. In one popular TikTok [sound meme](, users point out âthat one thing in their house that everybody thinks is so cool,â with examples raging from two-story closets, a faucet exclusively for coffee and milk, and âa $1,500 appliance that Food & Wine once described as âbasically the worldâs most powerful blender that also cooks and stirs.â Rich peopleâs houses,â Alpern writes, âlook like The Sims when you use a cheat code.â
But scroll long enough, she says, âand youâll probably see more than a few tours of a genuinely messy house (with 22,700 likes). Parallel to the appâs glowing walk-throughs of âcottagecoreâ dream houses and tiny homes are TikToks from users reveling in the ugliness or nonsensicality of their living space.â TikToks showcasing average middle classness are going viral â if not at the same speed or scale as their upper class counterparts â if only to make the mansion-less among us feel a little more welcome.
One last thing ð
I have to assume [this tutorial]( on how to make âBritish teaâ from an American lady is a psyop to make British people absolutely lose their minds.
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