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. The only awards show that mattered this year went down over the weekend, but you couldnât watch it on TV. It happened on Instagram, on the most important account for Gen Z social media stars and their followers: [TikTok Room](. Itâs hard to overstate the influence of TikTok Room to the growing world of the micro-famous (and now, some actually famous) TikTokers who comprise the most followed users on the app. Like the Shade Room, which it is directly modeled after, the account posts gossip and other hard-to-find morsels of drama, like deleted tweets, recordings of livestreams, or screenshots of comments, replies, and likes between popular creators. During the pandemic, when kids and teens are living their lives online and spending less time with classmates and friends, digital dirt is more essential than ever. When I [wrote about TikTok Room]( in February, the account had nearly 300,000 followers; now it has almost 2 million. Most importantly, TikTok Room is run by two regular fans who are anonymous outside of their first names: Elasia, a 19-year-old college student in New Jersey, and Nat, a 17-year-old high schooler in Texas. Its graphic design and branding may seem slightly amateurish, but thatâs also what makes it feel so authentic: Nat and Elasia are just genuinely so obsessed with creator culture that the account posts dozens of times a day, often within minutes of major drama occurring. (I asked Elasia if she considers herself a journalist; she said, âWe donât post fake tea.â) All this is to say that when TikTok Room announced that it would be holding its [first awards show]( in November, it was a pretty big deal. Nominees such as Charli DâAmelio, Bryce Hall, and Loren Gray encouraged their fans to vote for them in categories like âBest Dance Creator,â âBest Clapback,â âLeast Problematic Female,â and âBest Shipâ (for creators who havenât confirmed their relationship status but whom fans love to see together). Voting took place last week via Google Form, and the results, which were rolled out in a series of timed Instagram posts on Saturday night, included pie chart breakdowns of the voting results for transparency. The winners were not particularly surprising. Beauty YouTuber [James Charles]( won âBest Makeup.â âBest Role Modelâ went to body-positive creator [Sienna Gomez]( (as did âLeast Problematicâ). [Charli]( won âMost Achieved Female,â and âBest Dance Creatorâ went to âSay Soâ choreographer (and [Vox profile subject]() [Haley Sharpe](. These are the users TikTok is synonymous with, and that says volumes about the future of social media stardom: These users are, for the most part, white, cis, thin, and primed to make hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of dollars from their followings. Maybe more pressingly, the TikTok Room awards prove how little ârealâ awards shows matter anymore, and how much mainstream celebrity culture has to catch up on. According to the awardsâ results, nearly 500,000 votes were cast, which would illustrate an enormous rate of user engagement for the accountâs 1.9 million followers. There are rapidly expanding and increasingly niche fandoms for more and more TikTok creators, and the power rankings are constantly in flux. We already know how overnight fame can affect young peopleâs lives and mental health â [especially when it goes away](. These mechanisms are already in hyperdrive, and theyâre getting faster. Whatever this sort of attention does to the influencers themselves, TikTok Room and its marquee awards is a wildly impressive feat for two regular teenagers who might be the future of entertainment media. Though kids under 18 may not have been able to vote in that other election last month, to some of them, the TikTok Room awards might have been the one that mattered more. TikTok in the news ðï¸ - ByteDance has been given yet another deadline extension to sell TikTok to US ownership. ([Itâs now December 4](.) An amazing holiday present would be to give up the whole charade and let us TikTok in peace.
- âHow did I end up on Cartel TikTok?â is a question youâll see asked a lot on social media, as videos of dozens of bags containing what are assumed to be illegal drugs or exotic pets and luxury cars have popped up on hundreds of thousands of TikTok users' feeds. Yet [according to experts]( on organized crime, itâs all just ânarco-marketingâ â that is, âthe latest propaganda campaign designed to mask the bloodbath and use the promise of infinite wealth to attract expendable young recruits.â
- Relatedly, many TikTok users, including me, have been served [videos that appear to be filmed in North Korea](. Some appear to be staged; for instance, [one video shows]( people waiting at the top of a staircase seeming to wait for a cue. The [account]( describes itself as âNorth Korean residents sharing their current daily lifeâ and says it is produced in the Chinese city of Dandong, next to the North Korean border. But like all media that purports to come from North Korea, where citizens are subject to some of the worldâs most extreme censorship measures, its origins and intentions are suspect.
- Former Target employees [are claiming on TikTok]( that Target will âletâ you steal from stores, all the while tracking everything you take over time until the total is more than enough to prosecute people for grand larceny. Current Target employees, DM me!
- Hereâs a [cool mini-doc]( on how LGBTQ Muslims are building a community on TikTok.
- Megan Thee Stallion [remains Thee queen](of TikTok trends. One last thing ð Sick of seeing everyoneâs perfectly color-coordinated Christmas trees on Instagram Stories? [Here is a TikTok]( for those who appreciate a tree with, uh, âcharacter.â Manage your [email preferences](, or [unsubscribe]( to stop receiving emails from Vox Media.
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