Hey bestie! Do you keep logging onto the internet and seeing people calling each other âbestieâ and âgirlieâ and âgirlbossâ and âqueen,â and you sort of get the sense that these words are on some level being used ironically but also you arenât totally sure what the joke is? If you spend a lot of time reading TikTok comments, the most brutal and hilarious place on the internet, you almost certainly have. There, everyone is âbestie.â Regardless of whether you are wonderful or absolutely suck, you are âqueen.â Did you have a really bad opinion on something you donât know anything about? âHey girlboss itâs not too late to take this down <3â Did you post something that you thought was a flex but it ended up being a self-own? Someone will have commented, âhey bestie I canât do this today!â âBestiesâ and âgirlbossesâ have neither gender nor profession; even if you are an old man, on TikTok you are âgirlie.â Itâs a joke, even when itâs not â you can comment âok bestie you BODIED thisâ on a TikTok of someone wearing a cute outfit â the joke being the fact that youâre saying the word âbestieâ to a stranger on the internet. In other words, the fun of âhey girlieâ is that you get to role-play as someone who would actually call a stranger on the internet âgirlie.â In other-other words, youâre also sort of ironically appropriating MLM culture. MLMs, or multi-level marketing companies, have been a subject of fascination on the internet for more than a decade. Companies that [operate with an MLM structure]( (also sometimes called ânetwork marketingâ or âdirect salesâ) rely on individual sellers to recruit others to join the business, creating a pyramid-like system in which the biggest successes arenât the people who sell the most product, theyâre the ones who recruit the most sellers. MLMs like LulaRoe, LipSense, and Young Living encourage members to exploit the relationships they already have and create a false sense of intimacy with people they barely know â i.e., calling a distant acquaintance a âbestieâ before sending them a sales pitch. A portrait of the typical MLM participant has dominated: a white, suburban woman in her 20s or 30s whoâs either married or perpetually engaged, who probably loves Disney and [Christian self-help evangelist Rachel Hollis](, and who posts grainy images that say âBut first, coffeeâ to her Instagram. There are plenty of women like this, but the internetâs obsession with them goes deeper than just the numbers. For at least the last decade, weâve endured several new dictionary definitions for what it means to be an embarrassing kind of white woman: First we had the Pumpkin Spice Latte-drinking âbasic bitch,â then there was âChristian Girl Autumn,â a play on âHot Girl Summer,â the same year that [âVSCO girlâ]( became the de facto way to describe middle-class teenage girls who wore oversized T-shirt and puka shell necklaces. And as of last Friday, we have a new term to describe the same kind of cringey, out-of-touch basic person: âcheugy.â What is âcheugy,â a word I came across precisely once in a [relatively niche TikTok]( a couple weeks ago and never heard again until the New York Timesâs digital trend oracle [Taylor Lorenz wrote about it last week]( and [is now all]( [over the internet](? âCheugy,â according to its inventor, 23-year-old software developer Gaby Rasson, can be used to describe âpeople who [are] slightly off-trend,â outdated, or even just generally âoffâ in the same way that a high school classmate DMing you to buy her essential oils feels. The aesthetic is chevron print, Instagram posts captioned with âI did a thing,â and the twirly, curly font adorning [every Etsy product tagged âbridesmaid.â](The Instagram account [@cheuglife](, which documents particularly cheugy offenses, includes pictures of Ugg slippers, #girlboss mugs, Minions memes, Smirnoff raspberry vodka, and, hilariously, cake pops. The original TikTok, which got about 100,000 likes (Twitter viral, but not TikTok viral), makes clear that very few people are actually saying âcheugy.â It was presented more as a pitch, a term that might be useful in your life in case you and your friends needed it. In her explainer, Lorenz emphasizes the point, making clear that this was simply a term that spread among a few groups of friends at summer camp and sororities, not a wildly common phrase. Then, something predictable happened: The story went viral, and as of this weekend, âcheugyâ is everywhere. Though she couldnât tell me how many pageviews it has, Lorenz said it was one of the most-read recent stories in the Styles section â right below an explainer on Rachel Hollis. The meaning is clear: People are extremely fascinated by this specific kind of person, whether itâs because theyâre reminded of cheugy #girlbosses in their own life or out of a desire to separate themselves. âPeople love to bash this specific type of person, a privileged white person, and especially sorority types,â Lorenz told me. âAny time you can name that backlash or articulate it, it pops off.â While itâs easy to claim it all as outright misogyny, [Rolling Stoneâs EJ Dickson]( makes a good point: âMisogyny is insidious and takes many forms in our culture, but making fun of someone for posting Minion memes is not one of them.â Much more than sexism, Iâm reminded of spaces on the internet where people cosplay as other types of internet users, like Facebookâs iconic [âa group where we all pretend to be boomersâ]( or Caroline Moss and Michelle Markowitzâs delightful book [Hey Ladies, a fictional parody of a bridal party email chain](. âCheugy,â to me, feels less like an attack on someone else and more like self-deprecation, a way to poke fun at our past selves who actually did earnestly love chevron and aspired to be a girlboss. A little part of us probably wishes that we were less online and had fewer irony-poisoned brain cells, living in a world where we were completely unaware of the term âcheugyâ and instead just lived it. Am I right, bestie? TikTok in the news ðï¸ - TikTok [finally has a new CEO](, eight months after ex-Disney exec Kevin Mayer stepped down: former CFO Shouzi Chew, while interim CEO Vanessa Pappas will take over the role of COO.
- Many people hate how often TikTok removes video and audio for supposedly violating guidelines. [Vladimir Putin is not one of them](.
- An Idaho cop made a video mocking Lebron Jamesâs comments about the police; his employer is dealing [with the situation internally](.
- Everyone [in this story]( about Savannah Sparks, a woman who has devoted her TikTok presence to âcalling outâ (and often contacting the employers of) people who share health care misinformation, and who then got doxxed herself, desperately needs to mind their own business.
- Can TikTok stars successfully make the jump to traditional film and TV? If the last few [micro-generations of social media influencers]( are any indication, probably not.
- The 48-year-old CEO of the influencer collab mansion Clubhouse [might not be a great guy](!
- Here is a very sweet story about a 19-year-old who accidentally moved into a senior living complex and has been [documenting her misadventures on TikTok](. âItâs like having extra sets of grandparents,â she describes. I just!
- An IHOP hostess told a man there was a 30-minute wait for a table, so he left. That [man was Adam Sandler](. One last thing ð Now that weâre socializing in groups more, I literally cannot stop overthinking every weird-slash-drunken social interaction. [This TikTok did not help](. Manage your [email preferences](, or [unsubscribe]( to stop receiving emails from Vox Media.
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