this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2024
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I can't really think of anything aside from TikTok or other short form video scroll thingys. How did this video format become so popular? I try scrolling through tiktok and I can feel my brain melting from how erratic and all over the place all of these videos are.
It started with Vine which was 6 second videos. That got shut down and briefly taken over by Music.ly, which was bought by ByteDance and relaunched as TikTok after which every major social media site tried to emulate following Trunp’s proposed ban
Vine was amazing. I was so sad when it was shut down. Here's some stuff I miss.
Vine was great if you could find the good stuff, a lot of the time is was just terrible though. You are forgetting about the Don't Judge challenge and all the terrible music that emerged from that period (Silento, anyone?) and all the sexist and racist content that popped up all the time. I didn't get into Vine until a few years after it was dead. The good vines like this one were hard to find.
I'm there as well. I gotta say, I can only appreciate TikTok as it's far surpassed Facebook, and I can see a lot of leftist content now.
I've been wanting to see if I can curate it enough where I can get to that point, but every time I try I just give up after a few minutes.
This was me for the first 10 times getting into TikTok. Last time it just clicked and worked. I did need to find and like a lot of leftist videos so that the algorithm knew what I wanted.
I still don't really use TikTok tho.
I think it's a really common experience to approach an unfamiliar platform and to view it as a monolith. In some respects they genuinely are.
I dip in and out of tiktok but I've cultivated a feed that is mostly radical politics (and of that, mostly communist), along with a few other areas of interest like autism.
Where tiktok really shines is in its capacity for shorter form vlog style videos from people who wouldn't otherwise have a platform. Likewise, response videos can be really good too.
You know when you get into a deep conversation with someone and they spend a few minutes talking about something that they're deeply interested in or concerned about? My tiktok feed often feels a lot like that. Some communist will find an interesting excerpt from a book they're reading and they'll connect it to a current phenomenon or situation, or they'll start talking about how certain things parallel or how it fits into a broader historical context.
If you refuse to participate in yet-another social media platform or you are abhorred by the dopamine slot machine design of tiktok, I fully support you in your position. But if you are interested in it, the tiktok algorithm is really quite good and if you spend maybe an hour or two training it then it will start to cough up lots of really good stuff that is rare to find elsewhere.
It's a bit weird. It's its own cultural bubble. Mainstream tiktok is irredeemable garbage, just like mainstream subreddits or Facebook groups or whatever else. But there's some pretty great little niches that exist in there as well.