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The flood of status symbol content into Instagram Stories has run dry. No one is going out and doing anything cool right now, and if they are, they should be shamed for it. Beyond sharing video chat happy hour screenshots and quarantine dinner concoctions, our piece-by-piece biographies have ground to a halt. Oddly, what remains feels more social than social networks have in a long time.

A house-arrest Houseparty, via StoicLeys

With no source material, we’re doing it live. Coronavirus has absolved our desire to share the recent past. The drab days stuck inside blur into each other. The near future is so uncertain that there’s little impetus to make plans. Why schedule an event or get excited for a trip just to get your heartbroken if shelter-in-place orders are extended? We’re left firmly fixed in the present.

What is social media when there’s nothing to brag about? Many of us are discovering it’s a lot more fun. We had turned social media into a sport but spent the whole time staring at the scoreboard rather than embracing the joy of play.

But thankfully, there are no Like counts on Zoom .

Nothing permanent remains. That’s freed us from the external validation that too often rules our decision making. It’s stopped being about how this looks and started being about how this feels. Does it put me at peace, make me laugh, or abate the loneliness? Then do it. There’s no more FOMO because there’s nothing to miss by staying home to read, take a bath, or play board games. You do you.

Being social animals, what feels most natural is to connect. Not asynchronously through feeds of what we just did. But by coexisting concurrently. Professional enterprise technology for agenda-driven video calls has been subverted for meandering, motive-less togetherness. We’re doing what many of us spent our childhoods doing in basements and parking lots: just hanging out.

It’s time to Houseparty

For evidence, just look at group video chat app Houseparty, where teens aimlessly chill with everyone’s face on screen at once. In Italy, which has tragically been on lock down since COVID-19’s rapid spread in the country, Houseparty wasn’t even in the top 1500 apps a month ago. Today it’s the #1 social app, and the #2 app overall second only to Zoom which is topping the charts in tons of countries.

Houseparty topped all the charts on Monday, when Sensor Tower tells TechCrunch the app’s download rate was 323X higher than its average in February. As of yesterday it was #1 in Portugal (up 371X) and Spain (up 592X), as well as Peru, Argentina, Chile, Austria, Belgium, and the U.K. I despite being absent from the chart a week earlier. Apptopia tells me Houseparty saw 25 downloads in Spain on March 1st and 40,000 yesterday.

Houseparty rockets to #1 in many countries

A year ago Houseparty was nearly dead, languishing at #245 on the US charts before being acquired by Fortnite-maker Epic in June. Our sudden need for unmediated connection has brought Houseparty roaring back to life, even if Epic has neglected to update it since July.

“Houseparty was designed to connect people in the most human way possible when they are physically apart” the startup’s co-founder Ben Rubin tells me. “This is a time of isolation and uncertainty for us all. I’m grateful that we created a product that gives a sense of human connection to millions people during this critical moment.”

Around the world, apps for direct connection are spiking. Google Hangouts rules in Sweden. Discord for chat while gaming is #1 in France. Slack clone Microsoft Teams is king in the Netherlands. After binging through Netflix, all that’s left to entertain us is each other.

Undivided By Geography

If we’re all stuck at home, it doesn’t matter where that home is. We’ve been released from the confines of which friends are within a 20 minute drive or hour-long train. Just like students are saying they all go to Zoom University since every school’s classes moved online, we all now live in Zoom Town. All commutes have been reduced to how long it takes to generate an invite URL.

Nestled in San Francisco, even pals across the Bay in Berkeley felt far away before. But this week I had hour-long video calls with my favorite people who typically feel out of reach in Chicago and New York. I spent time with babies I hadn’t met in person. And I kept in closer touch with my parents on the other coast, which is more vital and urgent than ever before.

Playing board game Codenames over Zoom with friends in New York and North Carolina

Typically, our time is occupied by acquaintances of circumstance. The co-workers who share our office. The friends who happen to live in the neighborhood. But now we’re each building a virtual family completely of our choosing. The calculus has shifted from who is convenient or who invites us to the most exciting place, to who makes us feel most human.

Even celebrities are getting into it. Rather than pristine portraits and flashy music videos, they’re appearing raw, with crappy lighting, on Facebook and Instagram Live. John Legend played piano for 100,000 people while his wife Chrissy Teigen sat on screen in a towel looking salty like she’s heard “All Of Me” far too many times. That’s more authentic than anything you’ll get on TV.

And without the traditional norms of who we are and aren’t supposed to call, there’s an opportunity to contact those we cared about in a different moment of our lives. The old college roommate, the high school buddy, the mentor who gave you you’re shot. If we have the emotional capacity in these trying times, there’s good to be done. Who do you know who’s single, lives alone, or resides in a city without a dense support network?

Reforging those connections not only surfaces prized memories we may have forgotten, but could help keep someone sane. For those who relied on work and play for social interaction, shelter-in-place is essentially solitary confinement. There’s a looming mental health crisis if we don’t check in on the isolated.

The crisis language of memes

It can be hard to muster the energy to seize these connections, though. We’re all drenched in angst about the health impacts of the virus and financial impacts of the response. I certainly spent a few mornings sleeping in just to make the days feel shorter. When all small talk leads to rehashing our fears, sometimes you don’t have anything to say.

Luckily we don’t have to say anything to communicate. We can share memes instead.

My father-in-law sent me this. That’s when you know memes have become the universal language

The internet’s response to COVID-19 has been an international outpour of gallow’s humor. From group chats to Instagram joke accounts to Reddit threads to Facebook groups like quarter-million member “Zoom Memes For Quaranteens”, we’re joining up to weather the crisis.

A nervous laugh is better than no laugh at all. Memes allow us to convert our creeping dread and stir craziness into something borderline productive. We can assume an anonymous voice, resharing what some unspecified other made without the vulnerability of self-attribution. We can dive into the creation of memes ourselves, killing time under house arrest in hopes of generating smiles for our generation. And with the feeds and Stories emptied, consuming memes offers a new medium of solidarity. We’re all in this hellscape together so we may as well make fun of it.

The web’s mental immune system has kicked into gear amidst the outbreak. Rather than wallowing in captivity, we’ve developed digital antibodies that are evolving to fight the solitude. We’re spicing up video chats with board games like Codenames. One-off livestreams have turned into wholly online music festivals to bring the sounds of New Orleans or Berlin to the world. Trolls and pranksters are finding ways to get their lulz too, Zoombombing webinars. And after a half-decade of techlash, our industry’s leaders are launching peer-to-peer social safety nets and ways to help small businesses survive until we can be patrons in person again.

Rather than scrounging for experiences to share, we’re inventing them from scratch with the only thing we’re left with us in quarantine: ourselves. When the infection waves pass, I hope this swell of creativity and in-the-moment togetherness stays strong. The best part of the internet isn’t showing off, it’s showing up.

Read more: https://techcrunch.com/2020/03/21/showing-up-not-showing-off/

With the coronavirus public health crisis in full swing, The Department of State has restricted travel from and to the US. Chinese and Iranian citizens are no longer allowed to enter the country, and any US national coming back from one of the emergency-stricken countries is required to self-quarantine for 14 days. Should be enough to stay home, you think.

But for some individuals, slashed airline prices are all it takes to pack a bag and get into holiday mode. Hence, people are giving a roasting meme treatment to everyone with a positive coronavirus test who thinks it’s the right time to travel. Let’s take look at some of best pieces so far.

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I like it better with the pigeons.

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Well yes but actually no

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I’m a simple girl. I see tom holland, I upvote.

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Even though the Center For Disease Control And Prevention has made it clear that people should avoid non-essential travel, the recent travel deals for international and domestic flights might look tempting. Expedia offers a flight from New York to Paris for only 112 dollars on March 23. Austin Horowitz, an aviation management consultant, explains that “it’s almost a negative price that airlines will have to pay to get people to fly.” But airlines are willing to keep prices so low in order to make people start traveling again.

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Bob Ross predicted it.

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We all were taught to share as kids, right?

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7 hours ago (edited)

Bestseller for spring break 2020

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Some believe that the risk of air travel comes down to the recycled air all passengers breathe during a flight. All planes have HEPA (high efficiency particulate air) filters installed to filter out 99.9% percent of dust, mold, and microbes. If they work properly, then there’s no reason to worry about the air too much. The close proximity between passengers and various surfaces on the plane may cause far greater risk. If you do fly, then remember to wash your hands frequently throughout the flight and try not to touch your face.

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6 hours ago

Roses are red violets are blue, Your face belongs in a zoo, I’ll be there too, not in the cage But laughing at you!

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9 hours ago

This one is too funny and too sad

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6 hours ago

🎶Everybody’s looking for somethiiiiing🎶

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6 hours ago

Taking over the world!

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5 hours ago

Masks do NOT work. Properly fitted respirators worn by people trained in their use and maintenance do. Stop buying masks and gloves. Those of us that work in health care and labs need them and cannot get them as a result of ignorant panic buying.

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6 hours ago

No….. don’t give in!!!

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Pretty much

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6 hours ago

**thomas the train theme starts playing

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6 hours ago

Wow trump Wow 😳

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9 hours ago

They lost one in Italy

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There going to Italy 🇮🇹

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4 hours ago

Uno!

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No don’t travel unless you want to take over the world.

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This comment has been deleted.

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6 hours ago

To much of these.

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6 hours ago

Welcome to the Atlanta airport – literal most busy airport on earth

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2 hours ago

SEARCHING FAR AND WIIIIDEEEE

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5 hours ago

*tokyo drift music starts playing*

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5 hours ago

Zombie Warnings are still scarier.

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This is it, the apocalypse

Note: this post originally had 36 images. It’s been shortened to the top 30 images based on user votes.

Read more: http://www.boredpanda.com/coronavirus-people-travel-jokes/

The 1975 released their second single from their upcoming album Notes on a Conditional Form this week. The song wasnt the only thing the British pop-rock group delivered this week. Their single The Birthday Party was accompanied by a music video chock full of memes.

The video begins with an animated Matt Healy checking himself into a digital detox center. There, he gives up his phone and is changed into a simple white set of clothes before being beamed into a digital utopia.

And thats where the bombardment of memes, old and new, begin.

First, we run into Pepe the Frog turned yoga guru.

Read more: https://www.dailydot.com/unclick/memes-new-1975-music-video/

Its no secret that TikTok users love roasting themselves, and the latest TikTok trend has users exposing their boujee childhood selves. TikTok users have officially memed whew chile the ghetto and are sharing their thoughts on everything from buying houses to wedding dress budgets to name-brand alternatives.

The sound thats going viral is from a short clip ofReal Housewives of Atlanta. NeNe Leakes says whew chile the ghetto over sirens and the shows background music. While whew chile the ghetto is not a new phrase, it was only a matter of time before teens started making it into a TikTok meme given the rampant rise of the video-sharing, China-owned platform.

TikTok user @noahpugliano made a video saying me as a kid watching HGTV House Hunters and seeing their budget is $300K. He also included his fathers comments in the video saying Noah thats a lot of mone- before being cut off by the ghetto.

TikTok user @realliamsilk used the sound to show how his mother gets every last bit of soap out of the bottle.

TikTok user @samvicchiollo used the sound to make fun of Android users, saying when youre making an iMessage group chat but cant change the name because someone has an Android and captioned it HAHA tag your friend with a Samsung so we can make fun of them for being poor #justkidding.

TikTok user @mclovig simply said, 7th grade me seeing someone in Bearpaws instead of Uggs.

It appears that most of these TikToks are meant to be lighthearted in nature, and users are poking fun at their younger selves for their judgments. But many think white TikTok users calling things ghetto is racially insensitive. This is not the first time TikToks have been scrutinized for appropriation. Another TikTok trend that had viewers reeling was the ghetto white kid trend. Twitter user @jennyfuur asked ok but [for real] what is with this Tik Tok trend.

Twitter user @dahvaee pointed out that TikToks version of ghetto is just imitation Black dialect, and tweeted theres too much to unpack with these Tik Tok trends.

Though theyre trending now, after news that TikTok has been hiding content by fat, LGBTQ, and disabled users, and increased criticism of widespread stereotyping on the app, the whew chile the ghetto TikToks may be short-lived.

Read more: https://www.dailydot.com/unclick/whew-chile-the-ghetto-tiktok-meme/

You may be familiar with Maia (also known by her online handle mxmtoon), the up-and-coming 19-year-old recording artist who recently released her debut album the masquerade back in September. The first single of the album, the ethereally gloomy pop track Prom Dress, became a near-instant hit, with the YouTube video amassing over six million views to date. And now, its become a sensation on TikTokwith a little help from Lil Jon.

Just two weeks after Maia released Prom Dress on Bandcamp, TikTok user @mattsmixtape uploaded the following clip, mxmtoon-prom dress (feat. Lil Jon), which mashes up the pop song with the rappers ubiquitous interjections of yeah what, and okay.

@mxmtoon I really hope this actually makes you laugh and you dont hate me for it, he captioned the clip, in which his mood appears to improve by the end.

And it didnt take long for Maia to notice. Just one day later, the singer-songwriter uploaded her own video to TikTok using the remixed Prom Dress track. Thanks for the audio @mattsmixtape, she wrote. In her version, Maia likewise transforms from unsure to exuberant by the conclusion of the short clip.

Eventually, others began sharing their own uploads set to the Prom Dress, which typically demonstrated the users receiving surprisingly positive reactions to serious news or insecurities. On Nov. 17, user @hayleybabbyofficial uploaded a version in which her boyfriend saw her for the first time without makeup and still loved her, facial scars and all.

Shortly after, user @arden_tayler shared an iteration of the Prom Dress TikTok in which she recalled telling her then-boyfriend of three months that she was pregnant at 19 years old. (Complete with a happy ending!)

The format has since gone viral (with over 22,000 uploads and counting) as others shared their own versions of the Prom Dress TikTokinvolving everything from revealing heavy news to parents to overcoming insecurities and being accepted by peers and significant others.

Youd have to think Maia would only be pleased by the way Prom Dress is being interpreted by her young fans. My album, the masquerade, is about my journey of growing up! About learning who I am, who I want to be, and the challengers along the way, she said of her debut.

But its not just for me, its also for you. The stories told are universal experiences, so listen along and find yourself within the lyrics.

Read more: https://www.dailydot.com/unclick/prom-dress-lil-jon-tiktok-memes/

Who knew that the existential temptations and fears of post-adolescent partying could be perfectly embodied in one 10-second meme? TikTok knew.

The ingredients for a viral meme are simple yet specific: a catchy hook that is easy to dance to that is also ripe for high school social commentary. Hence the popularity of Party, Party, Party on TikTok.

Til the Morning, a 2015 DJ Carisma song featuring Chris Brown and DeJ Loaf, has resurfaced on TikTok. In particular, the beginning of DeJ Loafs verse, Party, party, party/ Pass me a cup, Ill take a shot to the air like yaddy, yaddy, yeah, yeah, yeah/ He wanna take me home, put me in the bed and feel my body, body, body, has taken hold on the video-sharing platform.

Party, Party, Party is TikTok gold

Its all there in about 10 seconds: party, drinking, sex. Its the teenage triumvirate. In fact, the verse is so popular that the song has been rechristened Party, Party, Party on Spotify.

Why does the song work so well for TikTok? Its a perfect fit for every aspect of the viral video cycle.

If you watch compilation videos of the meme, you see mostly young women who look like they are ready for a night out. They are mouthing along with the verse and parroting a few simple dance moves as a means of showing off their going out looks before they leave the house.

All told, the dance takes about 10 to 15 seconds and features less than a dozen amateurish dance moves. This is perfect for viral TikTok spread, as they are simple enough but allow for the addition of more sophisticated or sensual dancing should the user feel so inclined.

The lyrics also inspire social commentary for high schoolers and younger college students who are skeptical of the whole party scene.

Its striking how many takes on the video follow the structure of giving the first line to freshman girl, the second line about drinking to senior boys, and the third line to freshman girl, now a little scared and feeling in over her head. For those unfamiliar with TikTok, all the roles are generally played by the same person. Its kind of Shakespearian.

After the social commentary stage of TikTok reactions comes an almost absurd stage where creators mock the premise entirely. Here, that looks like taking jabs at both the party-goers and the party doubters.

There are a bunch of these videos. One video features a TikTok creator painting a treehouse with meme-themed humor. Another uses the song to recreate the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. The comment here seems to be that they would rather be with their friends in a treehouse or contemplating history than out drinking, dancing, and whatever might come next.

Party, Party, Party TikTok meme as commentary

Whatever the take on the memebe it earnest excitement, social commentary, or outright mockerythe Party, Party, Party TikTok posters are talking about the same thing. For a teenager, parties are more than just parties: They are a rite of passage.

When you start partying, you experience the allure of a forbidden world filled with music, drinking, and, eventually, sex. While there is a draw, there is also fear. Once you leave the comfort of your room, or your treehouse, you cant go back again. Youve forever entered a realm of adulthood and all the vulnerable feelings and dangers that come with it.

Some embrace it, even if it is a little scary. Others are skeptical, even though a part of them wishes they were going. And some reject it altogether and make their own party.

Read more: https://www.dailydot.com/unclick/party-party-party-tiktok/

Ready or not, the 20s are coming up, and not the ones you learned about in world history. The 10s (teens?) are moving into the pages of the past, so over the next month, and probably for years to come, we’re going to see everyone from pop culture columnists to historians trying to sum up the theme of the decade. Mari, a 26-year-old book critic, inspired Twitter users to get started reminiscing when she posted a picture of herself at the beginning of the decade vs. now. The thread now has thousands of replies in which people look back on how this decade has changed them.

The largest age group on Twitter is 25-34. A demographic that began the ‘10s as teens or young adults has undoubtedly seen a lot of adult milestones since then, like degrees, career beginnings, and relationships. Next in line is the 18-24 demographic, who have quite literally grown up this decade. It’s no wonder looking at old pictures of a person who hadn’t even experienced most of their formative years yet can bring up strong feelings (you also might notice that the older Twitter users taking part in the challenge are a little more chill about it.)

Here are some posts we liked—scroll down and have a look. Then share your thoughts, what you think of this trend, and how things have changed for you this decade in the comments below!

Twitter users look back on their 10-year-old photos

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But there’s no need to roast your former self, especially if you were a literal child in 2009. Learning to dress yourself isn’t a “glow up”, that’s just growing up. And nobody likes their fashion choices from 10 years ago. Don’t be so hard on yourself!

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Most importantly, don’t let this challenge get you down if you’re not comfortable showing pictures of yourself from 10 years ago, or if you feel like you haven’t achieved much this decade compared to all the people flaunting their lucrative jobs and happy marriages.

2020 isn’t a test—there’s not anything more profound about it than any other year. If all you did was stay alive this decade, that’s awesome. I bet you took some cool photos and listened to a lot of great music. Won’t it be fun to discover even more next year?

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Decades challenge: me traveling to Karlowy Vary in 2009 at 17 vs me traveling to London at 27

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Read more: http://www.boredpanda.com/people-decade-transformation-before-after-photo/

Sometimes your mouth says one thing and your music says another.

The reality that the music we listen to often more accurately reflects what were feeling than were willing to admit has manifested itself in the latest Twitter meme, known as my headphones.

TikTok is the breakout hit in social media apps at the moment — it’s currently ranked first in entertainment, and 12th overall in terms of download popularity on iOS, and 8th on Android in the US — and today it’s starting a partnership that should give it an even wider profile, with the added benefit of bring another key tool in for creators on the platform to use: the app is now working with Giphy, the GIF platform, to make it possible to import Giphy GIFs, specifically its animated Stickers, into TikTok posts, and at the same time, to be able to create new GIFs for Giphy based on what you are doing in TikTok .

fileTikTok tells me that this is not a commercial deal: there’s no money exchanging hands, a spokesperson said in an email. “We’re excited to continue enhancing our creative tools with this integration,” she continued, “as well as share some of TikTok’s most iconic memes with GIPHY keyboards everywhere!”

The spokesperson said that this is the first partnership for TikTok — owned by China’s Bytedance — to integrate a third-party GIF/Sticker content into its platform. On the side of Giphy, though, this is the latest of a string of integrations that it’s used over the years to expand its reach. You can call up Giphy GIFs in Twitch, enterprise apps like Slack and Quip, and (after ironing out a little controversy with how well GIFs were being vetted) on Snapchat and Instagram, among others.

(Note: TikTok does have deals with other kinds of third parties, though, for example music labels and publishers, who are apparently in the process of rethinking those agreements, in light of just how huge TikTok has become, and its role as the primary place where music is being played, heard and appropriated.)

TikTok will be putting the Giphy integration front and center into the app, with creators able to add a sticker to a post by hitting a Giphy button to call up a directory. It sounds like an algorithm will surface a pared-down selection for users: TikTok said that it worked with Giphy Studios to create stickers that reflect some of the more popular memes and hashtags on TikTok (eg #oddlysatisfying or a dog sticker). You can also search on #getGiphy to find more.

At the same time, TikTok’s using the integration to give creators on its platform a little more amplification: the most popular stickers based on TikTok memes will also get surfaced now on Giphy itself, and wherever it is integrated. You find these by searching on #TikTok in the Giphy libarary search bar. At a time when there is a lot of heated competition to bring the most popular creators to do their best original work on a specific platform, this potentially could be one way to help woo them to TikTok over others.

But that’s not to say that anyone’s Giphy stickers will appear anywhere that Giphy is.

file“Giphy users can create and upload their own Stickers to the platform. However, their content won’t be indexed in Giphy’s search and will not show up in third party apps like TikTok unless they are a verified channel on Giphy,” a spokesperson told us. “Giphy Studios has worked with a wide array of brands and partners, such as TikTok, to create custom content, which they do on a case by case basis. TikTok worked with the creators and the Giphy Studios team to turn popular TikTok memes into GIFs. To create this content, we invited a group of creative, funny, and diverse creators, @DreaKnowBest, @Gabe, @BenoftheWeek who are excited to immortalize TikTok memes in GIF form.”

Doubtless if this takes off, there will be more added to that mix.

TikTok doesn’t share how many users it currently has on its platform, but the app — and before that, its predecessor Musically — has proven to be a massively popular channel for sharing fun and occasionally sentimental short videos set to music. But even that loose remit, which has attracted so many users, has its limitations. If you browse enough TikTok, a lot of the posts start to meld together. Adding in a sticker option gives a little extra nudge of differentiation.

There is a longer-term option that this brings to the platform, too: While TikTok has yet to turn the advertising taps on to full volume, stickers can become an obvious way of bringing in more #brands and messaging in a way that keeps the fun ethos of the platform intact.

Read more: https://techcrunch.com/2019/08/01/tiktok-adds-giphy-integration-to-import-stickers-and-export-tiktok-memes-to-the-rest-of-the-world/

Since its rebranding last summer, TikTokreinvented how we produce and consume memes. While some use the video app to document daily life, cool art, or , memes and challenges are the big draw, and TikToks collaborative format ensures that once a challenge starts circulating, it will quickly evolve.

YouTube is now filled with TikTok meme compilations, but which ones are the best? The ones that showcase the sensibility and creativity of TikTok rise to the top.Heres a look at some of the best TikTok memes of 2019so far.

The best TikTok memes

1)Old Town Road

TikTok

Music is an important part of TikTok, and with Lil Nas Xs Old Town Road, we got a look at how the platform can springboard a song. In early 2019, the single kickstarted what became known as the Yee Yee Juice or Yee Haw challenge, in which normally clothed people turned country at the moment Lil Nas X says, I got the horses in the back. The challenge undoubtedly helped push the song up the charts; after it was removed from the Hot Country Songs chart in March for not being country enough, Lil Nas X roped in Billy Ray Cyrus for a remix, and Old Town Road shot to the top. He told Time in April that TikTok really boosted the song. It was getting to the point that it was almost stagnant. When TikTok hit it, almost every day since that, the streams have been up. I credit them a lot.

2)Heres the motherf**king tea

TikTok

The premise was simple enough: Eighteen-year-old Sammie Lewis sticks a straw into a giant Starbucks tea, takes a gulp, and states, Heres the motherfucking tea, dramatically tapping the screen between words for emphasis. She was settling in for a critique of people who wear glasses but dont need them, and in other similarly introduced videos, Lewis discusses whatevers on her mind (the tea). But people latched onto the elaborate intro, which could be spun in any direction. And because you can share audio on TikTok, it evolved into something else entirely.

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TikTok

TikTok loves Lizzo (see also: Boys) and her song Truth Hurts was the perfect accompaniment for the DNA test meme. Users filmed themselves singing the line, Just took a DNA test/turns out Im 100 percent that bitch, but put their own spin on what comes after 100 percent. There were more traditional results, but its TikTok so it also got weird.

4)

TikTok

This is one of those multilevel memes. In one iteration, users mimicked the audio from actress Bella Thornes Disney Channel PSA about growing up with dyslexia. In another iteration, Thornes song Bitch Im Bella Thorne soundtracks people struggling with tasks like washing their hands or getting dressed. Of course, mocking people with dyslexia isnt funny, but there were interesting explorations of physical comedy.

5)Are you emo?

TikTok

The POV meme is popular on TikTok, but the Are you emo? meme elicits a much more specific response. Olivia Giordano plays the various middle and high-school bullies that would ask if she was emo in that low-key mean-girl way, and the theme spread to other users (and platforms) as a way to work through the trauma of adolescence.

6)Divorce

TikTok

In real life, divorce is painful and messy. On TikTok, its a performance? Challenge? The curious trend of people announcing/mourning their divorces started circulating earlier this year, but those real videos soon became indistinguishable from videos of people parodying the trend, or cosplaying getting TikTok married or TikTok divorced. I dont get it, but I support it.

7)Not my generation

TikTok

The teens have seen the rom-coms. In this challenge, soundtracked by Current Joyss New Flesh, users take tropes from 80s and 90s movies and repurpose them. But some went back even further into the 20th century. Or a little too far into the future. Or to just three years ago. Time is fluid on TikTok.

8)Dear kitten

TikTok

As the Bella Thorne meme proves, TikTok can revive older content in new, weird ways. A 2014 BuzzFeed video is the source material here, repurposed to narrate videos of cats staring at their reflections, enduring new cats in the household, or chasing bugs.

9)Four generations

Victor Sun/YouTube

While a lot of the challenges on TikTok are weird or hyper-specific, this one will actually make you emotional. The challenge started on Chinese app Douyin before going viral on TikTok, and is fairly straightforward: Four generations of a family are called into a room one at a time, and it will make you want to call your mom.

10) Chin on palm

Diana London KH/YouTube

Another twist on POV, the chin on palm challenge is literally someone putting their chin in someone elses cupped hand. (Its also known as the You Can Count on Me challenge, a reference to the song that accompanies many of the clips.) It reportedly started in South Korea as the #IAmYourValentine challenge but of course when it evolved to TikTok, it got weirder and more dogs were involved. It also spread to Twitter, where people were a little more suspicious of the challenge.

11) Microwave challenge

TikTok/YouTube

TikTok user @djtaylortot set the table with the first microwave challenge video, which shows him sitting on the floor and slowly spinning to Jojis Slow Dancing in the Dark. The challenge evolved and users put their own artistic and creative spin on it, and some videos even got into how people were pulling off the illusion.

Editors note: This article is regularly updated for relevance.

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