I was behind a woman today on an escalator. I wasn't shoulder-surfing, she held her phone up so high I couldn't help but see it. She was on Tik-Tok. She watched like twenty videos in one minute. One second, click. One second, click. What good this does anybody at all, anywhere, is beyond me. It was all trash.
reidjs|3 years ago
dangwhy|3 years ago
Atleast she is using good posture for phone use. Give her that.
gardenhedge|3 years ago
andirk|3 years ago
xnx|3 years ago
karaterobot|3 years ago
But at the very least, maybe it was just trash compared to the experience of not watching a short video on your phone while riding on an escalator. Trash compared to just looking around. Would staring at your shoes, or the head of person in front of you, or the environment surrounding you have been a better experience than those short videos.
ceejayoz|3 years ago
psychphysic|3 years ago
But very relatable and I too am baffled by the appeal of these shorts.
comfypotato|3 years ago
As a recovered TikTok addict, I can supply that it was the jokes for me. There was a lot of content that got delivered to me that hit my sense of humor just right. I’m sure you could track increased oxytocin in active users just like with narcotics.
zamfi|3 years ago
Aaronstotle|3 years ago
unknown|3 years ago
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ssnistfajen|3 years ago
lordnacho|3 years ago
I also noticed the quality of the filters. They really make ordinary people look quite a lot better than they do in real life.
erlich|3 years ago
vmoore|3 years ago
It's TV 2.0, but caters to ADHD types or people with borderline ADHD. If you use The Internet in any extreme way, you already have an ADHD brain. It's the only logical way to handle information overload and deal with the vastness of the web IMHO. ADHD as a term is normalized because of The Internet. It's not a scary thing to have anymore. It's the new normal.