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Catchy TikTok songs are tackling racism head-on

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Over the last month, TikTok has become a hub for information on protests, police brutality, and the Black Lives Matter movement. The recent transition to activism has replaced dances and comical stories typically seen on the app. 

Now some activists are creating catchy songs to educate users about pressing issues—and dispel racist myths—in a new way.

One song by @joyoladokun, Vox first reported, calls out corporations for posting Black Lives Matter messages and then quickly going “back to enacting policies that oppress everybody.” 

“Graphic design is the cure to racism, graphic design it will make the world fair,” @joyoladokun sings. 

https://www.tiktok.com/@joyoladokun/video/6834554015842585862?referer_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.vox.com%2F&referer_video_id=6834554015842585862

A duet between @rynnstar and @alexengelberg talks about the police system and crime rates. 

“Black neighborhoods are overpoliced so of course they have higher rates of crime,” they sing. “White perpetrators are undercharged so of course they have lower rates of crime.”

https://www.tiktok.com/@alexengelberg/video/6834404363188915461

Others are more somber in tone, like Jason Nesmith’s song about George Floyd, whose death during an arrest has prompted nationwide protests.

“The blue man pinned him down, neck under knee, held the Black man 'til he couldn’t breathe,” @mr.nesmith sings. 

The 23-year-old told the Daily Dot that he came up with the lyrics after seeing a melody from @lynlapid. He translated the rage he felt seeing the death of Floyd and other Black people.

The video now has 1.7 million views on TikTok. Nesmith said the response was completely unexpected, and now, he's finding ways to do more.

“I'm already thinking what other things can I convey through my music, what other things can I introduce people to or make people think about,” Nesmith said.

Kyla Imani, 18, wrote a song about the death of Ahmaud Arbery. After seeing the response, she turned the TikTok, which now has 1.3 million views, into a complete song called “No Humanity.”

“I feel like music is so powerful and it has the power to do so many things that sometimes social media posts can't so I was just like, why not just turn this into a song and use it to help the cause,” Imani told the Daily Dot.

Imani is donating all proceeds from the song to Arbery’s family and social justice organization Until Freedom.

“When we're out protesting, we're blasting music,” Imani said. “Now is really the time for artists, influencers, anyone with a platform to just really raise their voice because art in any type of revolution moves people.”

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Grandma’s TikTok challenge leads thousands to register for Trump rally in protest

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Over the weekend, President Donald Trump's campaign gleefully reportedly that hundreds of thousands of people signed up to attend his first campaign rally since the coronavirus pandemic.

A huge number of those registrants are TikTokers doing a challenge in the hopes that no one goes.

A few days ago, Mary Jo Laupp, a grandmother of four who works at a high school, posted a TikTok complaining about both the rally's original date, Juneteenth, and location, Tulsa, Oklahoma, the site of what is widely known as the "single worst incident of racial violence in American history."

Laupp suggested that people register for tickets then not show up as a way to protest.

https://www.tiktok.com/@maryjolaupp/video/6837311838640803078?u_code=daa6kcf7hdl9ea&preview_pb=0&language=en&_d=daa6kibelfjcjk&share_item_id=6837901953637305606&timestamp=1592187856&utm_campaign=client_share&app=musically&utm_medium=ios&user_id=6781432621147702277&tt_from=copy&utm_source=copy&source=h5_m

"I recommend all of us who want to see this 19,000 auditorium barely filled or completely empty go reserve tickets now and leave him standing there alone on the stage," Laupp said.

Via direct message on Twitter, Laupp told the Daily Dot that she takes issue with Trump's tone and tact, as well as having "men connected to white supremacist groups working in his cabinet." She describes herself as a moderate Libertarian with slight leanings to the left, and said she voted third party for president in 2016.

Her idea went viral overnight.

Laupp was shocked.

"I was blown away when I woke up Friday morning. My followers had tripled; that video had been seen thousands of times and shared hundreds," she said.

Laupp's TikToks have at most a few thousand views. To date, this one has 1.8 million.

Many of the 20,000 comments are from people claiming to have registered for tickets with no intention of attending.

"I accidentally got 4 tickets but I forgot I have to vacuum my ceiling that day," said one. "Oh no guys! I reserved two tickets and I just realized that I have to walk my fish that day," said another.

Others have echoed Laupp's call. A TikTok with 75,000 views asked fans of K-pop supergroup BTS, whose internet prowess is legion, and who has a demonstrated commitment to fighting racism online, to do the same.

The Trump camp seems unaware that they're being duped.

Although some have pointed out that registering for tickets is actually unnecessary to attend, the internet is highly amused.

"I have a whole cadre of people ordering tickets online to inflate his numbers and give him a false sense of attendance," one Twitter user commented on Trump's self-congratulatory tweet this morning. "When no one shows, we can all have a good laugh."

In a TikTok posted yesterday, Laupp thanked Republicans for changing the rally's date to June 20, rather than Juneteenth, which marks the end of slavery.

She then explained why they'd received so many requests for tickets.

"A significant number of those 300,000 reservations you had by last night are from people who don't intend to come."

https://www.tiktok.com/@maryjolaupp/video/6837901953637305606?u_code=daa6kcf7hdl9ea&preview_pb=0&language=en&_d=daa6kibelfjcjk&share_item_id=6837901953637305606&timestamp=1592187856&utm_campaign=client_share&app=musically&utm_medium=ios&user_id=6781432621147702277&tt_from=copy&utm_source=copy&source=h5_m

Laupp then again urged the campaign to move the rally from Tulsa altogether.

"I'm hoping now you'll listen. Doing this rally in Tulsa with its history of Black Wall Street is in poor taste in light of the current climate in this country," she said, alluding to ongoing civil rights protests of systemic racism and police brutality against Blacks.

"I'm hoping you'll do better in the future and choose your sites more carefully."

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The ‘Vogue challenge’ elevates Black creatives—and challenges the industry to do better

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vogue challenge

The cover of Vogue has historically been a white space, and the magazine has often been called out for its ignorance. The Vogue challenge shifts the power of the edit to the underrepresented.

Know Your Meme points out that though people have been doing magazine edits for a while, the Vogue challenge picked up momentum in early June on Twitter and TikTok, with participants editing their own photos onto covers. On June 2, Salma Noor posted an edit that included the caption "Being Black is not a crime."

https://twitter.com/capricornbbyy1/status/1267785500477272069
https://www.tiktok.com/@kishamameridian/video/6835591232677219590
https://www.tiktok.com/@shadaenotadu/video/6836747036209974533
https://www.tiktok.com/@lizzo/video/6837959212425858309

As the project circulated, there was a reckoning at Condé Nast, which owns Vogue, as former and current employees called out its racist workplace culture and editors and management resigned. Last week, Vogue's longtime editor Anna Wintour said in a note to staff that "it can’t be easy to be a Black employee at Vogue," and that the magazine didn't do enough "to elevate and give space to Black editors, writers, photographers, designers, and other creators." Wintour has been Vogue's editor-in-chief since 1988, and artistic director of Condé Nast since 2013.

As the Vogue challenge got more popular (there are a couple variations on TikTok; celebrities started doing it, of course), there were also reminders that it's not about looking cool or jumping on a trend, but elevating voices that have been shut out of glossy fashion magazines—on covers and mastheads. As Teen Vogue reports, Beyoncé's September 2018 cover by Tyler Mitchell was the first shot by a Black photographer in U.S. Vogue's history, and it was at Beyoncé's request.

https://twitter.com/celinebyslimane/status/1270848459239653376?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1270848459239653376&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thecut.com%2F2020%2F06%2Fblack-artists-create-vogue-covers-in-the-vogue-challenge.html

The project extended to photographers, illustrators, and designers as well, putting their work out in the world instead of waiting to be asked.

https://twitter.com/RebLRocR/status/1270891284111265794
https://twitter.com/Paracosmjb/status/1270587716082810881
https://www.instagram.com/p/CBQcAN4MSSZ/

Photographer Cedric Nzaka, who runs the everydaypeoplestories Instagram, told Vogue of the challenge: "We as Black photographers have to be 50 times better to get noticed in the first place and even when we do get noticed and reach those boardroom meetings, we’re frequently the only Black voice in the room, which can make it difficult to be heard and understood." For Black women, that can be even more difficult.

Photographer Texas Isaiah went further on Twitter: "It's fun to imagine more Black Trans people on the cover of magazines. It's even more fun to think of magazines hiring Black trans and gender-expansive visual narrators to do the work."

https://twitter.com/TexasIsaiah/status/1270760449357647872

While the project is highlighting voices, it is also challenging the way magazines like Vogue hire and access talent. That will start with intention and action, not just another apology.

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Black doctors say they’re ‘celebrated’ in scrubs—but feared in hoodies

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Black doctor are sharing viral TikTok videos on how they’re treated differently in hoodies

Black doctors are sharing TikTok videos of themselves in scrubs, followed by appearances in their hoodies to address racial profiling.

The trend seems to have started with a doctor in London who went viral for a TikTok video on how people treat him differently when he’s in his scrubs as opposed to when he’s seen in a hoodie. 

Dr. Emeka Okorocha, 27, shared the video on June 3 on his TikTok, where he has more than 115,000 followers. 

https://www.tiktok.com/@doctor.emeka/video/6834588358660984069

The video is set against Childish Gambino’s Grammy-winning “This Is America”---a 2018 hit that laid bare the race politics of gun violence against the Black community in America. 

It starts with Okorocha smiling in his scrubs, with the text, “If you celebrate me in my scrubs.” He then zooms his left palm into the lens, and then emerges in a hoodie with the text, “Don’t hate me in my hoodie.”

Then another text appears, “No racism, no discrimination.” 

The video has since been viewed more than 830,000 times, way higher than his regular views which range from 50,000-100,000 views. 

Earlier this month, he shared a note thanking his followers for the support he received. 

“Don’t love [when] is just when it’s trendy or convenient,” he said in the caption of the post where he shared the video, “Love us when it’s hard, when you may be criticised when you may be scared or embarrassed. That’s when we really will feel you stand with us.”

The Instagram video has received almost 15,000 views. 

“I don’t want to be clapped for and celebrated when I have my Scrubs and PPE on only to see myself and others who look just like me racially profiled for wearing a simple hoody,” he wrote later in the post.

His post then inspired another Black doctor in the U.S. to share a similar video, the Daily Mail reported.

Dr. Kojo Sarfo, in collaboration with another doctor who on social media identifies himself only as docjp3, produced a similar video on Thursday: 

https://www.tiktok.com/@dr.kojosarfo/video/6836942284643110150

In the collaboration video, both doctors appear in two separate windows, at first in their scrubs, against the background of “This is America.”

Similar to Dr. Okorocha’s video, the text in this scene says, “If you celebrate me in my scrubs.”

The doctors then do a head-bump against the screen and appear in their hoodies.

“Don’t profile me in my hoodie,” the text continues. 

The sentence then changes to “Don’t fear me in my hoodie,” and then changes to “Don’t shoot me in my hoodie.”

The video ends with the text, “Everybody vs. racism.” 

The doctors, who have between 98,000 to 145,000 followers each, have used their platforms to address racism before as well. 

These videos appeared amid the global protests sparked by the police killing of George Floyd on May 25. Prior to that, the doctor identifying as @docjp3, shared how the current pandemic was disproportionately affecting Black Americans and invited his followers for a conversation on racism. 

“We are at a pivotal point in history. We are battling a global pandemic. The injustices, disparities, systemic racism, etc. that plague black and brown communities are only being magnified by Covid,” he wrote. “Modern technology allows the world to see that racism is alive and well.”

Teens are making TikToks about what it’s like to have divorced parents

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screenshots from tiktok video joking about divorce

A new genre of TikToks is dominating the platform, and it's specifically for kids who have divorced parents.

Most of the videos are funny, sarcastic, and lighthearted. They are uniting both trendy TikTok teens and Millennials who are often discovering the divorce videos on Twitter.

"Child of divorced parents TikTok hits different," Twitter user Joseph Longo wrote along with one of the videos.

https://twitter.com/josephlongo_/status/1272633812107870208

In the video, TikTok user @lu.angove rates different places where she's been "traded between" after her parents divorced.

For example, Panera Bread received a 10/10 for having macaroni and cheese and for the people eating outside with their dogs. But getting "traded" at one of her parents' houses only got a 5/10 because it was "boring." The house still got OK marks, she said, because at least it didn't "feel like a drug deal going down in a parking lot."

But this isn't the only type of divorce TikTok. A quick scroll through the hashtag "#divorce" will show thousands of relatable videos that amount to over 473 million views.

Several of the TikToks poke fun at awkward moments, like when both of @jesshellman's parents came to her doctor's appointment.

"When ur divorced parents are in the same room again for ur doctors appointment regarding ur mental health," she wrote in the caption.

In the video, she pans to both parents in the room and then zooms in on her face as she laughs. Meanwhile, the Phineas and Ferb song "We're Getting The Band Back Together" plays in the background.

Other videos are celebratory, showing off the parents' close relationship or highlighting both parents' simultaneous glow ups after separating.

For example, TikTok user @al3xandruh_ shows both parents' transformations after their divorce. Both parents got physically active and pursued their dream jobs. She ended the video noting that her parents are still on good terms.

Then there's a section of divorce TikToks that compares the living situation between their mom's and dad's houses. Some TikTok users show off their two rooms. Others, like TikToker @maddiemiller.1, show off the comical difference between food options.

In the food comparison video, the TikTok user posts her mom's full pantry, a candy shelf, and a packed refrigerator. Then, it shifts to the dad's food. She starts off with a 24-pack of Miller Lite, a jar of pickles, and pretzels.

The divorce TikToks cover everything from these types of playful jokes about the family dynamic to upsetting moments like spending holidays separated.

Most videos are flooded with comments from kids with divorced parents discussing similar situations. The videos seem to function as a coping mechanism and a way to make light of the situation.

So in the spirit of the TikToks, it might be a good time to remind you: Don't forget to bring your own food to dad's house if you don't want to be stuck with pickles.

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How ‘Hip Hop Harry’ went from kids’ show to soundtrack for a ‘movement’

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hip hop harry tiktok

You've heard the song if you've scrolled through TikTok long enough: a bit of fluttering flute, a drum-line beat, and a chorus of kids chanting ,"Go go go." Then, a voice calls out: "Who's next?"

It's from the educational kids' show Hip Hop Harry, which ran on Discovery Kids and TLC from roughly 2006-2008. It now lives on YouTube, but in the last few months the song has dominated TikTok, where both the audio from Harry's "dance circles" (a variation on the theme song) and actual clips from the show are circulating.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqqGWEmVzkY

Actor Claude Brooks is the show's executive producer and creator. He tells the Daily Dot that the idea for Hip Hop Harry came in the early aughts when he was putting together another show with Nelly, at the height of "Hot in Herre" fame. When Brooks' young nephews caught wind of the news they started freestyling Nelly's lyrics, and he saw a way to use "rhyming as a way to kind of teach social, emotional-related stuff." The series often explored inclusion and conflict resolution, with the dance circles bringing the kids together at the end.

The audio has been circulating TikTok for a while. Back in January, user itskshizzle posted one about mental health, using the song as the soundtrack. The audio has been used in more than 1 million videos; there are multiple remixes and an incredible violin cover.

https://www.tiktok.com/@itskshizzle/video/6783968559602175238
https://www.tiktok.com/@theeblackbadger/video/6827515238536072453

Inspired by cast member Jake Deanda's widely memed dance moves, there was also a "Stanky Leg" dance trend. Deanda, who was 9 at the time, embraced his meme status and revisited the move on Instagram last month.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CAV9zQDhEdD/?utm_source=ig_embed

Brooks says he was "shocked and happy" to see families in quarantine participating in the dance trends, and that it was "really hitting all racial boundaries," which reinforced the mission of the show.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7HtRwoYOZTg&t=5s

More recently, the song has been used in videos about protests and Black Lives Matter, and the "Go go go" part was recontextualized.

https://www.tiktok.com/@rreygrande/video/6833022019773238533
https://www.tiktok.com/@quinstepher/video/6834394422348647686

"Go go go" and "Who's next?" traveled to Twitter, where they've been applied to a recent streak of tearing down symbols of oppression and holding people in power, like the Los Angeles Police Commission, accountable. As Gita Jackson noted in a recent piece for Vice, protesters in the U.K. did the Stanky Leg on the site of the toppled Edward Colston statue.

https://twitter.com/amzy_obr/status/1270411883573641228

Brooks points to a recent remix that changed "go" to "vote," and says that it's more than a challenge. It's a movement.

https://twitter.com/JJ_Bola/status/1269649434108887041
https://twitter.com/T_o_n_e_r/status/1267939128378875905
https://twitter.com/kvnnrxa/status/1270926339080503297

It helps that the song is incredibly catchy, but seeing Hip Hop Harry rewritten in terms of current events, as police brutality (and protests against it) continues, "Who's next?" carries a little more weight. Brooks says he was pleasantly surprised that Gen Z—the demo that might be most familiar with the show—was giving the song momentum and applying it to peaceful protest. But, he adds, the four Minneapolis police officers being arrested in the death of George Floyd added another layer to "Who's next?"

To keep the momentum going, Brooks has been busy producing new "bite size" episodes of Hip Hop Harry, as its resurgence has translated to a surge in YouTube views and subscribers. And, of course, Harry is on TikTok now.

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Belle Delphine is back—and she has an OnlyFans

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belle delphine onlyfans

Belle Delphine, who is best known for selling her bathwater, has returned to social media following a hiatus that had fans thinking she was dead or in jail. To mark her comeback, Delphine is promoting her OnlyFans account.

Delphine posted a music video to YouTube on Wednesday, titled "I'M BACK." It was is her first time posting on the platform in seven months. In the two-minute video, she raps about everything, from her thick thighs and french fries to when she trolled fans with the promise of a Pornhub account.

"You were thinking I died? Bitch surprise," she raps in a song that parodies Tekashi 6ix9ine's "Gooba." "Buy my OnlyFans you big Chad. Lil titties, big ass, and no dad. Bathwater sold out, big sad. OnlyFans now to get a big bag."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TL470fJMi7w

At the end of her video, she promotes her social media accounts. Her new Instagram account is @kittybelledelphine, where she has already amassed nearly 90,000 followers and has posted three photos. She also created a TikTok account, @babybelledelphine, where she is followed by 36,000 users and has three videos up. She started posting on her OnlyFans on June 15, and a subscription to view her X-rated content is $35 per month.

"I hope you guys have all missed me as much as I've missed you, I haven't been on the internet for almost a year now so I feel slightly shy again >.< but im sure once I start speaking to you all, I'll feel comfortable being here again," she wrote on her first post.

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Bobby Berk subtly shades rest of the Fab 5 in a TikTok

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Bobby Berk Shade TikTok

Netflix’s Queer Eye Fab Five member Bobby Berk seems to have thrown some subtle shade at his castmates in a now-deleted TikTok.

A TikTok user posted a video, which he later duetted, showcasing how Berk does major home renovations, while Karamo Brown, Jonathan Van Ness, Antoni Porowski, and Tan France do much smaller tasks on the hit Netflix show. Berk seems to have agreed that he does most of the work, which is also a long-running joke amongst Queer Eye fans.

TikTok user @geneleave posted the video last week, garnering over 850,000 views and attention from none other than Berk himself. 

https://www.tiktok.com/@geneleave/video/6836823220306447622

On the show, the Fab Five choose a contestant who was nominated by family or friends to get a full lifestyle makeover, from a fresh hairdo to a redesigned home. Each of the Five has their own unique talent they play into, and Berk’s is interior design. He usually reinvents the interior of the contestant’s home while they spend time with France getting a stylish new outfit or with Van Ness in a grooming session. He duetted @geneleave's original video by reacting to it with side-eyes and nods.

“Bobby Berk remodeling an entire house on queer eye,” the text on the video says. In the TikTok, @geneleave pretends to be Berk running around with a hammer to Nicki Minaj's "Roman Holiday," sped up to make it sound panicky. Then, she pretends to be Porowski “making a sangria” and Van Ness “giving a haircut” at a much slower pace to Lana Del Rey's “Queen of Disaster.”

The duetted TikTok lived on Berk’s official page for almost a whole day until it was taken down without notice. But @geneleave’s comment section is filled with love for Bobby.

“Every time they cut to Bobby he's working hard af,” TikTok user Jacques L'Abbé said. “And then they flash to Antoni or Karamo they're playing with the dog.”

Another TikTok user named Lily said, “BOBBY DOES THE MOST and people say he’s their least favorite.”

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A decades-old ‘slasher’ tale is circulating on TikTok now

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warning about sex traffickers hiding under vehicles

Are sex traffickers hiding under cars and waiting to slash women's Achilles tendons so they can't run away, and then kidnapping them?

A rumor about this very specific abduction technique has been circulating on TikTok for a few days, signal boosted by user whoreunduss01, who says in the caption "I have heard this on TikTok," but offers no further proof. Others shared the video, which now has more than 6 million views, urging women to be careful and aware of their surroundings—always good advice.

https://www.tiktok.com/@usertjxt2r9r15/video/6837926986728459525
https://www.tiktok.com/@danielledoyle/video/6839464518574263557

While this scenario—a stranger slashing your ankle so you can't run away—sounds terrifying, it's just another iteration of the "Slasher Under the Car" tale, which has been around for decades. I remember hearing about it when I first started driving in the '90s, and nervously looking under my car. There's a Snopes article debunking the story, which had also grown into a scenario for alleged gang initiations in the '90s. A 1991 article in the Chicago Tribune details the story going around college dorms. Folklorist Jan Brunvand traced it back to Fargo, North Dakota, circa 1978, but the 1970s-1990s were also a heightened period of serial rapists and killers targeting women, and this story amplified those anxieties.

There haven't been any documented cases of people's ankles being slashed by someone under their car, just hearsay throughout the decades, though a Nebraska man was arrested in 2016 for hiding under cars and touching women's feet. The tendon-slashing act has been featured in films like Pet Sematary and Kill Bill.

While many people commented on the video as if it were fact, others called out the poster, with one writing, "Girls have enough to be afraid of, so please stop spreading misinformation." The video was also posted to Twitter, where it saw more than 2 million views and a mix of shock, jokes, and debunking.

https://www.tiktok.com/@lilmissriddlemethis/video/6839152915987385606
https://www.tiktok.com/@maya.chio/video/6839185190087068934

The focus on human traffickers appears to be the modern addition to the tale, and while trafficking is a very real issue, it's highly unlikely predators are using this tactic. Last month, a woman detailed an alleged kidnapping on TikTok, showing what appeared to be bruises on her body and rope on her legs, though Arkansas police later found her safe in Missouri. There is apparently a bigger trend of TikTokkers faking kidnappings, and a recent trend of women posting from the point of view of domestic abuse victims got pushback.

More recently, the wildly popular Netflix movie 365 Days, in which a woman is kidnapped by a mafia boss named Massimo and held hostage until she falls in love with him, became a meme on TikTok. The film is way more sexually explicit than Fifty Shades of Grey, but there's a troubling focus on young women acting out their excitement around being kidnapped and held prisoner by star Michele Morrone, strictly because he's attractive.

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What does FYP mean on TikTok?

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FYP as the Tik Tok logo

If you’ve scrolled through TikTok, you’ve likely seen the hashtag #fyp, followed by #foryoupage. They mean the same thing: For You page, TikTok’s portal into content it thinks you might like. 

Because it shows you content from anyone, and not just people you follow, the FYP has become a coveted spot for creators looking to get more eyes on their work. But how you end up there, and what kind of content gets distributed on the FYP, is a little more complicated.

What does FYP mean? 

FYP means For You page, the default landing page for anyone who opens the app. After downloading TikTok and scrolling through the FYP, the app starts to recommend content based on what you’ve previously engaged with, showing you similar content, or more videos within a popular challenge or trend. 

what is fyp tiktok

The “for you” part is pretty spot on. Maybe a little too spot on? I kept track of recurring themes or trends that showed up on my For You page over the course of a week in May, and found that roughly half of the videos contained trends I’d written about (or searched for) recently, and the other half was random content in line with my tastes (animals stealing food, the “Oh my god he on X Games mode” meme, the Hip Hop Harry song) with a dash of “Maybe... this too?" (Watching people stuff burritos in their mouths is a no from me, TikTok.) I’ve never looked for Call of Duty content on TikTok, but my boyfriend (like many boyfriends right now) started playing more in the last few months and we joke and talk about it. And now, Call of Duty videos show up on my FYP. I’m sure it’s just a coincidence. 

How do you get on the FYP?

The algorithm that serves the FYP page is, by design, a mystery. It doesn’t necessarily serve up the popular or trending content, like Instagram or YouTube. Videos on the FYP can have hundreds of thousands of likes or less than 10, and though many TikToks contain #fyp, it’s not clear if that automatically qualifies it for the FYP. 

Still, there's no shortage of tutorials about when to post and how to “hack” the FYP. How to get on the FYP has even become a source of content for creators, who’ve made TikToks investigating different theories, or parodying the page.

https://www.tiktok.com/@hunterwoodhall/video/6771546559344643334

In 2019, Vice reported on the “batch” theory: Showing a small batch of viewers the same content to see how they react, then showing a larger batch the same content if it’s engaged with. TikTok also measures how long you watch a video, and whether you rewatch or comment. Using a popular (and widely used) audio sample also helps. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6byGPuzNv5E

Though the FYP shows a wide variety of content, it doesn't include everyone: TikTok has faced criticism for suppressing content from Black, trans, disabled, and unattractive creators. It also allowed misinformation and conspiracy theories to reach the FYP, though the company has tried to combat misinfo about COVID-19. More recently, as protests took place around the country, the FYP saw an increase in content relating to Black Lives Matter and police brutality. But, as BuzzFeed detailed, TikTok's algorithm might feed into a "filter bubble," which shows users what it thinks they want in an effort to keep them scrolling, instead of broader content.

TikTok has tried to be more transparent about how and why content ends up on the FYP: In a June blog post, the company detailed factors that contribute to what users see, like captions, hashtags, user interactions, location, and how long a video is viewed. TikTok also addressed the "filter bubble" challenge, stating that "sometimes you may come across a video in your feed that doesn't appear to be relevant to your expressed interests or have amassed a huge number of likes." That is an "intentional component" in opening up that bubble.

Why is getting on the FYP important?

TikTok has surpassed 2 billion downloads. Its user base is vast, and cutting through the noise isn’t easy. Landing on the FYP can be a guide to what kind of content hits, and what newer users should aim for.

Being a TikTok “star” is now a tangible (and lucrative) profession, so follower count often factors into the FYP. But getting on the FYP can also elevate users to a certain level of fame: In the summer of 2019, “kombucha girl” Brittany Tomlinson posted a simple TikTok of her reacting to tasting kombucha, and just months later had brand sponsorships and a manager. TikToks going viral on Twitter can also push creators to the FYP.

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‘This is called grooming’: Famous TikTok couple scrutinized after revealing ages they met

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abbie josh tiktok grooming couple

A famous TikTok couple is receiving some major scrutiny after the two revealed they met when the woman was only 17, and the man was 24.

Twitter, of course, wasn’t haven’t it and is accusing the man of grooming.

The couple—Abbie and Josh Herbert—has become famous on TikTok and Instagram for posting vlogs, beauty tips, personal stories, and music. (Josh is a singer, while Abbie, who has more than 57,000 Instagram followers, appears to be a model and influencer.) 

Recently, however, Abbie posted a video describing how she met Josh. She claims this is her “most asked question.” 

In the video, Abbie says she met Josh in 2013 on the set for one of his music videos. As the years went on, she continues, they stayed in touch.

But, Abbie divulges, she was only 17 years old when she met Josh, who was seven years her senior.

Abbie then goes on to say that they didn’t go on their first date until two years later, in 2015. 

Of course, waiting until she’s legal then might seem legit at first—but, in her video, Abbie shares a screenshot of a tweet Josh wrote in 2014 alleging Abbie would be “the last gf in my life..” accompanied by a wedding ring and bride emoji. And in an old photo of them hugging, she allegedly captioned it on Instagram in 2016, "So happy he stalked me for 3 years after this was taken." The photo has since been deleted.

It wasn’t long before users noted that the dates and years weren’t adding up. 

The couple says they moved in just two months after officially dating and tied the knot in 2019—when she was 22, and he was 29. 

Some Twitter users weren’t OK with the details of this love story.

abbie josh tiktok grooming couple
abbie josh tiktok grooming couple
abbie josh tiktok grooming couple

The couple is also being criticized on TikTok in others' videos and was receiving negative comments under their own TikTok videos.

Both of their TikTok comment sections now read: "Limited comment display due to the user's privacy settings."

To be clear, this isn’t the first time the couple has shared details about their age difference. In one TikTok, Abbie gringes in a video captioned, “When you realize your husband was a freshman in college when you were in 5th grade!!!!!”

But some users are coming to the couple’s defense saying age is just a number and that the two are clearly in love. 

abbie josh tiktok grooming couple

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An elderly Karen asked a Black man to wait until she left the store to rob it. He was just shopping

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elderly karen

By Stacy Fernández

In a viral TikTok, a Black man is seemingly going about his business and shopping when an older white woman assumes he's there to steal.

This video is just one of so many racists incidents that have been caught on camera. More and more people are documenting these situations as a means of protection in case their aggressor denies or spins what happened (à la Amy Cooper).

The man starts recording the woman and asks her to repeat what she just asked him.

"You asked us was we gonna do what?" the man says.

"Rob the store," the woman replies with a straight face.

When the man asked why she thought that she asks him, "Aren't you going to do it now?" and says that she "just wanted" him to wait until she purchased her items and left.

The video was uploaded by a TikToker by the name of Agustist King with the hashtags #racism, #blacklivesmatter, #sad, #wow and #becareful. It has 2.4 million views and more than 11,000 comments.

https://www.tiktok.com/@agustistking/video/6839057053948923141?u_code=da47b296d25ej6&preview_pb=0&language=en&_d=da47b91mm557gh&share_item_id=6839057053948923141&timestamp=1592743548&utm_campaign=client_share&app=musically&utm_medium=ios&user_id=6775740175021622277&tt_from=copy&utm_source=copy&source=h5_m

This interaction is happening at the same time that people across the nation protest against the police brutality, systemic racism, and discrimination Black people are continually subjected to. Protests were sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died after a white officer pressed his knee of Floyd's neck for nearly nine minutes.

Plenty of people, including popular TikToker Vanessa Simeon who's known for her gas station series, called the woman out or left other comments in support of King.

"Old people forget everything except apparently how to be prejudice," @toninocash wrote.

But there are also a slew of comments in defense of the old woman saying she's "just scared" because of what she's seen on TV about the protests.

"The hypocrisy is amazing with these comments. So we giving Betty White a pass because she’s old? But is she was a few years younger we’d be marching?" wrote TikToker Brandon Keith Mincer.

"People who are saying poor old lady 🤡. What about the guy minding his business and having being accused of something he didnt do," @stefant78 commented.

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TikTok teens say they found suitcase filled with human remains while using Randonautica app

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tiktok remains

A group of teens who set out for adventure using the Randonautica app instead had the shock of a lifetime when they appear to have encountered a suitcase full of human remains.

Teens in Washington were documenting their trip to the beach after being sent there by Randonautica, an app that sends users to randomized nearby coordinates to explore new areas of their city, when they noticed a black suitcase washed up on the rocks down by the water.

Video posted to TikTok shows two girls in the group opening the suitcase, with captions noting that “the smell was overwhelming.” Inside, they discovered a black plastic bag covering whatever was causing the stench.

https://www.tiktok.com/@ughhenry/video/6840514200691887366

Concerned about the smell, the teens called the police, informing them there may be a body down at Alki Beach in Seattle. Another video notes that officers didn’t show up for three hours and features footage of the tide rising around the suitcase.

“Eventually the tide came up and exposed the contents in the bag…” reads text across the screen. “(But I decided to leave those parts out.)”

https://www.tiktok.com/@natthecvt/video/6840606813688302853

Later, reports confirmed that several bags of human remains were found at the beach. Though the press release didn’t specifically tie the discovery to the teens, the timing and location would appear to fit.

The videos have caused a stir on social media, with the one shared by @ughhenry racking up nearly 3 million views so far. 

“I absolutely didn’t see ‘tiktok of teens finding a body in a suitcase possibly indicating a new Seattle area serial killer’ as the next 2020 development,” wrote @cautiousamber.

There was also a fair amount of concern over the Randonautica app allegedly leading these teens to this particular spot. 

Wired previously reported on some “weird coincidences” that have been happening for Randonautica users visiting the supposedly randomized locations during lockdown, and a few folks in the comments added their own observations.

TikTok user @ughhenry, one of the teens in the video, admitted that the incident as left him somewhat traumatized.

"Btw my laughter is the way I was trying to get through the situation," he wrote in the comments. "The moment i got back home, I broke down. I still can’t sleep."

The police are still investigating and haven't publicized any additional information about the discovery of the remains or potential crime.

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Comedian Sarah Cooper makes fun of low turnout at Trump rally

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Sarah Cooper in how to empty seat TikTok

Comedian and author Sarah Cooper is going viral on social media for her TikToks mimicking President Donald Trump.

The New York City comedian takes sound bites from the president and lip-syncs and pretends to be him over the audio. The TikTok star started making her Trump videos in April.

In her most popular TikTok, she lip-syncs over audio of a journalist asking Trump for his favorite Bible verse. In the audio, it appears clear that the president does not know a verse, so he continues to say that the Bible is "very personal" and won't share a passage.

"The Bible means a lot to me, but I don't want to get into specifics," Cooper lip-syncs over Trump's voice.

https://www.tiktok.com/@whatchugotforme/video/6834103672788585733

During the coronavirus lockdown, many of her TikToks have focused on the disease. In one of those, she lip-syncs to the audio of Trump saying the nation has the most coronavirus cases because it tests more people than other countries.

In her most recent video, she pretends to be Trump as he promotes the size of his Tulsa, Oklahoma rally. In it, Trump said that about 900,000 people wouldn't be able to attend because they couldn't possibly all fit in the arena. However, the rally on Saturday had an "underwhelming" turnout with empty seats, according to news reports.

Her lip-syncs mixed with comical acting are sweeping the internet. The TikToks are so popular that her name has started to trend on Twitter after every new video publication.

After Monday's rally TikTok, people suggested her for the position of president or vice president. On Twitter, people are praising her for this new form of critical humor.

"It’s been 4 years of Cheeto this and orange that, comedy so toothless I thought we were lost, then Sarah Cooper...cracked the f*cking code," comedian Laurie Kilmartin wrote.

https://twitter.com/anylaurie16/status/1275216199404654593

While Cooper continues to experience success on social media, not everyone is pleased. Apparently, Trump has had her blocked her on Twitter for a while now. Cooper has "#blockedbyTrump" in her bio, and she now calls him her "head writer."

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Bryan Singer accused of targeting young influencers on TikTok, Instagram

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bryan singer instagram accusations

Despite decades of accusations and detailed accounts of abuse and misconduct, Bryan Singer still hasn't seen any major fallout in Hollywood—or any real consequences. More recently, the 54-year-old director has allegedly been targeting influencers.

According to a thread from YouTuber and musician Elijah Daniel, Singer, who previously used his status and circle of friends to get access to aspiring actors, has started looking at "Instagram, Raya, TikTok, SeekingArrangement, etc. to get influencers. They fly these boys on jets (as he did before), as well as to movie sets and promise roles!"

Daniel says there's proof on Instagram, but the men tagged with Singer "are 30+ year old. Parading as young youtubers. To make young friends." Other posts with Singer were allegedly removed in the wake of lawsuits.

bryan singer accusations

Daniel implies that these older men are used to recruit younger ones, but it's not clear if they posed as influencers on these platforms (or were influencers), or if they just sought them out. Daniel claims he had a text interaction with one "recruiter"; he later met Singer, who asked if he wanted to take a private jet to a film set in Texas. He adds that "There are several large influencers who I will not mention who were largely featured on Bryan’s jet in 2016-2017."

bryan singer instagram accusations

He urged followers to sign a petition to get the FBI involved in an investigation of Singer. Elsewhere, commenters relayed stories about alleged encounters with Singer and minors.

https://twitter.com/baebaespice/status/1275821285096820736

In 2019, The Atlantic published a yearlong investigation into allegations against Singer, including more than 50 sources. Many of the men interviewed claim they were underage when Singer invited them to parties and that he was often aided by associates. Allegations also came from Singer's film sets; three extras on 1997 film Apt Pupil, minors at the time, filed a lawsuit against him.

In response to Daniel's thread, Teen Wolf actor Stephen Ford alluded to his own story about Singer "that I haven't told from fear of reprocussions [sic] in the industry."

bryan singer accusations

Singer settled another lawsuit last summer but has never been formally charged or arrested. The Daily Dot has reached out to Daniel for comment.

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TikTok shows man trying—and failing—to spell ‘White Lives Matter’ with spray paint

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Wight Lives Matter

A man was caught on video attempting to spray-paint “White Lives Matter” on a fence, but he botched it.

In the video, the woman recording giggles as she watches him spell “white” as “wight.” 

The video was captured by RaShawn Hicks in Sunbury, Pennsylvania, who uploaded the video to TikTok, garnering over 500,000 views. 

https://www.tiktok.com/@rdhicks1999/video/6840967820201807109

“This can’t be real,” the woman recording says as he continues to spray paint.

“Get the f*ck out here,” one person says, calling the rest of their family to go outside and see the man’s mural. The spray-painter allegedly lives in the house of the fence he was tagging.

“The man lives in that house. He tried to fix his mistake on the fence,” Hicks told Jam Press. “but we let the idiot keep his awful grammar up.”

Later in the video, the man adds an E to “Wight” but that was not enough to salvage his failed attempt at counter activism. One viewer commented, “Maybe it will say Dwight Lives Matter - like from The Office?”

Other users thought he wrote “Wight Limes.” A commenter joked, “Finally! Someone is standing up for the white limes! This is a movement I can get behind.”

As the Black Lives Matter protests continue around the world, many counter-protesters are trying to rebut the movement with “All Lives Matter” sentiments. But, as made evident in this case, most of those attempts do not work out in their favor.

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The top 5 TikTok challenges of 2020

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best tiktok challenges 2020 wipe it down

Thanks to the (seemingly never-ending) coronavirus pandemic, folks have more free time than ever to create a steady stream of content from the safety of their own homes. Enter TikTok, the perfect creative outlet for anyone bored out of their minds in quarantine.

While TikTok has long since established itself as a major force in the world of entertainment, it's really taken off in 2020 on a whole new level. Mega-stars like Jason Derulo and Jessica Alba took time out of their (admittedly less busy) schedules to get in on some major dance challenges—Jason Derulo went as far as to chip his teeth for TikTok clout.

Meanwhile, you've got teens successfully trolling the president of the United States; grown adults setting up real-life Mario Kart; and, of course, the less-than-wholesome challenges typical to any trend-driven online space. Love it or hate it, TikTokers have been driving the culture forward this year, and that's not changing anytime soon.

That being said, not every dance challenge or viral video is a banger. In no particular order, here are the top TikTok challenges of 2020 thus far.

5 best viral TikTok challenges

1) The 'walk in naked' challenge

best tiktok challenges 2020 walk in naked

When couples are stuck at home together, [quarantine boredom] is more or less responsible for a new “walk-in naked” challenge currently making the rounds on TikTok. Basically, the challenge involves ladies stepping out of the shower (or other stages of undress) and surprising their significant others in the nude while they’re focused on playing video games, or what have you. According to Know Your Meme, the first popularly known instance of the walk-in naked challenge occurred on March 26, when TikTok user @lindseybear1 filmed a (mostly safe for work) video of herself walking in on her boyfriend who was playing Call of Duty. “Whoa,” aptly exclaims the clearly-stunned boyfriend, in the (blessedly) brief clip. Stacey Ritzen

2) The 'Vogue' challenge

best tiktok challenges 2020 vogue

The cover of Vogue has historically been a white space, and the magazine has often been called out for its ignorance. The Vogue challenge shifts the power of the edit to the underrepresented. ...As the project circulated, there was a reckoning at Condé Nast, which owns Vogue, as former and current employees called out its racist workplace culture and editors and management resigned. ... As the Vogue challenge got more popular (there are a couple variations on TikTok; celebrities started doing it, of course), there were also reminders that it’s not about looking cool or jumping on a trend, but elevating voices that have been shut out of glossy fashion magazines—on covers and mastheads. Audra Schroeder

3) The 'wipe it down' challenge

best tiktok challenges 2020 wipe it down

There’s a viral new TikTok challenge that doubles as an opportunity to do some cleaning around the house. It’s called the “Wipe It Down” challenge, and its premise is simple: TikTokkers start off by wiping down a mirror with some sort of cleaning supply in time with BMW Kenny’s “Wipe It Down.” On the third or fourth “wipe,” TikTokkers scrub their way to an alternate reality in which they’re sporting a vastly different wardrobe. Fox News credits comedian Lauren Compton with originating the “Wipe It Down” challenge [in May of 2020], posting a video in which she goes from wearing a bedtime robe to donning full Harley Quinn makeup and attire for a split second. The video has earned over 21 million views and 2.6 million likes. Apparently over 100,000 people have tried the “Wipe It Down” challenge since then, including several high-profile TikTok stars whose followers number in the millions. Bryan Rolli

4) The 'kissing your best friend' challenge

best tiktok challenges 2020 kiss your best friend

One of the latest trends to circulate on TikTok is the “kissing your best friend challenge.” It looks like many TikTokers may have secret feelings for their best friend, so this challenge is an opportunity for them to shoot their shot. Many attempts just ended in confusion from people who didn’t see the kiss coming. But some did have happy endings and new relationships started. But one girl was rejected on a whole new level when she attempted to kiss her best friend. TikTok user Shaniah Antrobus, @shaniahrose, tried the challenge with her best friend, Josh Pulford, who she says she’s known for 13 years. Antrobus says she’s had a crush on Pulford for the past five years, so she decided to just go for it and kiss him. Antrobus pretended to film a dance with Pulford to distract him. In the middle of their dance, Antrobus went in for the kiss, and Pulford pushed her away right onto the couch behind them. Esther Bell

5) The 'Savage' challenge

best tiktok challenges 2020 savage

While some TikTok dances take a circuitous route to virality, Keara Wilson was direct. [In March of 2020], she created an original dance for Houston rapper Megan Thee Stallion’s single “Savage,” and in the first video asked people who do the dance to tag her. Over the next few days, she made it her mission to go viral. By day four, she’d pretty much reached her goal. And then came the elevation, after Megan Thee Stallion posted Wilson’s dance to her 9 million Instagram followers on March 15, just five days after her original post. The caption reads, “Welp let me go learn this lol.” A.S.

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What’s up with all these time travelers on TikTok?

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2028Man on tiktok

He claims he’s here from the year 2028, and has seen America’s future. He and a “handful” of others were sent back to 2020 to “change” things. He references the start of the “great collapse,” which will eventually result in 90 percent of the population dying, and says the 2020 election ends with Biden winning and Trump having to be removed from office.  

https://www.tiktok.com/@2028man/video/6838536559730445574

On TikTok, he goes by 2028man, and he claims he’s a time traveler. It’s an extension of time traveler videos on YouTube: People (usually men) declare they’re here from some future date and have very important info, for clicks. One of 2028man's more viral videos is a prediction that Hurricane Kyle will hit Houston on Aug. 10 and be more devastating than Katrina.

Given that our current reality is so bleak, these predictions aren't that left field, but they still add to the misinformation that spreads quickly on TikTok. (Remember the "psychic" who said COVID-19 would be gone by June?) Unsurprisingly, 2028man’s amassed more than 170,000 followers in less than a month, many of them hungry for any shred of guidance or insight. Comments on his posts range from asking if Pizzagate was real to if there will be a One Direction reunion. The debate about him on r/timetravel is a little more cynical: “Nobody has worn quicksilver since 2007,” goes one comment. 2028man also has a merch store set up, which led many to question his motives.  

Another alleged time traveler, 2029man, says he was sent back to 2020 from—you guessed it—2029. His script is similar: He references the “great collapse” (also referenced in roleplaying game The Elder Scrolls V) and claims the 2020 election ends with Trump being forcibly removed. While his predictions are more rooted in pop culture (Lil Uzi Vert will be exposed as an alien, Addison Rae retires from TikTok in 2022), he’s been equally controversial and one account has tried to "expose" him.

https://www.tiktok.com/@dalton2023/video/6840644940981177606

There’s been more possibly manufactured drama: 2028man and 2029man have called each other out in videos, though neither have really explained why they chose TikTok as their platform.  

https://www.tiktok.com/@2029man/video/6838972594591517958

https://www.tiktok.com/@2028man/video/6839556569068227845

In the current timeline, 2028man posted his first video on June 15, and 2029man posted his first video on June 16. They both use the account name “The Messenger” and hashtag #lenoxteam253, suggesting something more coordinated or stunt-driven. Since June 15, similar accounts have appeared: 2025man, 2027man, 2039man, 2044man, time_travel2030. These accounts are a little less serious; some appear to be mocking the format, though they also parrot predictions.

Countering all these predictions from men, 2028woman reveals that she is also a time traveler and there are "no men left after the great collapse." Now this is the kind of info we need from time travelers.

https://www.tiktok.com/@2028woman/video/6841166170352110854

Some onlookers seem amused by this drama. Others seem to be taking these predictions seriously—and making themselves even more anxious. We’ve reached out to 2028man and 2029man for comment, but perhaps they already knew that.

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TikTok rally signups could force Trump campaign into compliance nightmare

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Trump Tulsa Rally COPPA

President Donald Trump's rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma last weekend had lower attendance numbers than the campaign expected.

There could be a number of reasons for the dip in turnout, but at least part of the reason the campaign boasted about a potentially huge rally is because of a trolling campaign from the youths.

TikTok users and K-Pop fans filled out a sign-up form for Trump's rally, with the goal of not coming at all. The push even got the attention of Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) who said the campaign was "ROCKED by teens on TikTok" who "tricked" the campaign into thinking more people were interested in showing up at the event than there actually was.

In the wake of the low attendance and focus on the TikTok and K-Pop trick, some people online began speculating that the campaign may have violated a law surrounding the collection of information about children online.

That speculation was only fueled by Brad Parscale, Trump's 2020 campaign director, who tweeted ahead of the rally that the sign-ups had surpassed 800,000 people and that it was the "biggest data haul and rally signup of all time."

The Children's Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) was passed in 1998 and puts strict parameters around how data and information can be collected on children. For websites that cater to children, parental consent is required for any child under the age of 13 to have data collected. Several companies have allegedly ran afoul of the law, including TikTok.

Technically, TikTok has said it would remove any videos made by users under the age of 13 to comply with COPPA as part of a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). However, last month consumer groups wrote to the FTC, asserting that the popular app was not adhering to those promises, adding that there were "many regular account holders" under the age of 13.

But is the Trump campaign possibly in violation of COPPA because of the amounts of TikTok users and K-Pop fans flooding the Tulsa rally's sign-up form?

It doesn't appear that way, experts say. But that doesn't mean the campaign is completely out of the water.

Susan Hintze, a partner at Hintze Law PLLC, told the Daily Dot the law specifies the kind of sites it has jurisdiction over.

Specifically, COPPA targets websites that are for children under the age of 13. The law also requires that any website would need to have "actual knowledge" that it was collecting information on those children.

Those two requirements would not likely apply to Trump's campaign sign-up, Hintze said.

"The bigger issue here is that this is a general audience site, they’re not specifically targeting little kids, and in order for COPPA to apply, you ... have to be targeting kids specifically," Hintze said. "The next question is do you have actual knowledge you have collected information from kids? So neither of those seem to apply here."

However, Hintze did note that its possible individual cases of COPPA could apply to the situation—and it comes down to parental consent and the "actual knowledge" part of the law.

Hintze said she imagined a scenario where a 12-year-old told their parents about trolling the Trump campaign after seeing the push on TikTok and deciding to join in.

"As a parent you're concerned that your child’s information is now given to the Trump campaign, you could write an email to the Trump campaign and say ‘My child is 12 years old and signed up for your site. I did not authorize this. You need to take that down,'” Hintze said. "In that case, they would now have actual knowledge that they have collected information from a child and would have to go hunt down that information and delete it. So that’s the scenario here that I could see where they could gain actual knowledge."

The campaign would have to take action—delete the information—and if it didn't, that would become a COPPA violation, Hintze said.

The FTC notes on its website that general audience websites with actual knowledge they are collecting or using information covered by COPPA would have to adhere to it.

Raeesabbas Mohamed, a partner at RWWarner PLC, agreed that "on its face" the Trump campaign did not seem to be in violation of COPPA with the intake sign-up form for the Tulsa rally.

However, Mohamed also added that a parent complaining to the Trump campaign about their child's information being collected could cause a cascade of events.

"If a parent complained, or somebody complained, they would certainly have—at a minimum—a duty to investigate, and they would have to delete that information. If they did not, it would be a COPPA violation," Mohamed said. "I think if one got it, and they have knowledge of one complaint, a reasonable and prudent campaigner would say ‘Hey guys we have a problem, we need to now scrub all of these’ or at least the ones that sound similarly [and] could have been registered on the same platform."

While many of the RSVPs sent to the Trump campaign were fake—like one TikToker who signed up as "Hugh Jass"—one 19-year-old who signed up told the New York Times their friends used their real phone numbers. While a 19-year-old's data wouldn't apply to COPPA, if a child under 13 did, it could raise issues for the campaign.

The Trump campaign did not return a request for comment from the Daily Dot, including whether it had received any complaints from parents and if it would delete any information stemming from those complaints.

The Trump campaign website does note in its privacy policy that if they are informed that they collected information from a child under the age of 13 that they would "delete that information."

Following the Tulsa rally Parscale said the campaign was able to "weed out bogus numbers," adding that there were "tens of thousands" for the Tulsa rally.

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TikTok cancels Pride event after trolls Zoombomb it with homophobic, racist slurs

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man holding glass of wine on zoom call

TikTok's virtual Pride event didn't last long.

Minutes into yesterday's event featuring hundreds of LGBTQ creators, trolls overran it, Business Insider reports. Audio and text chat on the Zoom event was flooded with racist and homophobic slurs, a phenomenon known as "Zoombombing."

The event was slated to last all day and include panels, workshops, and fireside chats. Instead, the trolls forced TikTok to shut it down just five minutes after it began.

Creators told BI that they didn't know what had happened until hours after the event abruptly ended.

TikTok later issued a statement on Twitter blaming uninvited "bad actors" who "interrupted the start of the celebratory event with extremely hurtful, harmful comments."

The company also apologized.

"We want to express our heartfelt apologies to those who took the time to join this special community event before it was sabotaged," @tiktokcreators tweeted. "This inappropriate incident in no way reflects our support for you and should have no reflection on the spirit and uplifting nature of Pride."

TikTok also sent a letter to creators saying that it was exploring other ways to share during Pride month, per BI.

The company has previously come under fire for suppressing content by LGBTQ users.

In December, it admitted to doing so, using the excuse that they were more susceptible to bullying. TikTok has said this policy is no longer in effect.

One TikTok creator told BI that they were never convinced that the company supported LGBTQ people.

"It's actually quite obvious they don't care. They shadowban LGBTQ+ content, creators, and have miraculously done this because they've faced severe backlash," @ikisspuppy reportedly said. "Whatever 'support' they speak of is an effect of them being caught."

Zoom has been criticized for its lack of privacy protection. Since the pandemic forced people indoors, classes, lectures, and happy hours have been Zoombombed by pranksters, some harmless or funny, others malevolent and hurtful, as in this instance.

Zoom has vowed that it is ramping up security efforts.

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