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Summer is coming on fast, and young people seem to be turning their attention away from weighty topics like "would you rather be trapped in the woods with a bear or a man," to more lighthearted concernsālike unhinged home design videos, candy salad, and Billie Eilish's new song "Lunch."
I'm calling it now: Billie Eilish's "Lunch" is the song of the summer. The 22-year-old pop star dropped the video this week, and in its first three days online, itās been played 16,697,734 times. The "Lunch" video feels like one of those generation-defining things. It's just Eilish. Thereās no big concept; there's not even a background. It's just a performer singing her new songābut her look, the song, and the moment seem to be coalescing. The look is '90s suburban-gangster throwbackābaggy jeans, snapback ball cap turned to the side, silver grill. And the song is an fearless celebration of lust. Eilish sings āIt's a craving, not a crush,ā and āYou need a seat? I'll volunteer.ā
Eilish, who came out as lesbian in Variety last year, said this about the song in a recent Rolling Stone interview: āI wrote some of it before even doing anything with a girl, and then wrote the rest after. Iāve been in love with girls for my whole life, but I just didnāt understandāuntil, last year, I realized I wanted my face in a vagina.ā
In Gen-Z slang, āaura" means something like presence. It's a little like the '70s meaning, but saying someone "has aura" defines them as mysterious, powerful, and cool. The term was first used widely in connection with Dutch soccer player Virgil van Dijk to describe his ineffable charisma. It stayed in the sports world for a while, until the question āCan you be fat and still have aura?ā caught on in March. The answersāwhich mentioned people like Tony Sopranoāprovide some nuance to how the word is generally used. First, itās almost exclusively applied to men. Secondly, itās not the same as saying someone is attractive (in a traditional way). Itās similar, but not the same, as ārizz.ā Rizz describes more of a āgood with wordsā person, where "aura" seems like the non-verbal part of being cool.
Another aura-related trend that took off recently are TikToks featuring āThe Most Amount of Aura Iāve Used on a Level 1ā where aura-filled subjects āuseā their aura on ālesserā people, often described as ālvl 1 crooks,ā or ālow vibrational people.ā
The āunhinged home designā trend thatās taking over TikTok refers to CGI videos that purport to be home-design tutorials, but quickly devolve into absurdly complex space-saving ideas, or just complete insanity.
The trend started with a TikTok account called @designer_bob that began posting earnest design videos like this a couple years ago. They would occasionally layer in some absurd elements, and people started noticing things like children being pushed through walls. Then other accounts, most notably @homedesign369, started posting videos that are all absurdity, including adding a weirdly intense AI narrator that describes the rooms and the people who build them. Videos like ābuilding a bedroom for 100 kids" started becoming popular, and repeated phrases from the videos, like āgalvanized steelā and āeco-friendly wood veneers,ā became catchphrases in the comment section and the videos themselves. It doesn't seem like anyone knows if these accounts are run by the same person/people, but they have a similarity in style that suggests they could be.
I donāt know if itās ācookingā exactly, but aspiring chefs on TikTok are making ācandy salad.ā As you could have guessed, candy salad is made by taking a variety of different candies and mixing them up in a bowl. This wholesome activity is often done as a group thing, with each person saying their name into he camera before adding their sweet of choice to the communal bowl. Some folks get a little extra and do things like make a green-candy-only salad for Saint Patrickās Day, but for the most part, itās just chucking some candy in a bowl. Of course, which candies you combine says something. Commenters on these videos offer their opinion about how the different sweets complement or clash with each other. Like you wouldnāt mix sour candy with chocolate, unless you were bold.
The first breakout star of the candy-salad genre is the kid in this video, Heās adorable, talks in that ākid whoās out of breath styleā and he brought two kinds of sour patch kids. But the real draw is that he says his name is "Ander Dingus," which is enough to make you internet-famous for 15 minutes.
Speaking of 16 minutes of internet fame: In a recently posted video, TikToker Girl On Couch threw out the chorus to a song, and asked āCan someone make this into an actual song plz just for funzies.ā Something about the way she says āIām looking for a man in finance. Trust fund. SIx-Five. Blue Eyesā caught a lot of peopleās attention. Some people added the music she requested (An alternative take. Or this one.) Or used her video as an excust to brag about their own āman in finance.ā Or made parodies. Some dudes used it as an reason to be assholes. Some people used it to be like, āI donāt want a man in finance.ā This lady did the math and made a Powerpoint to explore the likelihood of actually finding a man who fits those exacting criteria. In her video, Girl on Couch also suggests she may have written the song of the summer. She didn't, but she did write the song of the next couple of weeks.
Full story here:
Viral video of the week: Billie EilishāLunch
I'm calling it now: Billie Eilish's "Lunch" is the song of the summer. The 22-year-old pop star dropped the video this week, and in its first three days online, itās been played 16,697,734 times. The "Lunch" video feels like one of those generation-defining things. It's just Eilish. Thereās no big concept; there's not even a background. It's just a performer singing her new songābut her look, the song, and the moment seem to be coalescing. The look is '90s suburban-gangster throwbackābaggy jeans, snapback ball cap turned to the side, silver grill. And the song is an fearless celebration of lust. Eilish sings āIt's a craving, not a crush,ā and āYou need a seat? I'll volunteer.ā
Eilish, who came out as lesbian in Variety last year, said this about the song in a recent Rolling Stone interview: āI wrote some of it before even doing anything with a girl, and then wrote the rest after. Iāve been in love with girls for my whole life, but I just didnāt understandāuntil, last year, I realized I wanted my face in a vagina.ā
What does aura mean?
In Gen-Z slang, āaura" means something like presence. It's a little like the '70s meaning, but saying someone "has aura" defines them as mysterious, powerful, and cool. The term was first used widely in connection with Dutch soccer player Virgil van Dijk to describe his ineffable charisma. It stayed in the sports world for a while, until the question āCan you be fat and still have aura?ā caught on in March. The answersāwhich mentioned people like Tony Sopranoāprovide some nuance to how the word is generally used. First, itās almost exclusively applied to men. Secondly, itās not the same as saying someone is attractive (in a traditional way). Itās similar, but not the same, as ārizz.ā Rizz describes more of a āgood with wordsā person, where "aura" seems like the non-verbal part of being cool.
Another aura-related trend that took off recently are TikToks featuring āThe Most Amount of Aura Iāve Used on a Level 1ā where aura-filled subjects āuseā their aura on ālesserā people, often described as ālvl 1 crooks,ā or ālow vibrational people.ā
Unhinged home design
The āunhinged home designā trend thatās taking over TikTok refers to CGI videos that purport to be home-design tutorials, but quickly devolve into absurdly complex space-saving ideas, or just complete insanity.
The trend started with a TikTok account called @designer_bob that began posting earnest design videos like this a couple years ago. They would occasionally layer in some absurd elements, and people started noticing things like children being pushed through walls. Then other accounts, most notably @homedesign369, started posting videos that are all absurdity, including adding a weirdly intense AI narrator that describes the rooms and the people who build them. Videos like ābuilding a bedroom for 100 kids" started becoming popular, and repeated phrases from the videos, like āgalvanized steelā and āeco-friendly wood veneers,ā became catchphrases in the comment section and the videos themselves. It doesn't seem like anyone knows if these accounts are run by the same person/people, but they have a similarity in style that suggests they could be.
New culinary trend: candy salad
I donāt know if itās ācookingā exactly, but aspiring chefs on TikTok are making ācandy salad.ā As you could have guessed, candy salad is made by taking a variety of different candies and mixing them up in a bowl. This wholesome activity is often done as a group thing, with each person saying their name into he camera before adding their sweet of choice to the communal bowl. Some folks get a little extra and do things like make a green-candy-only salad for Saint Patrickās Day, but for the most part, itās just chucking some candy in a bowl. Of course, which candies you combine says something. Commenters on these videos offer their opinion about how the different sweets complement or clash with each other. Like you wouldnāt mix sour candy with chocolate, unless you were bold.
The first breakout star of the candy-salad genre is the kid in this video, Heās adorable, talks in that ākid whoās out of breath styleā and he brought two kinds of sour patch kids. But the real draw is that he says his name is "Ander Dingus," which is enough to make you internet-famous for 15 minutes.
Why is everyone "looking for a man in finance."
Speaking of 16 minutes of internet fame: In a recently posted video, TikToker Girl On Couch threw out the chorus to a song, and asked āCan someone make this into an actual song plz just for funzies.ā Something about the way she says āIām looking for a man in finance. Trust fund. SIx-Five. Blue Eyesā caught a lot of peopleās attention. Some people added the music she requested (An alternative take. Or this one.) Or used her video as an excust to brag about their own āman in finance.ā Or made parodies. Some dudes used it as an reason to be assholes. Some people used it to be like, āI donāt want a man in finance.ā This lady did the math and made a Powerpoint to explore the likelihood of actually finding a man who fits those exacting criteria. In her video, Girl on Couch also suggests she may have written the song of the summer. She didn't, but she did write the song of the next couple of weeks.
Full story here: