THE TIKTOK CHALLENGE
How a social media app is revamping the music industry Story, Photo, and Design by Michelle Ibañez Like every single social media app before it, TikTok specializes in the sharing of content created by its users. Ranging between funny, sad, bizarre, or questionable videos. Most of its users thrive in the ability to share short-timed videos, and the content can be either very outrageous or very lazy. Itâs really hard to concise in words the amount of content and things someone can do with TikTok. It feels a lot safer to go with Instagram, where photo sharing and video producing is very straightforward, or with Twitter, where things are a bit more serious, and letâs not forget Snapchat, where itâs a lot more private and also a little sketchy. As an emerging source of entertainment, TikTok holds the same group of people that make up most of the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Influencers. Usually people with a significant amount of money, or sometimes none, looking for stardom in the one city that guarantees it. As stated earlier, the creation of content for TikTok can be really lazy or really complicated, just like with anything that goes up on the internet, a single moment can make you go viral. Take into account Brittany Broski, or better known as âKombucha Girl,â whose rise to TikTok fame came after a single video of her considering kombucha. 16 | Basement
The complexity of TikTok is sometimes easier to perceive when you watch videos where you can realize that the content creator put effort into making it. Another thing that sets TikTok apart from other platforms is the fact that your feed, the part of the app where you get your âinformationâ from is already fed to you through an algorithm based on things youâve interacted with. The âFor You Pageâ allows newcomers to see either the most viral videos or the ones that have been hashtagged that way. It allows for virtual socialization without the actual socializing that usually comes embedded in social media platforms, which is an example of how this site falls into pop culture and plays the power card in American society.
can now share their talents and become the center of a viral sensation, landing deals with companies left and right, just Google Charli DâAmelio and Dunkin Donuts, for example. Homemade DJâs, as I like to call them, have been on the rise. Remix after remix will flood your feed even if you donât interact with it. Itâs not your usual remixes either, can you imagine the Fugeesâ Killing Me Softly as a rave song? You donât have to, it actually exists! Bruno Mars and Melanie Martinez? Yep. Even better, Doja Cat and Paul Anka? Man, do I have news for you!
But one thing that TikTok has exponentially contributed to is the rise of music. Now you may be asking yourself, music already existed before TikTok, didnât it? Yes, but the complexity of the app goes beyond videos like Kombucha Girl, because as youâre reading this, the app itself is paving the way for up-and-coming artists.
Remember at the beginning of the COVID-19-induced quarantine when everyone turned to TikTok to do the dance challenge to Doja Catâs Say So? By May of 2020, Miss Dojaâs song peaked at #1 on Billboardâs Hot 100 chart after the disco-inspired pop song was the theme of one of the appâs most popular dance challenges. Created by Haley Sharpe, whoâs following count surpasses the millions, the dance was among those that catapulted Charli DâAmelio and others to viral stardom.
Many hopeful musicians have taken to TikTok, whose shareable features and know-it-all algorithm are at the top of the game, to create their own musical content. It couldâve all started with one singing video, or an acoustic cover of a popular song, people all over the world
While the dance and the app are mostly tied to Gen Z and under, TikTok has also allowed old music to enter the mainstream online wave. Songs like Britney Spearsâ Gimme More, Mike Posnerâs Please Donât Go, oldie but goodie Rasputin by Boney M, and even












