Corecore

Last updated

Corecore (alternatively spelled CoreCore) is an Internet aesthetic and artistic movement aiming to capture post-2020 sensibilities. [1] A product of youth culture in the 2020s, the corecore aesthetic can largely be found on TikTok, where it juxtaposes various video clips while emotional music plays.

Contents

Aesthetic

Meant to evoke strong emotions, the corecore aesthetic juxtaposes imagery with its content made up of "seemingly unrelated clips" culled from a variety of sources including news footage, social media, films, livestreams, and memes. [1] [2] This content is then overlaid on usually emotionally rousing, somber, or ambient music. [1] [2] [3] Rap music has been noted to accompany some corecore videos. [4] The clips are edited at various speeds. [4] Writing on a corecore video, Moises Mendez II of Time noted it was "full of intentionally jarring juxtapositions and set to a kind of pensive sonic wall." [4] Chance Townsend of Mashable wrote that "some [corecore videos] can be unintelligible meme dumps that are upbeat, bordering on dada-style collage art and other edits are just clips of cats and Fortnite mashed together," with the latter also referred to as #pinkcore. [5] Townsend noted that "some of the most common signifiers of corecore edits included British football clips, Family Guy , Blade Runner 2049 , any clip of Jake Gyllenhaal screaming, and melancholic music (usually a soft piano score or Aphex Twin)." [5] The latter's "QKThr [ broken anchor ]" track has been noted as a particularly repurposed for soundtracking corecore videos. [6] Mendez II also notes the use of clips from American Psycho . [4]

The themes in corecore videos are very wide in scope; Mendez II wrote "Some [videos] may focus on certain themes, such as the experience of being a woman in a sexist world, while others try to comment more broadly on the overwhelming, disconnected, random, oversaturated nature of being a human in the world today." [4] The social commentary found in corecore is largely disseminated and consumed by Generation Z, [3] with the youth addressing topics "like capitalism, greed, depression, social status, fear of climate change and relationships." [7] Writing for The Guardian , Hannah Ewens described corecore videos as "depressing, full of existential dread and usually on the theme of disconnection and alienation," while also calling them "crudely edited." [3]

Writing for Hyperallergic , Isabella Segalovich noted that "Joe Rogan, Jordan Peterson, and Theo Von make frequent appearances in corecore videos." [8] Segalovich also wrote that "even more common are lonely, angry, and sometimes violent male protagonists from blockbusters like American Psycho, Blade Runner 2049, Fight Club , and The Joker . Some monologue about how everyone, especially girls, has rejected them. Others scream at their female partners, their faces contorted in extreme expressions of rage. Once in a while, you'll see a shot from the perspective of a man climbing up a cliff and stepping off." [8] Some TikTok users disagreed with this depiction of corecore, calling the more "fiercely environmentalist, anti-consumerist, and anti-capitalist" attitudes of early videos in the genre "real" corecore. [8]

Mason Noel, noted by media writers to one of the aesthetic's earliest creators, wrote in an Instagram Stories post that "the whole point of [corecore] is to create something that can't be categorized, commodified, made into clickbait, or moderated—something immune to the functions of control that dictate the content we consume and the ideas we are allowed to hold." [4]

History

The term corecore can be traced back to the hashtag #corecore being used on Tumblr as early as 2020. [1] However, its use on Tumblr and "especially" Twitter "existed solely as a pun on the literal definition of core, created out of users' frustrations of the over-saturation with the concept of "-cores," according to Townsend. [5] Indeed, many online subcultures, niches, or aesthetics are categorized into their microtrend utilizing the core suffix, such as goblincore or cottagecore. [2] [9] As such, "corecore" is in sarcastic reference to this sort of categorization, which began proliferating in 2020. [3] The origin and rise of corecore overlapped with a rise in popularity of digital culture in general, coinciding with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. [10]

Hyperallergic writer Rhea Nayyar considers the online aesthetic "weirdcore" as a predecessor to corecore. [11] When videos featuring the aesthetic first appeared on TikTok, they were known by the term nichetok, [1] which is considered by media writers and users as a sister trend to corecore. [10] Though technically different, the two terms are often used interchangeably by TikTok users. [5] Nichetok is an aesthetic movement as well, but is "made up mostly of shitposts that reference multiple fandoms, subcultures, and genres – requiring one to have a niche understanding of TikTok trends." [5] The terms chaos edit and 21st century humor are also related. [1]

Early corecore videos on TikTok often had an anti-capitalist or environmentalist messaging. [5] On January 1, 2021, Noel posted one of the genre's earliest videos on the platform. Noel's video stitched together clips of melting sea ice, Charli D'Amelio, a Black Friday sale, and Patrick Bateman of American Psycho. [1] The 20-second video also included critiques of the United States military and was soundtracked by a somber violin piece. [4] Tagged with the hashtags "#capitalism" and "#decay", Noel's video notably did not include the term corecore in its caption. [2] [10] Though the term's original creator is unknown, its usage as a hashtag dates back to July 2022, first used by "@heksensabbat". [2] [4] Media outlets and TikTok users alike consider artists such as Dylan Cherry, Eddie Hewer, Mason Noel, and John Rising as the pioneers of the genre. [2] [12] Called the "father" of the genre and having begun experimenting with the style in May 2021, Rising credits Nam June Paik as the originator of this type of video art. [2] [10]

Having blogged about the aesthetic in November 2022, [13] digital culture blogger Kieran Press-Renyolds was cited by Time and Mashable as one of the first to write in-depth about the aesthetic. [4] [5] Press-Reynolds told Mashable that at the time he first wrote about corecore, "most of the popular clips [...] was frenetic — they were these rapid-fire 15-second montages of surreal memes (like cute cats, alpha wolf edits) with intense music (Drain Gang and other internet rap) that didn't have much of a discernible meaning beyond the pleasurable rush of recognizable audiovisual material." [5]

By February 2023, the hashtag #corecore had received over 664 million views on TikTok. [1] By March, the hashtag's views surpassed 2.1 billion. [3]

Critical analysis and reception

In covering corecore, many media writers used the terms "meta" (metamodernity) and "chaotic" to describe videos featuring the aesthetic, as well as the genre's commentary on society. [1] [2] [11] Media writers were documented as generally praising the genre. [8] TikTok users likewise were noted to be largely positively receptive to the aesthetic, being able to commonly relate to the themes and messaging found in the genre. [5] [7] [14] The comment "real" was a common response to many corecore videos, for example. [14] Press-Reynolds opined that "the chaotic and disordered structure of these clips [...] deftly captures feelings of technological disarray and ennui that I think a lot of young people relate with nowadays." [5]

Ewens wrote that "some young people consider this genre to be merely content or, worse still, content about content. But many feel it speaks to them and their experiences on a deep emotional level." [3] Many writers posed the question of if the aesthetic constitutes art, [1] [3] with Townsend commenting "the idea of corecore and what it can (or could) represent that has given rise to what some consider a genuine form of art by Gen-Z." [5] Ewens further questioned if the aesthetic is a "new frontier in amateur documentary making," and added that corecore "mimics the way using [TikTok] is an overstimulating act of binge-watching a stream of short videos and voices," calling the trend a smart and sad commentary "on the proliferation of content in culture: self-focused, often narcissistic commentary, opinions, life-hacks and problem sharing." [3]

Amanda Silberling of TechCrunch called corecore an "absurdist meme" and wrote that the aesthetic has "techno-futurism-doom vibes", with most of the genre's videos being "tied together by a general malaise — a concern that life has no meaning and technology is alienating us from one another." [9] Silberling was among many contemporary media writers to compare corecore to Dadaism. [1] [5] [9] [11] Nayyar opined that corecore "reads as an art school freshman's first found-footage project in Adobe Premiere Pro [...] presented with the societal dread induced from doom-scrolling on one's phone at 2 am after one too many bong rips on a weeknight [...] but at the very least, it's an evidence-based manner of expressing one's frustrations with the world that seems to strike a chord with a large number of TikTok users." [11] Felicity Martin of i-D wrote that corecore "might be the hardest to explain or rationalize" among TikTok trends, opining that the genre's videos "amateurishly splice together unrelated clips, touching on topics such as loneliness and feeling unattractive." [6]

Segalovich noted the praise of corecore in many media articles from early 2023, commenting "They've lauded corecore for how vividly it evokes young people's frustration and panic looking down the barrel of climate and capitalist catastrophe," but opined that the coverage overlooked "the real message behind most of these videos: the terrifying rates of loneliness among young men and boys, which has led many into depression, suicide, and bigotry. And for some, corecore might only make it worse." [8] Segalovich added that the themes in corecore videos could exacerbate depressed feelings for viewers. [8] Segalovich also cited comparisons between Dada and corecore, noting that the two genres have a sense of despondency in response to world events, but opined that such "declarations of meaninglessness and hopelessness often lead to authoritarianism." [8]

Writing about the aesthetic in retrospect for Flash Art in August 2023, Declan Colquitt and Hannah Cobb (jointly writing under the pseudonym Y7) stated that corecore "was a program of scale undertaken from an anti- anthropomorphic POV, an insensate delirium scanning an ultimately inconceivable hyperobject of communicative media; and yet it was also a program of yearning and melancholy; of cancelled futures, of attempts to reconcile with endcore's cauterized horizons." [15]

See also

Related Research Articles

Video clips refer to mostly short videos, which are usually silly jokes and funny clips, often from movies or entertainment videos such as those on YouTube. Short videos on TikTok and YouTube often influence popular culture and internet trends. Such clips are usually taken out of context and have many gags in them. Sometimes they can be used to attract the public to the user's other accounts or their long-form videos. The term is also used more loosely to mean any video program, including a full program, uploaded onto a website or other medium.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Instagram</span> Social media platform owned by Meta Platforms

Instagram is a photo and video sharing social networking service owned by Meta Platforms. It allows users to upload media that can be edited with filters, be organized by hashtags, and be associated with a location via geographical tagging. Posts can be shared publicly or with preapproved followers. Users can browse other users' content by tags and locations, view trending content, like photos, and follow other users to add their content to a personal feed. A Meta-operated image-centric social media platform, it is available on iOS, Android, Windows 10, and the web. Users can take photos and edit them using built-in filters and other tools, then share them on other social media platforms like Facebook. It supports 32 languages including English, Hindi, Spanish, French, Korean, and Japanese.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vine (service)</span> Defunct American social network for short videos

Vine was an American short-form video hosting service where users could share up to 6-second-long looping video clips. Founded in June 2012 by Rus Yusupov, Dom Hofmann and Colin Kroll, the company was bought by Twitter, Inc. four months later for $30 million. Vine launched with its iOS app on January 24, 2013, with Android and Windows versions following.

Viral phenomena or viral sensation are objects or patterns that are able to replicate themselves or convert other objects into copies of themselves when these objects are exposed to them. Analogous to the way in which viruses propagate, the term viral pertains to a video, image, or written content spreading to numerous online users within a short time period. This concept has become a common way to describe how thoughts, information, and trends move into and through a human population.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Bill Wurtz</span> American musician and video producer

Bill Wurtz is an American musician, singer-songwriter, video producer, animator, and internet personality. He is known for his distinctive style of music, with deadpan delivery and singing, and his animated music videos, with surrealist, psychedelic graphics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Belle Delphine</span> British internet personality, pornographic actress, model and YouTuber (born 1999)

Mary-Belle Kirschner, better known as Belle Delphine, is a South African-born British media personality, pornographic actress, model, and YouTuber. Her social media accounts feature erotic and cosplay modelling, sometimes blending the two. Her online persona began in 2018 through her cosplay modeling on Instagram. Her posts on the platform were often influenced by popular memes and trends.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">TikTok</span> Video-focused social media platform

TikTok, whose mainland Chinese and Hong Kong counterpart is Douyin, is a short-form video hosting service owned by Chinese internet company ByteDance. It hosts user-submitted videos, which can range in duration from three seconds to 60 minutes. It can be accessed with a smart phone app.

Stan Twitter is a community of Twitter users who post opinions on celebrities, music, TV shows, movies, video games, social media, and other topics. It is known for using particular terminology and for incidents of harassment. Discussions in Stan Twitter spaces often revolve around public figures — primarily those in the entertainment industry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">ShareChat</span> Indian social networking service

ShareChat is an Indian social networking service platform, owned by Bangalore-based Mohalla Tech. It was founded by Ankush Sachdeva, Bhanu Pratap Singh and Farid Ahsan, and incorporated on 8 January 2015. ShareChat app has over 350 million monthly active users across 15 Indian languages. The current valuation of the company is $5 billion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mia Khalifa (song)</span> 2018 single by iLoveFriday

"Mia Khalifa" (originally titled "Mia Khalifa (Diss)", also known as "Hit or Miss", and sometimes stylized as "MiA KHALiFA") is a song by American hip hop group iLoveFriday (stylized as iLOVEFRiDAY). The duo of Atlanta-based rappers Aqsa Malik (also known as Smoke Hijabi) and Xeno Carr self-released the song on February 12, 2018, which was later re-released by Records Co and Columbia Records on December 14, 2018. It was included on their second EP, Mood (2019). The song was produced by Carr. The song is a diss track targeting Mia Khalifa, a Lebanese-American Internet celebrity and former pornographic actress. The decision to write a song dissing Khalifa arose over a misunderstanding. A faked screenshot, intended as a joke, seemed to show Khalifa, who once appeared in a pornographic film wearing a hijab, criticizing Malik for smoking while wearing a hijab in a music video. iLoveFriday thought the screenshot was legitimate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dancing Pallbearers</span> Ghanaian group of pallbearers

Dancing Pallbearers, also known by a variety of names, including Dancing Coffin, Coffin Dancers, Coffin Dance Meme, or simply Coffin Dance, is the informal name given to a group of pallbearers from Nana Otafrija Pallbearing and Waiting Service who are based in the coastal town of Prampram in the Greater Accra Region of southern Ghana, although they perform across the country as well as outside Ghana. The founder and leader of the group is Benjamin Aidoo. Locally, they are referred to as Dada awu.

There are reports of TikTok censoring political content related to China and other countries as well as content from minority creators. TikTok says that its initial content moderation policies, many of which are no longer applicable, were aimed at reducing divisiveness and were not politically motivated.

TikTok food trends are specific food recipes and food-related fads on the social media platform TikTok. This content amassed popularity in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, as many people cooked and ate at home and more people turned to social media for entertainment. While some TikTok users share their diets and recipes, others expand their brand or image on TikTok through step-by-step videos of easy and popular recipes. Users often refer to food-related content as "FoodTok."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Devious lick</span> 2021 TikTok trend promoting vandalism and theft

A devious lick was a challenge in which North American middle school and high school students posted videos of themselves stealing, vandalizing, or showing off one or more items they stole in their school, typically from a bathroom. The trend went viral on TikTok in 2021 and has resulted in the arrests of many students as well as various warnings being issued by police departments. It also allegedly spread to some schools in Latin America, England, Germany, Australia and Latvia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">YouTube Shorts</span> Sharing platform within YouTube since 2020-21

YouTube Shorts is the short-form section of the American online video-sharing platform YouTube. Shorts focuses on vertical videos that are less than 60 seconds of duration and various features for user interaction. As of May 2024, Shorts have collectively earned over 5 trillion views since the platform was made available to the general public on July 13, 2021, including views that pre-date the YouTube Shorts feature. Creators earn money based on the amount of views they receive, or through ad revenue. The increased popularity of YouTube Shorts has led to concerns about addiction for teenagers.

An Internet aesthetic, also simply referred to as an aesthetic or microaesthetic, is a visual art style, sometimes accompanied by a fashion style, subculture, or music genre, that usually originates from the Internet or is popularized on it. Throughout the 2010s and 2020s, online aesthetics gained increasing popularity, specifically on social media platforms such as Tumblr, Pinterest, Instagram, and TikTok, and often were used by people to express their individuality and creativity. They can also be used to create a sense of community and belonging among people who share the same interests. The term aesthetic has been described as being "totally divorced from its academic origins", and is commonly used as an adjective.

Ronnald Merle McNutt was a 33-year-old American man and US Army Reserve veteran from New Albany, Mississippi, who committed suicide by shooting himself under his chin on a Facebook livestream, which went viral on various social media platforms due to its inherent shock value.

Zepotha is a nonexistent movie created as part of a hoax by TikTok user Emily Jeffri in August 2023. A similar meme, Goncharov, had emerged on Tumblr nine months earlier, prompting comparisons between the two.

Copyright infringement and social media involves the use of social media platforms to distribute copyrighted material illegally, thus copyright infringement.

The online video platform TikTok has had worldwide a social, political, and cultural impact since its global launch in September 2017. The platform has rapidly grown its userbase since its launch and surpassed 2 billion downloads in October 2020. It became the world's most popular website, ahead of Google, for the year 2021.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Chen, Min (February 6, 2023). "Explained: What Is Corecore, the Dada-esque 'Artistic Movement' Now Trending on TikTok?". Artnet . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Rosenblatt, Kalhan (January 13, 2023). "#CoreCore videos are becoming more popular on TikTok. What exactly are they?". NBC News . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Ewens, Hannah (March 30, 2023). "'Why am I crying over this?': how corecore TikTok videos caught the mood of Gen Z". The Guardian . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Mendez II, Moises (January 20, 2023). "What to Know About Corecore, the Latest Aesthetic Taking Over TikTok". Time . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Townsend, Chance (January 14, 2023). "Explaining corecore: How TikTok's newest trend may be a genuine Gen-Z art form". Mashable . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  6. 1 2 Martin, Felicity (July 14, 2023). "How Aphex Twin built a cult Gen Z following". i-D . Vice Media . Retrieved November 15, 2023.
  7. 1 2 Cutler, Alison (February 9, 2023). "Dark TikTok trend highlights social media addiction in young people. What is Corecore?". The Miami Herald . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Segalovich, Isabella (February 22, 2023). "TikTok's "Corecore" Is Where Men Scream Their Anguish". Hyperallergic . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  9. 1 2 3 Silberling, Amanda (January 21, 2023). "TikTok's 'corecore' is the latest iteration of absurdist meme art". TechCrunch . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  10. 1 2 3 4 Koh, Reena (February 17, 2023). "Meet the top 3 TikTokers at the heart of Corecore — those chaotic video compilations you've been seeing all over social media for weeks". Insider . Insider Inc. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  11. 1 2 3 4 Nayyar, Rhea (January 26, 2023). "What Does TikTok's "Corecore" Have to Do With Dada?". Hyperallergic . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  12. Pitcher, Laura (February 24, 2023). "Corecore is the internet screaming from inside itself". i-D . Vice Media . Retrieved May 27, 2023.
  13. Press-Reynolds, Kieran (November 29, 2022). "This is corecore (we're not kidding)". No Bells. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  14. 1 2 Glossop, Ella (January 24, 2023). "Corecore is the Screaming-Into-Void TikTok Trend We Deserve". Vice . Retrieved April 30, 2023.
  15. Colquitt, Declan; Cobb, Hannah (August 28, 2023). "A Postmortem of #corecore". Flash Art . Retrieved November 15, 2023.

Further reading