产品展示
  • 格雨汽车磷酸铁锂电池12V AGM H7 80AH启停电瓶沃尔沃XC90奥迪A6
  • 汽车摩托车电瓶充电器12v24v伏蓄电池agm启停电池瓶充电机修复型
  • 17-21款北京现代悦动扶手箱套改装专用新款汽车手扶盖加长配件18
  • 瓦尔塔蓄电池汽车电瓶12V60AH速锐名图iX35朗动H6花冠威驰K3途胜
  • 轻手关门车贴请轻开轻关提示警示标识语提醒反光汽车贴纸车门标语
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

产品中心

University of Alabama rush week begins on TikTok

2024-05-20 23:23:47      点击:337

It's about that time. Tomorrow (Aug. 6), Season 2 of University of Alabama's sorority rush debuts, and it's already taking over our FYPs.

While Bama Rush is the flagship of rush TikTok, sorority recruitment has already begun across the country, giving us our fix of OOTDs (outfits of the day), rush in-jokes, and girls showing off their chapters. We're in for a couple of weeks of non-stop entertainment based around a system rooted in racism, classism, and elitism. It's good old-fashioned American fun!

SEE ALSO:Alabama rush TikToks are huge, but they also remind us of sororities' racist, elitist culture

Before TikTok gets entirely overrun by sorority girls, let's take a look at some of the most popular trends taking over the app this week. 

My rush bag

The first wave of BamaRushTok arrived when potential new members (aka girls who are rushing sororities) began showing off their over-the-top rush bags. In one video @gracynedmondsonnunpacks her pink Longchamp bag, pulling out a fan, sewing kit, advil, hand sanitizer, wipes, Tide sticks, spray deodorant, roll deodorant, a hair brush, rain poncho, a bag of mints, and — breath — even more. You truly do not know what will be pulled out next. These rush bags put Hermione Granger's little beaded, charmed bag to shame. 

Emoji trend

My favorite trend of the week involves TikTokkers repeating a singular word or phrase in the style of a variety of emoji. In these videos, creators take advantage of the "TikTok Text" feature and list a bunch of emoji at the top of their screen, then they say whatever their chosen word or phrase is as each emoji. It’s wildly entertaining to watch each creator interpret how an unlikely emoji would say something. Some stellar examples of the trend are @enemaemmy's video, where they embody eight different emojis saying, "Phoebe Bridgers"; @i.c.e._'s video of him begging, "Let me hit"; and @gageyayaya's videoasking, "Are you gay?" The trend further reiterates how emoji have created a new language and way to comprehend messages. 

Mashable Top StoriesStay connected with the hottest stories of the day and the latest entertainment news.Sign up for Mashable's Top Stories newsletterBy signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!
Screenshots of the three previously described TikToks.These three understood the assignment. Credit: TikTok / enemaemmy, i.c.e_, gageyayayaSEE ALSO:Emoji helped me find my voice in our new remote reality

I guess I just don't really understand

A clip of Mike Wheeler from Stranger Things saying, "Yeah, I guess I am just a little uh, I guess I just don't really understand," has become the soundtrack for TikTokkers describing something they find confusing. Yes, TikTok is still obsessed with Stranger Things

The soundbite is from an emotional scene in which Mike confronts Eleven for lying to him, but recontextualizing dramatic clips into a humorous trend is what TikTok does best. This edit of Mike, which was originally posted by @loserxthings11, has been used in nearly 8000 videos.

In one video, @scarlye07 writes, "When I meet someone who still doesn't have TikTok." Another, posted by@greenbriarist, reads, "pov: u just watched some of the worst, most confusing movies ever created cause ur in love with one of the actors who had 5 minutes of screen time." We've all been there! Other TikTokkers participating in the trend, like @lilzosie, incorporate timely pop culture moments. Their video describes Swifties reconciling with the singer's staggering CO2 emissions:  "being a taylor swift fan and seeing that she's taken 170 flights in the past 7 months and is MASSIVELY contributing to global warming." 

Screenshots of the three previously mentioned TikToks.Sooo confusing. Credit: TikTok / scarlye07, greenbriarst, lilzosie

Sicitalian categories

The latest TikTok challenge isn't a dance, but a test of knowledge. The "Sicitalian Categories" filter, created by @sicitalian, shuffles through the alphabet before landing on a letter, then it challenges you to name a country, city, animal, body part, job, brand, famous person, clothing item, chemical element, and sport that all start with that letter. The filter has been used in over 176,000 videos. 

It's a relatively harmless challenge that takes me back to elementary school era tests of knowledge. Next week, be prepared to have your knowledge of Bama Rush tested.

North Korea apparently all set for nuke, ballistic missile tests: South Korean military
TikTok's 'bold glamour' filter: What it is and how to get it