‘Why am I crying over this?’: how corecore TikTok videos caught the mood of Gen Z
Sad clips from films, TV shows and TikTok are being spliced together over melancholy music - and they're raising a smile among hopeless young people
Jimmy Nguyen, an 18-year-old student, saw his first corecore" video on TikTok in January. He can't remember which one it was - there are so many of them now. But he says it was typical of this new trend of video: other TikTok videos, celebrity or podcaster interviews, TV show and film clips spliced together over some sad or ambient music. They're depressing, full of existential dread and usually on the theme of disconnection and alienation. Nguyen initially thought, like other users, that these videos were a joke. They're crudely edited and the name in itself is a sarcastic reference to the proliferation of micro-trends emerging from TikTok since 2020. But he was soon staying up late at night in his bedroom making corecore of his own.
As I was making my first video I started to really see myself expressing how I was feeling and it felt relieving because I didn't have anyone to talk to and explaining my emotions is hard," he tells me. But that video felt like an exit or gateway to those feelings." In it, clips of Lee Jung-jae, the lead in Squid Game smiling broadly and falsely at the camera, someone recounting how in school kids would ask which super power you'd want out of invisibility and flying but he says I'm already invisible" and Jake Gyllenhall in Stronger (2017) screaming Why do you even want me? I'm such a fuck up!" run into each other over a morose Arcade Fire track. Now Nguyen makes these videos in an attempt to help people, he says, to let them know that they're not alone.
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