‘The 21st century equivalent of court jesters’: TikTok’s dark obsession with ‘LOLCows’

On the internet, people go viral for all kinds of reasons. Sometimes, for the wrong ones. 

LOLCows are one example of the internet’s darker sense of humor. While not a new term, an “LOLCow” is a “a person you get extensive laughs from, who doesn’t know they are being made fun of,” according to  Urban Dictionary. In other words, a person being milked for “lols” or laughs. “They can often think they are admired for what they are doing, but secretly are being laughed at constantly,” the definition continues.

While online trolling is nothing new, TikTok’s algorithm and ease of access can now turn anyone into an overnight star—sometimes to their detriment. “When someone shows me their phone and their FYP is nothing but ‘lolcows,'” one TikTok post reads over a soundtrack calling that person a “loser.” One comment calls it, “the 21st century equivalent of court jesters or circus sideshows.” 

After being thrust into the spotlight, LOLCow creators are often given opportunities to collaborate with bigger creators who profit off the engagement or are offered lucrative brand deals—most of the time only after being mocked online. While some fans claim to be supporting or uplifting the creators in question, it often crosses the line from lighthearted humor to ridicule, turning vulnerable creators into targets of relentless online obsession.

“LOLCows are almost always picked out by the internet because they essentially have disabilities,” explains TikTok creator @pinkbinz. “Ninety-nine percent of the time, if these people were never involved in the internet, their life would have been completely different. Most of the things that happen to them in their real life have happened thanks to the impact of people on the internet bullying them.”

Another video posted by @GamerMagee, says it is the audiences of the LOLCows we should be paying the most attention to. “The level of depravity of the people who are f*cking with them is just mind-boggling,” he said. “A lot of these aggressors . . . they’re able to keep their anonymity and get away with everything because they’re hidden behind a computer screen.

As a result of the public attention, LOLCows can be doxxed, where private or identifying information is shared publicly about them with malicious intent; or may become victims of swatting, the act of making hoax phone calls to report serious crimes to emergency services. In other cases, they can go on to self-destructive and even abusive behavior toward others, as viewers watch on in morbid fascination. 

Reminder: There’s plenty to laugh at on the internet without making fun of vulnerable people. 


https://www.fastcompany.com/91240838/the-21st-century-equivalent-of-court-jesters-tiktoks-dark-obsession-with-lolcows?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 1mo | 5 déc. 2024 à 14:30:08


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

DoorDash is expanding its portable benefits program to Georgia next year (exclusive)

DoorDash is expanding its portable benefits pilot program to certain gig workers in Georgia starting next year, the food-delivery giant tells Fast Company.

Dashers (which is wha

10 janv. 2025 à 15:20:07 | Fast company - tech
Red Bull and Ford are building a new F1 hybrid race car engine—first as bits, then atoms

To get from 0 to 60 in Formula 1 engine design while competing against organizations with much more experience, Red Bull Ford Powertrains will need extra help (and, no, that boost won’t come in th

10 janv. 2025 à 15:20:06 | Fast company - tech
AI taught me to be a (slightly) better badminton player at CES

I am not what you would call a finely tuned athletic machine. I am, if anything, an outdated lawnmower engine held together by duct tape and rust. So when I was offered the opportunity to let AI h

10 janv. 2025 à 15:20:04 | Fast company - tech
The L.A. wildfires show how social media has become just another spin room

It’s hard to remember now, as you scroll through a thicket of porn bots, anti-trans activists, and AI slop

10 janv. 2025 à 12:50:06 | Fast company - tech
These AI applications are aiding—not replacing—human creatives

There’s been plenty of speculation about whether generative AI could replace—or perh

10 janv. 2025 à 12:50:06 | Fast company - tech
What does Meta’s Oversight Board even do?

When Meta established its Oversight Board to adjudicate on decisions it made about removing content from its platforms in 2020, the goal was for the select group of individuals from the media, civ

10 janv. 2025 à 10:40:03 | Fast company - tech
6 years ago, Elon Musk offered help during wildfires. This time he blamed DEI

When a devastating wildfire hit California in November 2018, a powerful CEO went on Twitter to ask how his company could help. That

10 janv. 2025 à 01:20:06 | Fast company - tech