Hello from The Goods' resident internet culture reporter, [Rebecca Jennings](! On Tuesdays, I'm using this space to update you all on what's been going on in the world of TikTok. Is there something you want to see more of? Less of? Different of? Email me at rebecca.jennings@vox.com. Thereâs [a TikTok]( thatâs stuck with me ever since I saw it earlier this fall. Itâs of a Walmart employee named Shana announcing all the racist and sexist behavior she witnessed during her time on the job over the store microphone, calling out her coworkers by name. She ended with, âI fucking quit.â Shana later updated the nearly 35 million people who watched her video, saying that, yes, her speech was actually broadcast throughout the store in Lubbock, Texas (thereâs [video proof]() and that as she walked out of the store she was [met with tons of applause](. A few people told her theyâd never shop at Walmart again. Itâs the only thing I could think about when [reporter Michael Waters]( broke the news this week that the company is now trying to turn 500 of its employees into social media influencers who proselytize about Walmartâs unique greatness. The program is called Spotlight and is only open to salaried, not hourly, employees, meaning that the vast majority of its 2.2 million workers are ineligible. Popular posts are rewarded with cash bonuses. Retail employees from megachains like Sephora, Chipotle, and Starbucks have been going viral on TikTok [since the app has existed](, and for the most part, companies have tried to shut it down. A Panera employee was fired for [her video âexposingâ]( how its mac and cheese was prepared; a Chik-fil-A worker [was let go]( for her viral video on menu hacks. Even when the content is inarguably innocuous â or positive! â big brands have bristled at the idea of their image being out of their control; just ask the Sherwin-Williams retail worker who was reportedly fired for [simply sharing videos of how he mixed paint](. The only saving grace to Walmartâs rather ethically dubious influencer program is that it doesnât appear to actually work: The two Walmart influencers Waters interviewed in his story have about 1,500 and 300 Instagram followers, respectively. Other brands that have [attempted to turn their workers]( into stars have only succeeded when they chose TikTokers who had already built up massive followings, as was the case with Dunkinâ Donutsâ âCrew Ambassadorsâ program. (Consider [Amazonâs laughable Twitter army]( of warehouse workers who flooded the site with pro-Amazon sentiments in 2019.) But as the golden rule of social media authenticity suggests, the videos that travel the furthest are the ones that portray employeesâ actual experiences. One of the first videos I saw when I opened the app this week was of a woman [working silently and quickly]( in what appeared to be an Amazon fulfillment center. Her captions begged viewers to shop local instead, arguing that the companyâs coronavirus safety measures are âa joke,â that its productivity tracking is âinhumane,â and that it spies on and retaliates against workers attempting to unionize. [In other videos](, she said that sheâd gotten two yeast infections in two months because she was so afraid of using the bathroom and lowering her productivity rates, [and that]( the company has minimized the rising injuries among warehouse workers, especially during the peak holiday season. âPlease support businesses who care about their employeesâ health and well-being,â she wrote. Itâs clear why brands like Walmart are trying to take more ownership of employeesâ social media content: They want to cancel out the effects of videos like this, ones that centralize the lived experiences of the lowest-ranking workers rather than burnishing a companyâs image. The problem, of course, is that this amounts to sponsored content, and nobody wants to watch that. Hearing [Target employees tell you]( about the brandâs alleged practice of âletting people stealâ from them until the total amount of stolen goods is equal to grand larceny is a lot more interesting than watching a Walmart worker show you his favorite Funko Pop dolls. And as long as TikTok is a platform driven by algorithmic popularity, the messy videos â the ones where employees leak secrets, quit on camera, or expose union suppression â will be the ones weâre most likely to see. Of course, if Walmart [manages to obtain a large enough stake]( in TikTok, all of this may be moot, and the platform could be reduced to an infinite scroll of creepily jubilant store greeters being forced to read from a corporate PR-approved script. Until then, retail workers of the world: Keep your cameras on. TikTok in the news ðï¸ - Oh, look, [another TikTok-inspired]( Facebook app!
- The crowdsourced Ratatouille musical is [going IRL]( on January 1, when the production company Seaview hosts the digital event to benefit the Actors Fund. Itâs unclear how the dozens of artists who contributed music, choreography, graphic design, costumes, and even puppeteering to the musical as it existed on TikTok will be credited or compensated.
- Atlanta is now home to two all-Black TikTok creator mansions, and in the process is becoming the [new influencer capital of America](.
- TikTok stars [are joining venture capital firms]( and investing in startups because theyâre part of the generation who grew up on Shark Tank.
- This is a really [honest depiction]( of how standup comics are succeeding on TikTok, even when they know their content is a little hacky â itâs because thatâs what works!
- Welcome to [SelenaTok](, the place to study up on Selenaâs life and music before watching the new Netflix series.
- Do not file your teeth to make them look more even, or do anything else on [this list of the worst TikTok health trends]( of the year. One last thing ð Barely anyone in college turns their cameras on during Zoom lectures, but these students surprised their professor by [showing their faces all at once](. Spoiler: The professor cried, and so did I. Manage your [email preferences](, or [unsubscribe]( to stop receiving emails from Vox Media.
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