产品展示
  • 狮子车贴汽车中国风疤痕划痕遮挡个性创意装饰摩托电动车舞狮贴纸
  • 适用于宝马3系专用汽车手机支架老款3系e90内饰用品改装配件导航
  • 宝马X3音响罩 X4 新X3高音装饰圈 2018-21款X3喇叭罩 X3音响改装
  • 核载7人589人年审车贴警示车贴七座SUV七座商务车面包车贴7坐车贴
  • 大众新迈腾B8专用中网改装亮条迈腾前脸格栅装饰亮条汽车改装配件
联系方式

邮箱:admin@aa.com

电话:020-123456789

传真:020-123456789

产品中心

TikTok users parody East Asian fetishization with 'Americacore' videos

2024-05-21 17:03:45      点击:404

What do energy drinks, chicken nuggets, and inaccessible healthcare have in common? They're all Americacore.

TikTok users are spoofing videos that romanticize other cultures by referring to day-to-day aspects of American life as "Americacore." As of Sunday, the tags #americacore and #americancore each have over 30 million views on TikTok, and the tag #Americacoreuwu has about 140,000 views.

Under the guise of celebrating "Americacore," TikTok users are recording their trips to Target and Walmart, eating snacks like Goldfish crackers and Funfetti cookies, and using paper plates. Paired with gentle music and soft filters, the video trend mimics the way many Americans fetishize East Asian culture, but misrepresent them in "aesthetic" content.

Lifestyle influencers have long made content from visiting "unique" Korean grocery stores, for example, but to any Korean or Korean-American person, buying chips at H-Mart is about as aesthetically pleasing as buying chips at Ralph's.

Americacore is not to be confused with Americana, though. This is not a celebration of folk music and art, but a criticism of how Americans engage with other cultures.

In one video romanticizing "Americacore," a TikTok user pours a can of Monster Energy into a teapot emblazoned with the American flag, and serves with a Twizzler, which they refer to as "rubber pocky."

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!

It's reverse Orientalism at its finest.

Americacore videos parody "kawaii" videos fetishizing East Asian cultures.Credit: tiktok / lavender_goatThe videos poke fun at the way Americans often woefully misrepresent other cultures.Credit: tiktok / lavender_goat

The videos are as much of critique of American norms as they are of the way Americans tend to idealize and infantilize East Asian cultures. Videos by lifestyle influencers visiting Asian grocery stores, for example, have been criticized as crossing the line between cultural appreciation and fetishization. The trend pokes fun at the absurdity of white Americans' fascination with arbitrary aspects of East Asian food, music, and traditions.

TikTok user kinokino1226 parodied lifestyle influencers who exalt common Asian snacks as exotic by visiting her local Safeway.

"Fun fact: Americans are very patriotic," kinokino1226 captioned her video, posing for an "aesthetic photoshoot" with American flag-wrapped grocery store flowers.

Nothing more American than visiting SafewayCredit: tiktok / kinokino1226TikTok users made sure to "respect vegan culture."Credit: TIKTOK / KINOKINO1226

With the worldwide success of the K-pop and anime industries, Asian culture is often misrepresented as a monolith rather than a diverse set of rich, individual cultures. The distillation of Asian heritage into a palatable melting pot of cute packaging, exotic skincare routines, and popular music only perpetuates harmful stereotypes. Americacore, as Vice notes, turns the fetishization of East Asia back on itself.

Ironically, as some Twitter users pointed out, other countries doromanticize American products the way Americans romanticize East Asian ones.

Before you post pictures of the "exotic" snacks you may have scored from the Asian grocery store, consider whether you'd portray Oreos and red plastic cups the same way. Those, dear reader, are simply Americacore.

How to delete your TikTok account
Minister, biz leaders discuss North Korean demand for facility removal from Mount Kumgang