Lo-fi Hip Hop and POV Playlists are symptoms of late capitalism
<p>In 2020, the Brazilian influencer Mário Júnior grew popular beyond TikTok as he was turned into a national meme. One of the motivators was the fact that he was producing content in a format that is typical to the platform: POV or point of view. This audiovisual format generally appears in the tab “For You” on TikTok, which is a section that offers similar content to what the user has engaged previously, but not necessarily published by profiles they already follow.</p>
<p>For that reason, the POV format has become a new engagement strategy in a social network that promotes the remix of videos, sounds and memes. In order to stand out in an ocean of similar content (that is, a same meme or viral trend being reproduced, only performed by different people), the POV format has generated engagement precisely because it is supposedly more “humane”.</p>
<p>Using soundtracks that, oftentimes, feature lyrics that communicate the message the creator wants to share, POV videos can also be very specific: they may portray embarrassing and trivial moments for teenagers or even the simulation of a relationship, such as in the case of Mário Júnior.</p>
<p>Ultimately, as suggested in <a href="https://www.vice.com/en/article/bj9qq5/this-meme-explains-why-tiktok-isnt-like-any-other-social-media" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">this article</a>, POV videos promote empathy between users and, this way, they can address situations or topics that are sensitive to <a href="https://www.omnicoreagency.com/tiktok-statistics/" rel="noopener ugc nofollow" target="_blank">this audience mostly composed of people younger than 34</a>. By the way, this is also the demographic for those who watch the videos and streamings of lo-fi hip hop playlists on YouTube.</p>
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