Propaganda I'm Not Falling For
5 Articles
5 Articles
Online, people recently reveal what they used to believe.
Propaganda I'm Not Falling For
Propaganda I'm Not Falling For is a trend where participants list examples of things they consider propaganda that they refuse to believe. The trend was popularized on X / Twitter in early May 2025 and spread to TikTok later that month, with some people using it ironically and some using it genuinely. On TikTok, the trend is often set to the song "I think about it all the time" by Charli XCX and Bon Iiver.
The propaganda trend on Tiktok shows how consumption, aesthetics and attitudes are negotiated – from Oatmilk to Indie feminism. Whoever understands the codes becomes part of the debate – instead of the goal of it. Our analysis can help.read more on t3n.de
What do Botox, Oat Milk, OnlyFans, the doll Labubu, Beinrasur, 9-to-5 jobs and even the US-American singer-songwriter Gracie Abrams have in common? They are all referred to as "propaganda" on TikTok – but not in the political sense. The term is part of an ironic trend that transforms everyday phenomena into pointed comments on social norms. Under the label "Propaganda I-m not falling for- users explain:In personal preferences, consumer trends or…
For the past few days, a word of viral order flooded TikTok: Propaganda I的m Not Falling For. An apparent lightness masks an ironic rejection of social injunctions, cultural norms and viral objects. What young people now call "propaganda" no longer comes from an authoritarian state, but from a constant flow of micro-influences. A playful but lucid way to resist the economy of attention. https://youtube.com/shorts/H5zNGoRhHVs?feature=shared The so…
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