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Hostility Toward Baby Boomers on TikTok
Author(s) -
Reuben Ng,
Nicole Indran
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
the gerontologist
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1758-5341
pISSN - 0016-9013
DOI - 10.1093/geront/gnac020
Subject(s) - baby boomers , popularity , theme (computing) , social media , content analysis , psychology , social psychology , sociology , advertising , social science , political science , computer science , economics , law , demographic economics , operating system , business
Background and Objectives The recent entry of the hashtag #OkBoomer into social media vernacular underscores the collective frustration of younger people with a group whose views they find increasingly incompatible with theirs. Most social media analyses in gerontology focus on content on Twitter and Facebook, with content on TikTok virtually unexplored. Given the burgeoning popularity of TikTok among younger people, we assess the content of TikTok videos with the hashtags #OkBoomer or #Boomer to distill the undercurrents of hostility expressed by younger people towards Baby Boomers. Research Design and Methods We collated TikTok videos (N=332) with the hashtags #OkBoomer or #Boomer, which received over 5.4 billion views. Both inductive and deductive approaches guided the qualitative content analysis of the videos. Results Five themes emerged. Most videos (79%) described ‘Negative Encounters with Baby Boomers’ (Theme 1). 58% were about ‘Conflicting Values/Beliefs between Baby Boomers and Younger People’ (Theme 2). 39% were about ‘Baby Boomers Antagonizing Younger Generations’ (Theme 3). 22% of the videos made references to the ‘Karen Meme’ (Theme 4). 7% bemoaned the existence of a ‘Wealth Gap’ between Baby Boomers and younger people (Theme 5). Discussion and Implications Findings reveal that the usage of the hashtags #OkBoomer and #Boomer is highly nuanced, at times explicitly ageist, and at others, emblematic of a phenomenon far more complex than ageism. There is a need to leverage social media as a space to foster interaction between older and younger people. Society is ultimately well served by intergenerational interaction.

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