TikTok Is Gen Z’s MTV — but Better

There’s beauty in the social network’s randomness, which fosters creativity in a way the music video channel never could

Omar L. Gallaga
OneZero

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A photo of the TikTok logo.
Photo: Thomas Trustchel/Getty Images

A significant portion of my brain is MTV.

It’s not by choice. If I could evict Crowded House, tell Neneh Cherry to take her “Buffalo Stance” elsewhere, create an exit on the ceiling of my amygdala for Lionel Richie to dance his ass through, I’d do it.

But I am a Gen Xer, born in 1975, raised in the 1980s, weaned on neon-bright clothing and cheesy synth riffs. My grandmother, who took care of me most days after school, had cable. And while the cuss-word-filled comedy specials on HBO and Nickelodeon’s all-day buffet of kid programming (‘sup, Pinwheel!) caught my attention, MTV was the channel that shaped me, for better or for worse.

When MTV was very little else but music videos all the time and I was at my most impressionable age (Six? Nine? 11? When is a child most a sponge?), the world opened up to me in music videos, three or four minutes at a time.

This was a world where women slid around on the hoods of cars without injury. Where crudely computer-animated blue-collar workers had problematic hot takes on popular music:

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