this post was submitted on 10 Nov 2023
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The article doesn't explain it - I wonder what "Kookie Santos" means.

The articlearchive.today • Can You Understand Gen Alpha's Slang? - The New York Times

Are you a “sigma”? Do you have “rizz”? The youngest generation is bamboozling its elders with terms all their own.

Do you know what a gyat is? What about a rizzler? And how, precisely, does one pay a Fanum tax?

Welcome to the language of Gen Alpha, the cohort coming up right behind Gen Z. These children of millennials have begun a generational rite of passage — employing their own slang terms and memes, and befuddling their elders in the process.

Which brings us back to gyat (rhymes with “yacht,” with a hard “g” and a firm emphasis on “yat”).

“There’s no cute way to say it — it’s just a word for a big butt,” said Alta, a 13-year-old eighth grader in Pennsylvania. “If someone has a big butt, someone will say ‘gyat’ to it.”

Alta and her brother Kai, an 11-year-old sixth grader, said they had learned the word on TikTok and that it had suddenly become popular among their classmates. The internet encyclopedia Know Your Meme credits the sudden popularity of “gyat” to the Twitch livestreamer Kai Cenat. (In August, Mr. Cenat made headlines when his fans swarmed Union Square Park in Manhattan after he promised to give away gaming consoles at no cost.)

“I don’t say ‘gyat’ to people, though, unless they’re my friend,” Alta said. “And we say it to our mom.”

Several other new words have become part of this generation’s vernacular, and six members of Gen Alpha offered their decoding services for this article. (Their parents gave permission for them to be interviewed, with the agreement that their last names would not be used.) Many of the children cited a catchy parody song making the rounds on TikTok as a key to the slang’s rising popularity. The lyrics go like this:

Sticking out your gyat for the rizzler

You’re so skibidi

You’re so Fanum tax

I just wanna be your sigma

A rizzler is a “good person,” according to Malcolm, a 10-year-old in Washington state.

“Having rizz is when you have good game,” Alta said. “Being a rizzler is like when you’re a pro at flirting with people.” (Rizz is short for charisma.)

The word can be used as a compliment or a joke, according to Jaedyn, 12. She said that the boys at her school in New Jersey had been singing the song lately, adding that it gave her a headache.

Jaedyn added that “nobody really knows” the meaning of “skibidi.” It has entered the lexicon by way of the animated series “Skibidi Toilet,” which has racked up more than 700 million views on YouTube. A typical episode is about 15 seconds long and features a man who pops his head out of a toilet bowl and launches into a song heavy on the use of the word that gives the show its name. (It’s easier if you just watch it. Boomers might think of “Skibidi Toilet” as a 2020s answer to the animations of “Monty Python’s Flying Circus.”)

“I don’t like,” Tariq, 8, said of the series. “It creeps me out. Every time I go to the toilet, I just want to get it quick done.” Tariq, who lives in New York State and is known online as Corn Kid, said he was not familiar with the other terms.

Fanum tax refers to Fanum, a popular streamer on Twitch who regularly appears online with Mr. Cenat. When friends are eating in Fanum’s presence, he insists that they share some of their food with him. That’s the Fanum tax.

And sigma has something to do with wolves.

“Everyone in my grade, at least, says it in a way where they’re like the alpha of the pack,” Alta said. “If you’re trying to say you’re dominant and you’re the leader, you’ll call yourself ‘sigma.’”

In a TikTok video posted in October, Philip Lindsay, a special-education math teacher in Payson, Ariz., listed a few terms he had been hearing in the classroom, including Fanum tax and gyat. “Which does not mean ‘get your act together,’” Mr. Lindsay, 29, said in the video, which has since been viewed over four million times.

His students tried at first to make him believe that gyat was an acronym that stood for “go you athletic team,” he said in an interview. He recently had to explain gyat’s real meaning to a colleague whose students had convinced the teacher to display the word in the classroom.

Mr. Lindsay said the new words struck him as more “meme-like” than earlier slang terms. He added that he believed they were “driven mainly by social media, TikTok specifically.”

Gen Alpha is still being born, according to demographers. Its birth years span from 2010 to 2025, said Mark McCrindle, a generational researcher in Australia who coined the name Gen Alpha several years ago.

Online, members of Gen Z have begun to realize they are no longer the new kids on the digital block — and that Gen Alpha might be coming for them, in the same way that they had once gone after millennials.

Anthony Mai, a TikTok creator with a large following, recently posted a video of himself wearing a comically deadpan expression as the Gen Alpha-slang song played. “Gen Alpha is making their own memes now,” he wrote in a caption. “It has begun. We are the next cringe gen on the chopping block.”

Intergenerational comedy has become a staple on social media platforms, where creators dramatize the differences between age groups. Skibidi and gyat fit snugly into the memes and video shorts belonging to this subgenre.

“Whenever I think about the linguistic differences between generations, I just think, Are we really going to do this again?” said Jessica Maddox, an assistant professor of digital media at the University of Alabama. “Generational differences and divides have always been played up to some extent, even before the heyday of the internet, but social media really exacerbates them.” She cited “OK, boomer,” a retort popularized online by Gen Z in 2019, as an example.

As Gen Alpha’s slang terms make their way into the wider (read: older) world, the young people responsible for their popularity are ready to move onto what’s next.

“If millennials start saying them, we’ll be like, ‘We’re done with these now,’” Jaedyn said.

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

A big part of it is tone. Part of "lolrandom XD" is the "XD." Skibidi Toilet is just too dystopian.

Here's early lolrandom XD from the early aughts, a Black Albino animation that was reuploaded onto Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nZMwKPmsbWE

The tone is completely different. It's entirely flippant on what is essential nuclear holocaust where the vast majority of humanity dies. The tone is "omg what if we all nuked each other lololxDDDD" Using another ancient animation like that Badger song, tonally, it's basically "omg a bunch of badgers dancing for no reason xD," "lolol a red mushroom XD how random xD," and "oh no D: a snaaaaaaaake XD." Even something like Charlie the Unicorn is mostly just lolrandom XD with a darker ending of the horse having his kidney stolen.

By the early 2010s, "lolrandom XD" humor was beginning to phase out. Stuff like YTP that were once completely random now start to have coherent plots. It also began to lose the "XD." But even then, I mostly noticed the trend in currently existing YTP scenes, for lack of a better word.

Compare KOTH YTPs:

2010: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S9bGVMBMXY0 This is a prototypical YTP. It uses "lolrandom XD" with a lot of the more obnoxious YTP conventions.

2013: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZ8nN6hTnmM This uses various conventions of KOTH YTP, but it really isn't one. The tone is completely dark and gone are any attempts to be random or even be humorous. It portrays a disturbing picture of Hank Hill.

2015: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BcbUFniOjHI (The video was originally released around 2015). This video is close enough to still be a YTP, but there's a coherent story that isn't just based on the source material. It's also fairly dark at places, culminating with Hank Hill killing Dale Gribble and running over his corpse with his pickup.

2013-2014 was when those "Shrek is love, Shrek is life" videos started to appear and when Filthy Frank became more prominent. But even those were mostly just people being edgy. What if beloved fictional character Shrek sodomized some teenager? What if some dude dressed up in a pink suit went around harassing random strangers?

I say post-2016 because of course, 2016 is the year of Trump. A lot of the "edgy for the sake of being edgy" starts to look completely terrible in hindsight. People either quit being edgy, which is what Filthy Frank/Joji did, or dive deep into becoming fashy. But even then, the desire for dark and dystopian works never went away. It stopped being edgy, but it still continued to be dark.

This was the creator of Skibidi Toilet's most popular video pre-Skibidi Toilet from 2017: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yyXUNLr5L9E I'm not as familiar with gmod YTP, but it's already far removed from "lolrandom XD." It's like this unsettling bizarre body horror. I mean, the video ends with a giant Big Smokes head voring CJ. 2020 was when Aamon Animations released his first video which has the same body horror. Here's a random Youtube channel I follow with this video from 2022: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_0FuLYAYkU. It has the same general "disturbing eldritch horror" vibe that all these videos have. Proto-Skibidi Toilet would be released in December 2022: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUgJDRPDVgw And 2023 is when Skibidi Toilet went viral.

I mostly see Skibidi Toilet as an obvious product of its time. You could argue that it could've been release in 2019 or 2021, but not 2013 or even 2016. Even the length of the early episodes is fit for Tiktok, which was released internationally in 2018.

Sorry for the rambling post. I guess I'm just annoyed when people try to make it out to be something that would've been released in Newgrounds way back in the day.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)