Drew Afualo’s laugh is a weapon, a cri de coeur, and a cleansing fire. It’s a staccato, full-chested explosion of high-pitched emotion and outrage. It’s also brimming with the shock of recognition: Of course this jerk would say that. Afualo says it’s just how Polynesian people laugh (she’s Samoan), but she deploys it as a kind of punchline and for a very specific purpose. She makes some of the most popular videos on TikTok, the app that effectively owns youth culture, by roasting dudes online.
The common threads uniting her targets are racism, fatphobia, and above all, misogyny, a poison familiar to any woman who’s voiced an opinion on the internet or walked a busy city street. In a typical video, which comes in at under three minutes, she shows a clip of a man shouting something about how he’d never date a fat woman or how a girl needs to try harder with her appearance. Then she cuts back in to laugh at him and break down what a loser he is.
This formula has earned Afualo, a 26-year-old former digital media coordinator in Southern California, 7.5 million fans on TikTok and a living off of views and sponsorships. Among the app’s billion users, few have an audience that big. Among the 11 million popular creators tracked by influencer marketing firm Captiv8, only 947 clear that bar. Afualo is still a ways off from the likes of Selena Gomez (with 42.3 million fans) or Justin Bieber (25.7 million), but she’s in the same ballpark as Jimmy Fallon (8.7 million) and gaining ground.
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Esta historia es de la edición August 08 - 15, 2022 (Double Issue) de Bloomberg Businessweek US.
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