Citations:corecore

English citations of corecore

  • 2023 January 14, Chance Townsend, “Explaining corecore: How TikTok's newest trend may be a genuine Gen-Z art form”, in Mashable[1]:
    All these TikToks share the same qualities: Amateurishly-edited clips of found media, a blisteringly quick editing style, and depressing, melancholic music. They all share the same hashtag: #corecore. [] However, it is the idea of corecore and what it can (or could) represent that has given rise to what some consider a genuine form of art by Gen-Z.
  • 2023 January 20, Moises Mendez II, “What to Know About Corecore, the Latest Aesthetic Taking Over TikTok”, in Time[2]:
    A somber violin piece soundtracks the 20-second video that unintentionally came to define the Corecore aesthetic as it is now known on TikTok.
  • 2023 March 30, Hannah Ewens, “‘Why am I crying over this?’: how corecore TikTok videos caught the mood of Gen Z”, in The Guardian[3], →ISSN:
    They’re crudely edited and the name in itself is a sarcastic reference to the proliferation of micro-trends emerging from TikTok since 2020. But he was soon staying up late at night in his bedroom making corecore of his own.