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Read the newsletter on buzzfeednews.com. Cat internet is making a comeback, except Gen Z’ers aren’t as “lolcats” about it TikTok / @carconc.123 I’m writing about TikTok so much these days, it probably feels like spon. It’s not, but if TikTok would like to toss me some money, you know how to get in touch.
Cats on TikTok aren’t presented as “lolcats” or with “I Can Has Cheezburger” speak, the way millennials wrote cat content during the early years of social media. Cats aren’t only seen as cutesy, airheaded memes anymore. Gen Z’ers are now writing their cats into their internet content as a more fleshed-out secondary character. I know, I know — how millennial of me to once again take their silly irreverence and analyze the shit out of it.
But I did speak to an actual Gen Z’er who has a famous cat on TikTok and is famous himself. He echoed my theories. Abram Engle is 18 and lives in Mississippi. He has an adorable 1-year-old cat named Kurt, and the two of them have amassed over 1.8 million followers on his account, @abrameng. He just graduated high school and is enrolled in college. If the app sticks around and figures out a viable business model for creators, he said, he could do TikTok full time. Instagram / @abrameng Abram told me he had about 8,000 followers on the app before he got Kurt at the end of 2019. He got him as a kitten, so over the year he would “play with him and move him around … and he ended up trusting [Abram] and letting [him[ do whatever with him,” he said. These days, Kurt is most famous for doing all the viral TikTok dances (with a little help from his dad). Some of their videos get as many views as Charli’s or Addison’s, and rightfully.
Abram also posts everyday videos with Kurt. Sometimes he perches on his shoulder. They seem very close, and I’m very jealous of their bond. These seemingly mundane videos rack up hundreds of thousands of views, and Abram said he’s even been approached by music labels and artists to make videos with their music for a one-time payment.
On TikTok, people are giving cats real human voices, documenting mundane events around being a cat owner, and participating in trends with their cats.
Abram Engle And may we finally lay the doggo-meow pun speak to rest.
Tanya Want more? Here are other stories we were following this week. Charli D’Amelio called out a TikTok creator for posting a “disgusting and disrespectful” body-shaming video about Kouvr Annon. "This is so incredibly rude," Charli said in a comment. "Kouvr is one of the most kind-hearted people I know and she does not deserve this at all."
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