TIKTOK ‘DOGSHOWS’ AND THE AMPLIFICATION OF ONLINE INCIVILITY AMONG GEN Z INFLUENCERS IN THE PHILIPPINES

Autores/as

  • Samuel Idris Cabbuag University of the Philippines Diliman; Hong Kong Baptist University
  • Crystal Abidin

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2024i0.13913

Palabras clave:

TikTok, Dogshow, Online incivility, Gen Z, Philippines

Resumen

Studies on digital platforms and online incivility have established that uses of humor can lean towards cyberbullying and hate speech. Focusing on TikTok’s affordances and cultures of online incivility, this paper studies how TikTok influencers and their audiences maneuver legal-but-harmful humour (Matamoros-Fernández et al., 2023). Specifically, we study how online incivility has become an accepted and negotiated practice in the Filipino context through the phenomenon of ‘dogshows’, where users throw jabs at individuals using derogatory humor and provocative memes. Through online observation and textual analysis of TikTok posts and their corresponding comment sections, we demonstrate how online incivility is subtly amplified through humour and play, and how Gen Z and young children became both objects and producers of these dogshows. We argue that while there is already peer surveillance on TikTok, there needs to be more deliberation between TikTok and at-risk groups to make the platform a more civil space.

Descargas

Publicado

2025-01-02

Cómo citar

Cabbuag, . S. I., & Abidin, C. (2025). TIKTOK ‘DOGSHOWS’ AND THE AMPLIFICATION OF ONLINE INCIVILITY AMONG GEN Z INFLUENCERS IN THE PHILIPPINES. AoIR Selected Papers of Internet Research. https://doi.org/10.5210/spir.v2024i0.13913

Número

Sección

Papers C