Sludge content is consuming TikTok. Why aren't we talking about it? - Action News
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Sludge content is consuming TikTok. Why aren't we talking about it?

Imagine this: you're watching three videos play simultaneously, all on the same screen. While it might seem overwhelming, this is sludge content one of the most popular formats of media on TikTok. But researchers dont know where it came from or how it could affect us.

Content style is one of the most popular online, but researchers are only just learning it exists

Sludge content invades TikTok feeds

2 years ago
Duration 3:41
'Sludge content' is filling up TikTok feeds, using split screens to pair users clips with unrelated footage. Its aimed at getting users to watch for just a little longer, and increase views for content creators.

Billy Obermanwas usingTikTok as a means to an end. Instead of looking for his own entertainment, the New Jersey musician had downloaded the app as a way to promote his content, only browsing occasionally.But fairly quickly, an odd thing happened.

Seemingly out of nowhere, his feed was choked by Stewie, Brian and Peter Griffin. Because quite by accident, and against his will, he'dfallendown what he callsthe Family Guy"pipeline."

"You're watching it and you're not really taking it in it's just something to stimulate you," he said. "It's like Cocomelon,"a YouTube channel geared towardinfants but here,aimed atadults.

But what Obermansawis just a smallexample of what the few people who have studied itare calling "sludge content."

And while it seems insidious, Oberman says it's an experience shared by many on the app: TikTok's video recommendation algorithm, which is supposed to deliver content based on your interests,relentlessly showing users clips packaged in a very particular, and overstimulating, way.

The types ofvideos that make up this experience areeverywhere on the app, but it's unlikely non-users have seen anything like it. That's because the style of video that Oberman stumbled upon exists almost solely on TikTok, and only came into being in the last few years.

The "pipeline," as Oberman and others have dubbed it,is basically justsegments from Seth MacFarlane'sanimated sitcomFamily Guy reposted on TikTok what Canadian YouTuber Savanticsreferred toas "the new age of piracy:Family Guyepisodes being posted in several parts, with soap-cutting underneath, by accounts run by bots."

Instead of playing alone, the segmentssit on top of low-substance, high-interest videos. Sometimes they're recordings of mobile video games likeKnife JumporSubway Surfers. Other times they areASMR"satisfying videos":short for "autonomous sensory meridian response" (these videos showcreators squishing and cutting intovarious substances like coloured bars of soap to elicit thatresponse). Sometimesthe segments arecombined witha third or even fourth videoto create a jumbled mess of meaningless visual stimulation.

"I will have a moment of clarity while I'm watching and be like, 'What am I doing?' ThenI'll just continue to watch," said Oberman. "That's where we're at, technology and entertainment-wise."

But cartoon clips taking over feeds is only a symptom of a wider change in media creation and consumption that'saltering the voices, and ideas,that gain audiences all while going virtually unnoticed.

WATCH | What is the Family Guy pipeline?

"This is an example of this larger trend of dumbed-down content, which is meant to be consumed passively rather than intelligently and actively," saidSaif Shahin, an assistant professor of digital culture at Tilburg University in the Netherlands.

"What TikTok is doing with these videos is allowing people to have distractions on the same screen ...[and therefore] have people stay on the same screen for an extended period of time.

"This form of media content is not meant for active engagement," he added. "While it draws on people's already limited abilities to be attentive to media for extended periods of time, it then reinforces that and further limits people's attention spans."

The Family Guy phenomenon, specifically, has been recognizedmostly due to a related memeand the odd fact that a cartoon more than two decades old gained newfound popularity.

But the encompassingtrend has been almost completely unrecognized, even as it becomes a dominant media form on one of the most dominant media platforms on Earth a "digital advertising juggernaut" which made roughly $10 billion US in ad revenue alone last year, according to the New York Times.

The technique is a corollary to theTikTok trend "corecore" a seeminglycarelessly mashed-together style of video-making that has beencalleda "genuine Gen-Z art form" byMashable. But the former'spervasiveness hasn'tbeen as well-noted; in fact,it's so successfully passed under the radar researchers have no ideawhere it came from and it barely even has a name.

Understudied media trend

"Yours is one of the first emails I've gotten from a journalist where I was like,'We should do a study on that now,'" said Gordon Pennycook, an associate professor of behavioural science at the University of Regina. "Check back in a little bit, because we will probably run some experiments."

That's because Family Guy is far from the only source for this video treatment. South Park,The Simpsons and a litany of TV and movie clips have received the same packaging.

"At first it feels like a chaotic jumbled mess that has been hastily thrown together in the hopes that at least one element of it will grab your attention," reads Kaycia Ainsworth's essay The Content Culture Crisis. "But its disordered nature is not only intentional, it's essential. The intention is to not only hook you in, but to disassociate you entirely."

WATCH | TikTok's security issues explained:

Breaking down TikTok security concerns

2 years ago
Duration 0:01
The National's Ian Hanomansing asks cyber security experts Brian Haugli and Alana Staszcyszyn about how worried TikTok users should be about having the app on their devices.

Given its newness, there have been a number of proposed names. Content creators interviewed for this article suggested "stim-maxxing" and "stim-tok" for what it does to the brain.

Ahmed Al-Rawi, an associate professor of social media and communications at Simon Fraser University in B.C., suggested"cocktail content" for how it mixes unrelated ingredients:"Most of the time it's nonsensical, there is no connection [but] I don't think this will stop it will continue to grow."

But Ainsworthfirst labelled thetrend "content sludge," though for whatever reason, the word order wasreversedas the idea picked upon Twitter. Still,the few TikTok posts that recognize the trendretainthe original phrase intended tocontrast what Ainsworth described as the "once rich and fertile mud" of past internet platforms with their current state.

"The more our media focuses on producing sensory stimulating content, the more we search it out and begin to require it to avoid boredom," Ainsworth wrote. "We are so overwhelmed by sensory input and wading through content sludge that we are trained into craving it."

Sheena Peckham, a digital content executive for children's online safety non-profit organizationInternet Matters,likened that training to "second screening," the pandemic-fuelled trend of, for example, simultaneously using yourphone while watching a movie.

While sludge content can be seen as a kind of built-in second-screening, Pennycook and Al-Rawi both cautioned againsta moral panic.

Instead of turning it into a generational critique likepast worries over the rise of video games, it would be better for parents to simply be mindful of screentime and recognize the media weconsume is forever changing, they said.

In abstract, the form isn't even all that new. Chris Gabriel, creator of YouTube channel and multimedia projectMemeAnalysis, noted its similarity to YouTube commentary, and the tactic of putting graphics around copyrighted videos to avoid automatic takedowns. While sludge content could have evolved directly from the success of the latter example, Gabriel said there's a more obvious reason for its current ubiquity.

"Of course," he said, "young people raised on this rather than on television or film or whatever yes, they're going to need things that are faster and faster."

WATCH | Sludge content and 'parasocial agency':

Pennycook said that while it's still untested, the greater risk tosludge content consumers comes from those using it to try to convince a person of a particular viewpoint.

"I can see the potential risk for it impacting the way that people process the information, because it's essentially a form of distraction," Pennycook, who specializes in the field of misinformation, said.

"Even if having the extra video increases the amount of time that people spend, and those people are successful at ignoring the message, that will still trick the algorithm into showing that video to more people who may not be as discerning when they see the content."

YouTuber Blair Chapman a cognitive science graduate of USC who says he worked at a startup that used sludge content to test and promote engagement pointed to itas the reason controversialinfluencers like Andrew Tate and Sneakogained such popularity.

Coining it "parasocial agency," Chapman said those creators who often package their opinions as self-help content create an association between their adviceand the feeling of accomplishment watchers get from tasks or video-gamelevels being completed in the accompanying videos.

"Then you stop watching the content and it's like, 'Oh wow, I'm still in the same position and none of this got done,'" he said. "But that's what makes it such good content: it hooks you and [convinces you] all those things are happening."

A man is shown on a TikTok screen. The screen is split horizontally down the  middle. Beneath him is a video game clip of a car crashing.
Blair Chapman argues that videos from influencers paired with sludge content can trick the algorithm, and viewers, into sharing their ideology. (sneakoenterprise/TikTok)

But Betsi Grabe, a researcher of cognitive processes and principal investigator at Indiana University'sObservatory onSocial Media, says sludge content is unlikely to hypnotize anyone. Pointing to a field of study called "audio-visual redundancy," she said that whenever sound and video compete for humans' attention, video wins.

Because of that, she doesn't believe sludge content influencers' diatribes will seep into anyone's unconscious. Instead, they'll just ignore them.

"So would you draw eyeballs putting some visual candy to your talking head? Sure. I buy that," she said. "Would you get your message across more effectively? No. And we know money is to be made by eyeballs, right?"

What is risky, she said,is letting the trend proliferate without researchers, or those watching, aware it even exists or of how it affects them.

With files from Laura Thompson