This week in youth culture, everyone is asking whether you'd rather be trapped in the woods with a man or with a bear, a question that reveals a stark truth about gender. In less-depressing developments, a womanâs duet with a kitchen fan has legitimately touched people's hearts, and a YouTuber has done some serious research about North Korean entertainment.
This hypothetical question has the online world embroiled in discussion and controversy this week: âWould you rather be stuck in the woods with a man or with a bear?â The source of question seems to be this street interview video from TikToker Screenshot, that was referenced on this video from @callmebkbk. It's since spread everywhere, and nearly all women immediately answer âa bear.â Itâs a seemingly meaningless question that uncovers a brutal truth.
The reasons women choose the bear are heartbreaking: âI've never been followed home by a bear,â âNo one is going to tell me Iâm lying or imagining it if I get mauled by a bear,â and "at least with a bear I don't have to worry about running into them at a family reunion.â
While women seem to understand the nature of the question immediately, if you're a man, it can take a little coaxing. (My gut response was "A man. Bears will kill you.") This leads to a clarifying just-for-men question: "Would you rather have your daughter/wife be alone with a man or a bear?" This seems to clear things up instantly, and the moment of realization of what the question implies is fascinating.
Another interesting twist: If you change the parameters to "a woman or a bear," the choice of "woman" is a no-brainer.
If you were hoping that maybe, just this one time, men would just shut up and listen, youâd be disappointed. Here are some responses from Redditâs Ask Men subreddit: âWomen just like to get together and talk shit about men,â âI don't think that they realize the unintended consequence of low key misandry is misogyny,â âthey like fueling the gender war and being the victim," and âthere's a reason our fathers and grandfathers just didn't listen to women when they yap." Way to prove the point, fellas.
For the record, there are about 40 bear attacks per year worldwide and about quarter million rapes.
The man vs. bear thing is so depressing, I'm following it up with a gender-related TikTok thing that is heartwarmingâthe âwatch my boyfriendâ trend. Hereâs how it works: women or girls start recording a video, ask their audience âcan you guys watch my boyfriend for a second?â then point the phone at their boyfriends and walk out of the room. Thatâs it. But the videos are heartwarming and wholesome. Some dudes sit and eat crackers, or sit and do nothing. Some tell you whatâs on their minds. Or lay down you some boyfriend-y facts about flamingos. It's good to have a reminder that a lot of young people are having normal relationships with normal people sometimes.
I used to think that the one redeeming contribution Elon Musk made to society was convincing douche bros that it was cool to drive an electric car, but the reaction to Muskâs Cybertruck might even take that away. The vehicle has been on the road since November, and if youâre wondering whether young people are coveting it like they did when the Tesla came out in 2008, it doesnât seem like it.
Tesla sold 3,878 of the things since launch, which isnât bad compared to sales of other electric trucks, but itâs far from the 250,000 a year Musk once promised. The truck has been plagued with problems since its announcement, when a demonstration of its bulletproof windows went hilariously wrong. It rusts easily. Itâs prone to software errors. It might chop off your fingers. You canât take it through a car wash. Itâs being recalled due to a potentially deadly design error that could result in a stuck accelerator. And itâs really, really ugly.
Maybe the tech problems can be ironed out, and maybe there are a lot of people out there ready to shell out 80k for the next-gen Cybertruck no matter how ugly it is, but I seriously doubt it. Mainly because the Cybertruck just isnât cool. This is a vibe thing, so I could be wrong, but when people are arguing that something âis so uncool that it comes back around to cool again,â itâs the kiss of death.
There is hope for Elon's folly over the long term, though. Cars that were ridiculous jokes upon their releaseâThe Edsel in the 1950s, the DeLorean in the 1980sâtend to be fondly remembered after enough time has passed and everyone has gone bankrupt.
This weekâs viral video is a short clip of TikTok of musician Claire Boyer harmonizing with a kitchen fan while making dinner (tacos, specifically). Itâs hard to explain why, but these 20 seconds of wordless vocalizing struck a nerve with people. The nameless tune really is otherworldly, disquieting, and nostalgic, and over 19 million people have viewed the video since it was posted earlier this month. TikTokers are suggesting lyrics in the comment section, responding with duets or posting videos explaining the emotions, memories and thoughts the song evokes. Boyer says sheâs working on a full song based on the video, taking lyrical suggestions from her comment section, and I can't wait for the fans-and-artist collaboration that will come from it. Although I doubt it will beat the simplicity of the original item.
Since âharmonizing with a fanâ is such a short video, I thought Iâd include a long-form viral video to balance the scales. Most viral videos are short, amusing, and forgettable, but thereâs a growing audience for content that takes extremely deep dives into niche subjects, like Entertainment Made by North Korea, a five-and-a-half-hour(!) video from YouTuber Paper Will that goes into great detail about the history, context, and meaning of movies, music, and TV shows made by and for North Korea. Itâs a fascinating video on its own, but itâs also gratifying to see how many people have watched it, and how enthusiastically theyâve responded.
Full story here:
The "man or bear" question, explained
This hypothetical question has the online world embroiled in discussion and controversy this week: âWould you rather be stuck in the woods with a man or with a bear?â The source of question seems to be this street interview video from TikToker Screenshot, that was referenced on this video from @callmebkbk. It's since spread everywhere, and nearly all women immediately answer âa bear.â Itâs a seemingly meaningless question that uncovers a brutal truth.
The reasons women choose the bear are heartbreaking: âI've never been followed home by a bear,â âNo one is going to tell me Iâm lying or imagining it if I get mauled by a bear,â and "at least with a bear I don't have to worry about running into them at a family reunion.â
While women seem to understand the nature of the question immediately, if you're a man, it can take a little coaxing. (My gut response was "A man. Bears will kill you.") This leads to a clarifying just-for-men question: "Would you rather have your daughter/wife be alone with a man or a bear?" This seems to clear things up instantly, and the moment of realization of what the question implies is fascinating.
Another interesting twist: If you change the parameters to "a woman or a bear," the choice of "woman" is a no-brainer.
If you were hoping that maybe, just this one time, men would just shut up and listen, youâd be disappointed. Here are some responses from Redditâs Ask Men subreddit: âWomen just like to get together and talk shit about men,â âI don't think that they realize the unintended consequence of low key misandry is misogyny,â âthey like fueling the gender war and being the victim," and âthere's a reason our fathers and grandfathers just didn't listen to women when they yap." Way to prove the point, fellas.
For the record, there are about 40 bear attacks per year worldwide and about quarter million rapes.
TikTokâs âwatch my boyfriendâ trend
The man vs. bear thing is so depressing, I'm following it up with a gender-related TikTok thing that is heartwarmingâthe âwatch my boyfriendâ trend. Hereâs how it works: women or girls start recording a video, ask their audience âcan you guys watch my boyfriend for a second?â then point the phone at their boyfriends and walk out of the room. Thatâs it. But the videos are heartwarming and wholesome. Some dudes sit and eat crackers, or sit and do nothing. Some tell you whatâs on their minds. Or lay down you some boyfriend-y facts about flamingos. It's good to have a reminder that a lot of young people are having normal relationships with normal people sometimes.
Is the Cybertruck a failure yet?
I used to think that the one redeeming contribution Elon Musk made to society was convincing douche bros that it was cool to drive an electric car, but the reaction to Muskâs Cybertruck might even take that away. The vehicle has been on the road since November, and if youâre wondering whether young people are coveting it like they did when the Tesla came out in 2008, it doesnât seem like it.
Tesla sold 3,878 of the things since launch, which isnât bad compared to sales of other electric trucks, but itâs far from the 250,000 a year Musk once promised. The truck has been plagued with problems since its announcement, when a demonstration of its bulletproof windows went hilariously wrong. It rusts easily. Itâs prone to software errors. It might chop off your fingers. You canât take it through a car wash. Itâs being recalled due to a potentially deadly design error that could result in a stuck accelerator. And itâs really, really ugly.
Maybe the tech problems can be ironed out, and maybe there are a lot of people out there ready to shell out 80k for the next-gen Cybertruck no matter how ugly it is, but I seriously doubt it. Mainly because the Cybertruck just isnât cool. This is a vibe thing, so I could be wrong, but when people are arguing that something âis so uncool that it comes back around to cool again,â itâs the kiss of death.
There is hope for Elon's folly over the long term, though. Cars that were ridiculous jokes upon their releaseâThe Edsel in the 1950s, the DeLorean in the 1980sâtend to be fondly remembered after enough time has passed and everyone has gone bankrupt.
Viral video of the week: harmonizing with a fan
This weekâs viral video is a short clip of TikTok of musician Claire Boyer harmonizing with a kitchen fan while making dinner (tacos, specifically). Itâs hard to explain why, but these 20 seconds of wordless vocalizing struck a nerve with people. The nameless tune really is otherworldly, disquieting, and nostalgic, and over 19 million people have viewed the video since it was posted earlier this month. TikTokers are suggesting lyrics in the comment section, responding with duets or posting videos explaining the emotions, memories and thoughts the song evokes. Boyer says sheâs working on a full song based on the video, taking lyrical suggestions from her comment section, and I can't wait for the fans-and-artist collaboration that will come from it. Although I doubt it will beat the simplicity of the original item.
Special bonus viral video of the week: Entertainment Made By North Korea
Since âharmonizing with a fanâ is such a short video, I thought Iâd include a long-form viral video to balance the scales. Most viral videos are short, amusing, and forgettable, but thereâs a growing audience for content that takes extremely deep dives into niche subjects, like Entertainment Made by North Korea, a five-and-a-half-hour(!) video from YouTuber Paper Will that goes into great detail about the history, context, and meaning of movies, music, and TV shows made by and for North Korea. Itâs a fascinating video on its own, but itâs also gratifying to see how many people have watched it, and how enthusiastically theyâve responded.
Full story here: