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Home / Entertainment

TikTok creators warn of economic and social impact if app is banned in the US

By Leah Willingham
AP·
18 Mar, 2024 05:00 PM6 mins to read

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The US House of Representatives passed a bipartisan bill leading to the nationwide ban of TikTok. Photo / Getty Images

The US House of Representatives passed a bipartisan bill leading to the nationwide ban of TikTok. Photo / Getty Images

Content creators say a TikTok ban would hurt countless people and businesses that rely on the app for a significant portion of their income.

Alex Pearlman shut the door on dreams of a standup comedy career almost a decade ago, pivoting from the stage to an office cubicle where he worked a customer service job.

Then he started posting random jokes and commentary about pop culture and politics on TikTok. Just over 2.5 million followers later, he quit his nine-to-five and recently booked his first nationwide tour.

Pearlman is among the many TikTok creators across the United States outraged over a bipartisan bill passed by the House of Representatives on Wednesday that would lead to a nationwide ban of the popular video app if its China-based owner, ByteDance, doesn’t sell its stake. The bill still needs to go through the Senate, where its prospects are unclear.

Content creators say a ban would hurt countless people and businesses that rely on TikTok for a significant portion of their income, while also arguing TikTok has become an unrivalled platform for dialogue and community.

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Content creators say a ban would hurt countless people and businesses that rely on TikTok for a significant portion of their income. Photo / AP
Content creators say a ban would hurt countless people and businesses that rely on TikTok for a significant portion of their income. Photo / AP

Pearlman, who lives outside Philadelphia, said TikTok has transformed his life, allowing him to live a dream, provide for his family and spend the first three months of his newborn son’s life at home. His customer service job had offered paternity leave equivalent to only three weeks off, with two weeks paid.

“I don’t take a day for granted on this app, because it’s been so shocking,” said Pearlman, 39. “In reality, TikTok has been the driver of American social media for the last four years. Something will step into that place if TikTok vanishes tomorrow. Whether or not that will be better or worse, Congress has no way of knowing.”

TikTok, which launched in 2016, has skyrocketed in popularity, growing faster than Instagram, YouTube or Facebook. The push to remove the app from Chinese authority follows concerns from lawmakers, law enforcement and intelligence officials about the insecurity of user data, potential suppression of content unfavourable to the Chinese Government and the possibility that the platform could boost pro-Beijing propaganda, all of which TikTok denies.

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So far, the US Government has provided no evidence showing TikTok has shared US user data with Chinese authorities.

The move comes as the Covid-19 pandemic saw huge growth in digital marketing as people were stuck at home consuming — and creating — content at levels not seen before.

Jensen Savannah is now a full-time influencer on TikTok who has tripled her income since leaving her telecommunications sales job. Photo / AP
Jensen Savannah is now a full-time influencer on TikTok who has tripled her income since leaving her telecommunications sales job. Photo / AP

Jensen Savannah, a 29-year-old from Charlotte, began making TikToks of her travels around the Carolinas during the pandemic. Now a full-time influencer, she has tripled her income since leaving her telecommunications sales job.

“‘Social media Influencer’ is almost to be looked at as the new print and the new form of radio and TV advertising,” she said. “It’s going to bring your dollar much farther than it is in traditional marketing.”

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Some creators describe it as a digital equaliser of sorts, providing a platform for people of colour and other marginalised groups to get opportunities and exposure.

“I’ve always had Twitter, I’ve had Facebook, I’ve had Instagram. But TikTok was the first one where, if you want to find somebody who looks like yourself and represents you in any type of way, you can find it,” said Joshua Dairen, a black 30-year-old content creator in Auburn, Alabama. Dairen makes videos about his state’s ghost stories, urban legends and history.

Growing up, he loved researching everything paranormal, but he didn’t see a lot of black representation in the field. Exposure on TikTok has led to jobs writing freelance pieces and contributing to documentaries about paranormal occurrences and unsolved mysteries. The app also gave Dairen the flexibility and confidence to open his own coffee shop, where he gets visits at least once a day from fans of his work.

He thinks banning TikTok sets “a dangerous precedent about how much power our highest levels of Government can wield”.

Others say the app is both a financial and social safety net.

Chris Bautista, a food truck owner in Los Angeles catering to television and movie sets, started using TikTok during the pandemic to connect with members of the LGBTQ+ community and show support for those who might be having a hard time.

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Bautista, 37, grew up in a conservative Christian community outside LA and didn’t come out until his late 20s. As a young person, he struggled with his mental health and considered suicide. He wanted to create a platform he could have used as a teenager, one showing that someone like him could go to that dark place and come out the other side a “well-adjusted, confident person.”

“I just find the corners of TikTok that I find myself in to be so wildly important and profound,” says Bautista, adding it would be “heartbreaking” if the app is banned.

Bautista didn’t start posting with the intention of monetising the experience, but money from projects tied to the app came at the right time: If it weren’t for the extra income he earned through TikTok during the pandemic and then the Hollywood strikes last year, his business would have shut down.

Marcus Bridgewater, who owns a business and posts TikTok gardening videos, wants Congress to be focused on those issues, not whether the app is Chinese-owned. Photo / AP
Marcus Bridgewater, who owns a business and posts TikTok gardening videos, wants Congress to be focused on those issues, not whether the app is Chinese-owned. Photo / AP

Almost since its inception, concerns have been raised about the addictive nature of the app, especially for young audiences whose minds are still developing. Marcus Bridgewater, a former private school teacher and administrator who owns his own business and posts TikTok gardening videos, wants Congress to be focused on those issues, not whether the app is Chinese-owned.

“Social media is a powerful tool,” said Bridgewater, who lives in Spring, Texas. “And powerful tools are just that: They are capable of helping us transcend ourselves, but in their transcendence, they’re also capable of completely severing us from those we love.”

Pearlman said he has long feared politicians would come after TikTok. He compared the experience of finding out about the House vote to finally getting the call that an ailing loved one has died.

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“The part that’s disturbing to me is, I feel like for a lot of Americans, TikTok and social media in general is a release valve — it’s kind of become a default complaint box,” he said. “So to many people, it feels like they’re trying to ban the complaint box instead of dealing with the complaint.”

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