LOS ANGELES: In a luxury mansion in the Hollywood Hills, young TikTok influencers bounced around on a bright sunny morning this week trying out new ideas for zany short form videos that they hope will go viral. They’re also feeling concerned about their future.
Kids Next Door LA is one of a number of TikTok houses set up around the US where teens live, sleep and brainstorm creative ideas for dance and music videos and seek deals with brands that can bring in millions of dollars for the top influencers.
But their livelihoods are now at risk from an executive order by US President Donald Trump that will effectively ban the social media app if its Chinese parent ByteDance does not reach a deal to divest it by mid-September.
“For two to five months, maybe, everybody is going to take a big hit. Everyone is going to lose a stream of revenue. I think it’s really stupid ... what Trump is doing,” said Adam Miguest 27, known on TikTok as @itsadamm, who is one of the seven influencers at the house.
Walmart Inc said this week it was joining Microsoft in a bid for TikTok’s US assets. ByteDance is expected to pick a bidder to enter into exclusive talks as early as Friday but it’s not clear how any deal would affect the future of the quirky videos that are loved by millions and those who make them.
Claire Hesser, 18, a former beauty queen, says TikTok has quickly become a huge part of youth culture.
“I feel like if it gets taken away, I feel it’s going to hurt more rather than benefit... I just wish that they understood that TikTok really does have an impact on our world today and our generation especially,” she said.
Published in Dawn, August 29th, 2020