< P class = "uk-text-lead" > one of the phases among the generation of the jar
< p > What products lately not obsessed modern buyers ? & nbsp;
< P > These are Labuba toys, Dubai chocolate with pistachio stuffing, latte match, Crumbl cookies and other things that are overwhelmed by social media. & Amp; nbsp;
~ ~ < p > Online trands are not first impregnated into the physical world, but modern consumer obsession & mdash; In fact, not too new. In particular, Dubai chocolate appeared on separate shelves in 2021, and Starbucks began to sell a patch from green tea almost 20 years ago. & Amp; nbsp; nbsp; viral popularity of these products testifies to the desire for a certain lifestyle & mdash; However, a little artificial, meaningless and probably devoid of taste. This phase is appropriate to call IRL Brain Rot & mdash; At least so they say in the column of The New Yorker. Why ? we explain everything in more detail.
< P >< Img Alt = "Labuba Toys" SRC = "/Upload/Image/Jerry_ (314) .png" Loading = "Lazy"/>0 ~/P > 62 > 62 < p > irl brain rot & mdash; It is a culture that exists physically but remains incomprehensible without the Internet.
< p >The Oxford Dictionary chose the Brain Rot with the word 2024 & mdash; He decided to outline a set of absurd memes and phrases that can be understood by spending a lot of time in Tiktok. Skibidi Toilet, Rizz, Delulu & mdash; and the more of one in one sentence, the more understandable to everyone around how actively a person uses the Internet.
< p > The same applies to physical things. It is not enough to simply have a labuba toy & mdash; You need to combine it with something else. For the more trends, the more demonstrative their strength (though completely lost & mdash; meaning).
< blockquote > < p > & laquo; one fashionable object cannot cover the entire latitude of the algorithmic tape, which ultimately affects what we wear, what we eat, who we communicate with and where we go & raquo; & mdash; referred to The New Yorker.
< p > Therefore, chocolate and pistachio syrups are added to the latus match, creating the taste of Dubai chocolate & mdash; And it does not look like a mixture of green and light brown. The main & mdash; People feel involved in products that suddenly become viral.< p > As they write in the material, IRL Brain Rot seems to be a radical aesthetic movement, although it collects commercial and superficial trends. His strength & mdash; In particular, products that can shock or offend more sophisticated people. Therefore, such & laquo; bad & raquo; taste & mdash; It’s like an avant -garde that is now actively created on the Internet.
< P > The New Yorker notes that the culture of mixing trends and their receiving now is inevitable. And the only way out of it & mdash; pass this stage.
< P >< Img Alt = "Dubai Chocolate" SRC = "/Upload/Image/Img_6620.jpeg" Loading = "Lazy"/>0 ~/P > 62 > 62 > 62 < p > Recall that we recently wrote about Skibidi, Tradwife, Delulu and other neologisms that are now in the Cambridge Dictionary.