Tiktok is flooded with new trends almost every day. The latest addition to that list is finger tricks and one particular video showcasing that trend is going all kinds of viral after it was shared on Twitter. Since being shared on November 21, the seven-second-long video has garnered over 5. Further, it has also amassed close to 4.

RELATED ARTICLES


People started sharing their attempts at the viral hand trick.
An 'auditory illusion ' has gone viral after blowing the internet's minds, as the audio in the clip isn't actually getting higher in pitch, despite what it sounds like. The video was originally shared on TikTok by a user called Michael McBride, who shares 'fun facts' and 'bite-sized history' with his , followers under the handle idea. In the video, text tells us: " This is an auditory illusion. The sound isn't actually getting higher, but your brain thinks it is - which is why you're probably thinking The camera then cuts to a handwritten note that the video began with, which reads: "There's no way this is a loop. Clever, eh? Well, clever and completely baffling, of course.
Amanda Hess,
A complete story may be unspooled in a fleeting video snippet, a tweet, a GIF. The social media app TikTok has built an entire world on that premise, amassing a vast global collection of second clips that are changing the way we sing, dance, pose, joke, dress, collaborate and cook. It is home to comedy sketches, dance challenges, makeshift runway shows and short-short films. The most ambitious ones arrive as mini-epics, complete with soundtracks, visual effects and narrative arcs. TikTok was started in by the Chinese company ByteDance, but only recently has it gained real traction in the United States. Though this country is by no means the center of creative gravity, which is a part of its appeal. It feels as if there are endless TikTok universes unfolding all at once. And so last week, over 48 hours, five critics of The New York Times with different specialties and varying familiarity with the app took a look at what it has to offer.
Viral Optical Illusi An optical illusion on TikTok has gone viral, leaving many people stumped as to how it works. A TikTok user called Kevin, who shares content to his 34, followers under the handle kevkevkiwi, posted a video of a strange trick involving two arch shapes. Add to Chrome. Sign in. Home Local Classifieds. News Break App. News Break Viral Optical Illusi Mastering contemporary emojis is hard work; in order to use them efficiently, one has to be fluent in Internet culture, and that's not something you become overnight.