Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of Politicians

TikTok and the associated technologies for recording and editing short-form video constitute a large and growing portion of online communication. Previous modalities of social media, including static images and especially text, engendered significant attention to the facticity of the communication:...

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Main Authors: Kevin Munger, Valerie Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-04-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251329990
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author Kevin Munger
Valerie Li
author_facet Kevin Munger
Valerie Li
author_sort Kevin Munger
collection DOAJ
description TikTok and the associated technologies for recording and editing short-form video constitute a large and growing portion of online communication. Previous modalities of social media, including static images and especially text, engendered significant attention to the facticity of the communication: was a statement true or false? Did an event actually take place? For a certain genre of stylized, highly edited short-form video, this is beside the point—which is to produce a compelling video that portrays a prominent figure in a particular light. We conduct an experiment to evaluate whether “edits” of prominent politicians can change voter perceptions. We find that “thirst trap” edits cause an increase in perceptions of politician attractiveness and that “badass” edits improve overall evaluations of Donald Trump (but not Joe Biden). Descriptively, we present a distribution of the evaluations of the attractiveness of Trump, Biden, Bernie Sanders, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr (“RFK”), demonstrating significant variation.
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series Social Media + Society
spelling doaj-art-6e334f45fbc743a0ac36b53ce0341d712025-08-20T03:06:35ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512025-04-011110.1177/20563051251329990Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of PoliticiansKevin Munger0Valerie Li1The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, USAThe Pennsylvania State University, University Park, USATikTok and the associated technologies for recording and editing short-form video constitute a large and growing portion of online communication. Previous modalities of social media, including static images and especially text, engendered significant attention to the facticity of the communication: was a statement true or false? Did an event actually take place? For a certain genre of stylized, highly edited short-form video, this is beside the point—which is to produce a compelling video that portrays a prominent figure in a particular light. We conduct an experiment to evaluate whether “edits” of prominent politicians can change voter perceptions. We find that “thirst trap” edits cause an increase in perceptions of politician attractiveness and that “badass” edits improve overall evaluations of Donald Trump (but not Joe Biden). Descriptively, we present a distribution of the evaluations of the attractiveness of Trump, Biden, Bernie Sanders, and Robert F. Kennedy Jr (“RFK”), demonstrating significant variation.https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251329990
spellingShingle Kevin Munger
Valerie Li
Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of Politicians
Social Media + Society
title Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of Politicians
title_full Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of Politicians
title_fullStr Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of Politicians
title_full_unstemmed Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of Politicians
title_short Thirst Traps and Quick Cuts: The Effects of TikTok “Edits” on Evaluations of Politicians
title_sort thirst traps and quick cuts the effects of tiktok edits on evaluations of politicians
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051251329990
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