“What’s wrong with the smiley emoji[?]”asked one user in a TikTok comment. Another replied,” it’s so weird. “In a different video of a woman saying that she stopped using it after learning that children don’t, a teenager commented,” At 15 years old I say you should use this bc emoji [because] we certainly won’t. “
“I use everything but the smiley emoji,” Walid Mohammed, 21, told CNN Business. “I stopped using it a while ago because I saw older people using it, like my mom, my older siblings and just older people in general.”
For many members of Generation Z, the emoji 💀 has become a popular substitute for conveying laughter. It is the visual version of the slang “I am dead” or “I am dying”, which means that something is very funny. Other acceptable alternatives: the oji emoji (officially called “Guy who cries out loud”), or just write “lol” (laughing out loud) or “lmao” (laughing out, well, you probably know the rest).
Xavier Martin, 17, called the 😂 emoji “boring” and said “not many people” his age. Stacy Thiru, 21, prefers the real crying emoji because it shows a more extreme emotion and looks more dramatic. She said she couldn’t even find the emoji laughing and crying on the keyboard of her iPhone.
A similar emoji, called “Rolling on the Floor Laughing” (🤣), is also no longer in fashion. When asked about that emoji during a video call, Thiru visibly winced. “I don’t like this one,” she said. “My mom doesn’t even use it.”
“Tears of Joy was a victim of its own success,” said Gretchen McCulloch, an Internet linguist and author of “Because Internet: Understanding the New Rules of Language”.
“If you indicate digital laughter for years and years in the same way, it starts to look fake … Hyperbole runs out with continued use,” she said. That’s why Generation Z may be looking for new and innovative ways to signal that it’s laughing in different ways.
Sometimes teenagers and young people in their twenties use emoji – like the one who laughs and cries – ironically, like sending six or seven of them in a row to friends, to exaggerate. But in general, this emoji is impossible.
“For Generation Z, it’s the same as having an Android,” said Mohammed.