- Your ATTN Please
- Posts
- Your ATTN Please || Tuesday, 13 May
Your ATTN Please || Tuesday, 13 May
Together with

Netflix and chill? More like Netflix and scroll while never deciding what to watch, amirite?
But the streaming platform believes they’ve found a way to help us answer the age-old question, “What do I want to watch today?” Netflix is testing an infinity scroll, where users are served clips of shows they may like. So, will this feature actually make it easier to decide on a show or just give me one more platform to doomscroll?
- Charlotte, Editor ♡
PRESENTED BY PLANABLE
Killing your productivity one tab at a time?
If managing comments means hopping between 10 tabs, you’re burning yourself out—and missing high-value conversations.
Now, Planable’s new in-beta feature lets you reply to Facebook and Instagram comments right where you plan and schedule your content.
Instead of tab hopping, you can:
✅ React & reply instantly (so you never miss a potential lead or collab)
✅ Streamline your workflow (so you can focus on high-impact work)
✅ Stop context switching (so you can get more done in less time)
Be one of the first to try out the tool that lets you create, approve & schedule content PLUS reply to comments, all in one place. 👇
WHAT’S HAPPENING IN MARKETING TODAY?
Netflix intros TikTok-style video feed, Pinterest is so back & RIP Skype

Netflix is rolling out a TikTok-style feed
TikTok, you are never beating the trendsetter allegations. Because these biddies really do all wanna be you. Instagram be jacking your style. YouTube. And now Netflix, who is officially redesigning the homepage to make it even more addictive. The platform will now include a fresh feed of vertical videos with dole out recommendations for mobile app users. In an endless vertical array, Netflix will show clips from originals like Bridgerton and Squid Game.
This obviously will promote its content library to its subscribers, but also keep pace with other platforms that dispense short-form film and TV clips. On YouTube Shorts, for example, some of the most popular channels are glorified Squid Game meme accounts. So it makes total sense for Netflix to covet a piece of that audience.
Pinterest is sooo back.
Last year, I was writing articles arguing against the vile rumours that my beloved emotional support platform was dying. It was, to an extent, true. AI slop had strangled Pinterest of good content and users were becoming disillusioned. But alas, the platform has pulled a Britney 2008 Circus-era comeback, with global monthly users rising 10% to 570 million in the first quarter (hell yeah), and shares jumping more than 11% on Friday. If gains hold, according to Reuters, Pinterest is set to add around $2 billion to its market cap. I TOLD Y’ALL, YOU DAMN NON-BELIEVERS. Moving on.
Skype shuts down after 22 years.
Truly the end of an era. Skype was the first of its kind. Sort of a radical resistance to Telcos and their expensive long-distance calls, Skype was many users' first time experiencing video calling someone on the other side of the world, myself included (except for maybe Omegle, but we won’t mention the horrors experienced there.)
Microsoft first acquired Skype in 2011 for $8.5B, which was, at the time, its largest ever acquisition. Skype’s peak saw over 300 million active users as the dominant video calling platform on the internet. Fast forward to recent years, and Skype has sadly declined in relevance. Its user base shrank to 36 million due to competition from Zoom, WhatsApp, and Microsoft's own Teams platform. We bid you adieu, sweet Skype, you served us well x
-Sophie, Writer
DEEP DIVE
TikTok has turned real world crises into an aesthetic. So, what's a brand to do?

There’s a war happening, and somehow my feed thinks I need an outfit breakdown for it.
Scroll a little more and I’m offered a “5-step morning routine to survive the apocalypse,” complete with matcha recipes and neutral-toned loungewear. Somewhere between an OOTD and a trending sound, a country is burning.
The TikTokification of everything has turned news into an entire new format. And it’s changing the way we see, feel, and respond to global crises. Because when every crisis becomes content, the result isn’t always awareness. It’s trivialisation.
The 24-hour news cycle didn’t die. It transformed into 9:16 ratio with trending audio and 30-second cap.
News, once delivered by anchors, now comes via creators. Some thoughtful, some literally just grifting clicks from tragedy. The Ukraine war quickly spawned “war-core,” a fashion aesthetic of utility vests, cargo pants, and military palettes. U.S. election coverage took on a bizarrely beige tone, with TikToks styled like minimalist wellness updates. And coverage of Gaza? It’s heartbreaking, urgent—and endlessly reshared in a format eerily similar to fan-made cinema clips.
The TikTok algorithm rewards emotion, simplicity, and shareability. That means complex global events often get reduced. And creators, some on the ground, others watching from afar, tend to package information in ways that are digestible but sometimes dangerously diluted.
Distilling complex political struggles into palatable, memetic content risks the trivialisation of such issues, reducing them to a catchy hashtag or viral video challenge.
This is the performative side of activism, where awareness is curated for shareability, and engagement is measured in story reposts. This isn’t inherently bad. It can be a powerful gateway for learning, but it often stops short. People feel emotionally involved, but intellectually disconnected. Like, “I saw it. I shared it. I care. That’s enough, right?”
And, there is of course a catch: algorithms shape what we see and don’t see. If you engage with one perspective, the algo keeps feeding it back to you. Over time, the content narrows. Suddenly, your worldview is a perfectly manicured echo chamber—matching your values, reinforcing your biases, and drowning out dissent or complexity.
When complex events get boiled down to soundbites, it’s not just context that gets lost, but the truth.
TikTok is increasingly a news source for Gen Z, but it isn’t built for fact-checking. The most emotionally resonant videos spread fastest, regardless of accuracy. And when creators compete for views and virality, outrage often wins over nuance.
That means unverified claims, AI-generated “news,” and conspiracy theories can travel just as far, if not further, than legitimate journalism. Add to that the issue of algorithmic bias and censorship in certain regions, and you’ve got a deeply unreliable distribution system for some of the most critical stories of our time.
Even well-meaning creators can unintentionally mislead when they oversimplify or remove necessary context. In a feed where anyone can be a reporter, the lines between truth, opinion, and performance blur fast. This results in less trust, more divide, and audiences becoming increasingly unsure of who (or what) to believe.
Now imagine being a brand trying to navigate this minefield.
Post, and you risk being accused of virtue signalling. Stay silent, and people assume you don’t care. And yet, some brands are managing to get it right. Ben & Jerry’s consistently aligns statements with policy and action. Patagonia lives its values with donations, lawsuits, and divestment. They don't just “speak”—they do.
Others? Not so much. The black squares, the “praying for insert-location” captions, the branded infographics that feel like a parody of sincerity. It’s crisis communication as aesthetic curation.
If you’re a brand trying to do better, a few tips…
Firstly, know when to stay out of it. If your brand doesn’t belong in the conversation, you are in no way obliged. It’s okay to amplify others instead.
Don’t rush to post. Clarity > speed.
Match message with action. If you can’t do anything, ask why you’re saying something.
Consider your format. Not every crisis needs a freaking Reel.
We weren’t designed to consume global suffering at this scale, let alone in autoplay snippets between a makeup tutorial and a “get ready with me” breakup.
The constant exposure—especially when aestheticised—breeds desensitisation. We see more, we feel more, but we do less. We’re exhausted, emotionally frayed, and stuck in a feedback loop where attention replaces action.
And let’s not ignore the privilege baked into this experience. The ability to scroll past war, to “engage” with tragedy while sipping your iced coffee, is a luxury many can’t afford. For some, it’s life. For others, it’s content. This is the reality we live in.
It’s easy to point fingers at TikTok or Instagram, but we also need to check our own habits. We reward what we consume. We shape the feed, too.
The real challenge? Holding space for complexity in a world that wants clean narratives, fast takes, and aesthetic coherence.
Some things aren’t digestible. Some stories deserve more than a trending audio and a sad beige filter. Maybe the most radical thing we can do isn’t to post, but to pause. To read the article. Donate. Show up. Speak up in ways that aren’t always seen. We can’t solve the world’s problems in 30 seconds. And maybe we were never supposed to.
-Sophie, Writer
TREND PLUG
I’m like a machine

Locked in legends, this one's for you.
Coming from Beyoncé's very own words, in a cool edit titled "Beyoncé mindset," she says, "When I work I don't eat, I don't use the restroom, I'm like... a machine." Now I'm not usually part of the beehive, but if it's any video that will make me jump in, it'll be this one!
TikTokers are making the sound the anthem for when you're trying to impress someone by showing how dedicated you are to the craft. Think me at any job interview, doing my self-evaluation during performance review time, or even how morning gym people remind you they're better than you (pls stop).
How you can jump on this trend:
Start with this audio, and relate it to studying, working/job applications, or any activity you can't stop doing once you start.
A few ideas to get you started:
Doing 3 outfit changes for a LinkedIn selfie
Me applying to 16 "Easy Apply" jobs in one hour
Exporting my video in 3 different formats for 3 different apps
- abdel, brand & marketing executive
FOR THE GROUP CHAT
😂Yap’s funniest home videos: She was definitely surprised
❤How wholesome: grateful kids.
😊Soooo satisfying: car CLEANED
🍝What you should make for dinner tonight: Brazilian Coconut Chicken
TODAY ON THE YAP PODCAST
Want even more “YAP”ing? Check out the full podcast here.
Reply