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    Home»Business»‘I didn’t get a graduation’: How the Class of 2020 turned its pandemic loss into a running joke on TikTok
    Business

    ‘I didn’t get a graduation’: How the Class of 2020 turned its pandemic loss into a running joke on TikTok

    February 21, 20263 Mins Read
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    Members of the Class of 2020 still aren’t over the COVID-19 pandemic canceling their graduation. Apparently they never stop bringing it up, according to TikTok. Now their complaints are being used as a punch line.

    Being robbed? “Did you know that I didn’t get a graduation.”

    Slip on ice? “I didn’t have a prom, I didn’t have a homecoming.”

    Oh, your grandma just died? “Okay, well if you think that’s bad, I literally didn’t graduate.”

    While the trend has been around since Gen Z did—or didn’t—graduate in 2020, with some reminiscing on those “unprecedented” times and others crashing their siblings’ graduations in place of their own, it has recently regained traction.

    @cobreezzy

    That lockdown had us all acting crazy lol my dad came up with this idea #classof2020 #graduation #family

    ♬ original sound – Conor O’Brien

    In the past few weeks, it has merged with another trend in which TikTokkers explain how certain people would react to a glass being half full or half empty. Instead of just the classic “optimist” or “pessimist,” the trend includes the points of view of random people, characters, or the Class of 2020.

    @briemcp

    Disclaimer: I was a victim of 2020 so let me clown #glasshalffull #glasshalfempty #fyp #fypシ #pessimist

    ♬ Classic classical gymnopedie solo piano(1034554) – Lyrebirds music

    “It wasn’t even like a graduation, it was like a drive thru and you just grabbed your diploma,” one creator laments.

    @iamjoeyleon

    Ball knowledge required #fyp #funny #basketball

    ♬ original sound – Joey

    The humor is mostly self-referential, reflecting Gen Z’s coping mechanism of choice: “Me using every opportunity to remind my friends that I was Class of 2020,” another jokes.

    @zayaperysian

    And I’ll never get over it actually #classof2020 @Spencer Hunt

    ♬ original sound – アジアンマッサージ リラクゼーション ヴィラ 千歳店 – ガラスコーティング 洗車用品 カーフィルム コンパウンド

    And it’s hard to deny that members of the Class of 2020 were dealt a bad hand. Their senior year did, after all, coincide with a global health crisis. Five years ago, what started as a week off from school spiraled into an unprecedented global emergency, the ripple effects of which are still being felt.

    While the COVID-19 pandemic impacted Americans of all ages, the erstwhile seniors of the Class of 2020 were uniquely positioned to experience the shockwaves across their social lives, finances, and careers as they transitioned into adulthood.

    In the throes of the pandemic, unemployment among people under age 24 jumped from 8.4% to 24.4%. Researchers have found that beginning a career during a recession can depress earnings for 10 years and leave lasting impacts for decades.

    It’s no surprise, then, that the identities of the Class of 2020 are tied to this once-in-a-lifetime crisis. If they want to complain about it, the least we can do is let them.





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