‘Rage-baiting’ is the word of the year: but what does it mean?

Source: Radio New Zealand

This story was first published on 8 August, 2024

Trolling has been around for almost as long as the internet itself; think of the early days of YouTube clickbait titles, edgy memes posted to Facebook, and nihilistic Twitter threads, all deliberately designed to provoke and enrage the masses. It’s an online terrain most people are familiar with, and yet the rise of TikTok has allowed a new form of trolling to thrive.

Rage baiting, or rage farming, has a new wave of content creators and social media influencers not only inciting rage online – but profiting off viewers’ anger too.

At its core, rage baiting is a manipulative tactic used by content creators to elicit outrage from their viewers. The idea is that if you’re angry, you’re more likely to comment, share, react, and ultimately increase the online engagement of that video, which helps content creators drive more traffic to their channels and earn more revenue.

TikToker Ryan Gawlik does things like intentionally calling espresso "expresso" and biting into a whole KitKat bar because he knows internet audiences find that behaviour upsetting.

TikToker Ryan Gawlik does things like intentionally calling espresso “expresso” and biting into a whole KitKat bar because he knows internet audiences find that behaviour upsetting.

TikTok / Ry Williams

– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand