Did Face Filters Ruin Modern Dating?

CChris Williamson
Mental HealthAdvertising/MarketingBeautyComputing/Software

Transcript

00:00:00- What's happening with how girls see their appearance?
00:00:02How's that changed over time?
00:00:03- Yeah, I mean, that's another crazy arms race.
00:00:08I mean, I talk about, again,
00:00:11with beauty influencers like Zoella that I grew up with,
00:00:15she would just do like a back-to-school makeup tutorial,
00:00:18and it would be very simple and basic,
00:00:22and there's nothing really harmful
00:00:25about teenage girls watching that.
00:00:27But again, the competition, the amount of influencers
00:00:30over the years that now have to compete for clicks and money
00:00:34mean that each beauty influencer also has to up their game
00:00:38and say something slightly more extreme
00:00:40or show something more extreme.
00:00:42So for example, you go from normal beauty tutorials
00:00:46to casual vlogs where you just show you
00:00:50getting a Brazilian butt lift in the middle of the vlog,
00:00:53and that becomes part of a standard beauty routine.
00:00:56And you see it with stuff like anti-aging
00:00:58where it's just a simple anti-aging routine
00:01:02then becomes like a 50-step anti-aging routine,
00:01:05and you need to do it younger and younger
00:01:07because the thumbnail that says you need Botox at 17
00:01:12does way better because people click it
00:01:14and wanna know more about it.
00:01:16And so it's in all aspects of life for young women.
00:01:19It's the mental health trends, it's the political trends,
00:01:22it's the beauty trends.
00:01:23Basically, social media will drag everything
00:01:26to its inevitable extreme.
00:01:28And then if you're spending most of your waking hours
00:01:31on social media, then that is no longer the extreme.
00:01:35That is where you're getting your information.
00:01:37It's where you're learning about beauty
00:01:39and relationships and politics.
00:01:41- Has Instagram and TikTok changed what we find attractive?
00:01:45- Yeah, I think so.
00:01:47I think it's more of a sort of avatar now
00:01:52where there's a terror of aging among young women.
00:01:57And so I wrote a piece ages ago about 12-year-olds
00:02:02worrying about wrinkles on Reddit forums
00:02:05and obsessively ruminating over pictures
00:02:08where they have aged,
00:02:10writing out all of the sun exposure they've had
00:02:14and checking, is this something
00:02:16that could make me look worse in the future,
00:02:18comparing all of their anti-aging routines
00:02:21and their children?
00:02:22- You need an aging routine.
00:02:26You need to actively be aging at that point.
00:02:28- Yes, yeah, yeah.
00:02:29Well, this is-- - Get more sun.
00:02:31- Sometimes it's girls worrying about wrinkles
00:02:33before they've got through puberty
00:02:35because they've grown up with watching influencers
00:02:38who are worrying about that
00:02:40and who are having to sort of exaggerate their neuroticism
00:02:43and up their neuroticism to get clicks.
00:02:45But then you have young girls,
00:02:47that's the first they encounter.
00:02:50First sort of young women role models they encounter
00:02:53who are warning them about this.
00:02:55And I think social media in general just makes you ruminate.
00:03:00And so girls already ruminate more than boys,
00:03:02but then they're on all these platforms like Reddit
00:03:05where you all co-ruminate together.
00:03:07The point is you talk about your problems
00:03:10excessively. - And there's an escalation
00:03:11on there as well. - Yeah.
00:03:12- There's always a sense of one-upmanship.
00:03:14I always see this with my friends that are conspiracy-minded
00:03:18and in a room it's kind of like an arms race
00:03:23to see who can go deepest down the iceberg.
00:03:27Oh, you think that Epstein was just a guy that had an island?
00:03:30Oh, you think he was just Mossad?
00:03:31Oh, you think he was just a reptile person?
00:03:33Dude, let me tell you, oh, that's cute.
00:03:35Let me tell you the real thing.
00:03:36And it's this, yeah, weird race to the bottom of the iceberg.
00:03:40And it's kind of the same here
00:03:41that there is this ratcheting up in intensity of this stuff.
00:03:46You see that most with the mental health stuff
00:03:49where it will be, oh, you think it's bad.
00:03:52You've got ADHD.
00:03:53Well, I've got autism and ADHD.
00:03:55(laughing)
00:03:56- And I've got a gluten intolerance
00:03:58and I've got a club foot and my dad walked out.
00:04:00- Yeah, exactly.
00:04:01And I think the platforms, again, they encourage that
00:04:04because you have all influencers are competing for attention,
00:04:09but then you have influencers whose whole brand now
00:04:13is their mental health diagnosis.
00:04:15They are the ADHD influencer.
00:04:18And I think that creates some very bad incentives
00:04:20because then you basically compete over your diagnosis.
00:04:24- There has to be a psychological cost of growing up
00:04:26with a front facing camera 24/7 as well.
00:04:28- Yes.
00:04:29- Right, there was a Zoom face
00:04:32that people had during lockdown.
00:04:33- Snapchat dysmorphia as well.
00:04:35- Where people want to get surgery
00:04:37and to look like their filter.
00:04:41They don't like seeing themselves without their filter.
00:04:44- Yeah, so you have girls who are using,
00:04:46did you know about Facetune?
00:04:48'Cause I swear no young men even know what it is.
00:04:51You don't know?
00:04:52- What's Facetune?
00:04:54- See, that's great.
00:04:55So Facetune is like one of the most popular apps
00:04:58where girls would edit themselves to then post on Instagram.
00:05:02- Like filters?
00:05:03- No, going in and editing each part of your face.
00:05:07So you can slim your jaw, you can enlarge your eyes,
00:05:09you can change your waist, you can tan your skin,
00:05:11you can whiten your teeth, it's everything.
00:05:13But that is what girls were using as teenagers
00:05:17all throughout growing up.
00:05:22And then they've reached their 20s and people say,
00:05:24oh, why are they unhappy with the way they look?
00:05:25Why do they have body dysmorphia?
00:05:27And they're using this app where you change yourself
00:05:30and then there's like an undo button,
00:05:32which if you click it, you look horrifying
00:05:34because then it reverts back to how you actually look.
00:05:37But you had girls doing that
00:05:38during the most formative years of their life
00:05:42and then trying to adjust to how they actually look.
00:05:45- How does the self-love messaging co-exist
00:05:49with record levels of body dissatisfaction?
00:05:52- Yeah, that's another paradox.
00:05:54I think because it's a marketing strategy.
00:05:59It's much like mental health awareness.
00:06:03A lot of that was a marketing strategy.
00:06:06The self-love campaign was basically
00:06:09ways to sell things like editing apps.
00:06:11So Facetune was marketed as something
00:06:15that can help you feel confident and empowered.
00:06:17And I talk about these influencers in the book
00:06:19who are literally, they're literally talking about
00:06:23how they don't have any insecurities anymore
00:06:26and they've overcome it.
00:06:27And they finally reached a stage of self-love
00:06:29while they're literally reshaping their jaw on Facetune,
00:06:32teaching girls how to do it.
00:06:35And none of the comments are calling that out
00:06:37or thinking it's hypocritical.
00:06:39- Why?
00:06:41- Because I think it's been drilled into us
00:06:43that these things are self-love.
00:06:46And so a lot of the time in the book I talk about
00:06:49recognizing what are you actually being sold
00:06:52versus what you're being told.
00:06:53Because you're constantly being told you feel this way
00:06:56and that this app or technology or trend
00:06:59will make you feel this way, even though it's not.
00:07:02So I don't know any young woman
00:07:04that would Facetune herself and feel good.
00:07:08Feel good doing it rather than feel embarrassed
00:07:11and a bit ashamed and feel worse about themselves after.
00:07:15- You know, I think the same thing happened
00:07:16with the Pick Up Artist movement.
00:07:17So what guys that did it learned was just how much
00:07:22they had to contort themselves
00:07:25in order to get laid with a woman.
00:07:27And even if it was effective,
00:07:30what they felt was the delta between who they were normally
00:07:32and who they were when they deployed the game by Neil Strauss.
00:07:35And that gap made the normal version of them
00:07:39feel even more disgusting, even more unwanted.
00:07:42Look at how much I've got to disguise and pervert myself
00:07:46in an attempt to try.
00:07:47Did you see the midget fight outside?
00:07:48Let's go to three other bars
00:07:49so that I can neurolinguistically program
00:07:52hack the back of your brain
00:07:53into coming to bed with me tonight.
00:07:54You go, I have to jump through all of these hoops.
00:07:57And this is where,
00:07:58so for the guys that it was successful for,
00:08:00if you don't do too much self-investigation,
00:08:03hurray, you did a thing.
00:08:06But if you do a bit more self-investigation,
00:08:07it's pretty, it can be pretty dark.
00:08:10And for the guys that did it and it didn't work,
00:08:13even with the best tactics in the world,
00:08:16I still can't make myself into someone that woman wants.
00:08:19Yes.
00:08:21Neither of those are good outcomes.
00:08:22Yeah, it's the same,
00:08:24that's so similar to the beauty stuff for women,
00:08:26which is that it can maybe get you
00:08:29what you want superficially.
00:08:31So you face tune yourself and you get 200 likes
00:08:34on your Instagram post,
00:08:36but then it's a momentary bit of dopamine.
00:08:40But then after that, you're now hooked on the app.
00:08:43You need to keep using it.
00:08:44You need the constant. And ugly.
00:08:45Yeah, and then you develop,
00:08:48which is what happened to me
00:08:48and a lot of girls I know,
00:08:50which was then having an aversion
00:08:52to having your pitch taken naturally
00:08:55because you're so used to controlling it.
00:08:56So girls in my friendship group
00:08:58would fight over whose phone the picture would be taken on.
00:09:01So that they could go in and face tune themselves.
00:09:03They've got the control.
00:09:04Wow.
00:09:05And so then-
00:09:05Wow, that is fucking insane.
00:09:08Yeah, because it feels so out of control.
00:09:10And then also that explains a lot of, I think,
00:09:12social anxiety because being in the real world
00:09:16is out of control.
00:09:17You can't control your appearance.
00:09:18You can't edit what you're saying or rehearse it.
00:09:21And so I think a lot of these apps
00:09:22actually then stunted us in real life because it feels so-
00:09:26You know what was interesting?
00:09:27I was on Long Island, August of last year,
00:09:32good weather, sunset.
00:09:34And there was a group of young teenage girls
00:09:37that were taking photos.
00:09:38And I noticed that if it was really perfectly put together,
00:09:41I mean, they must've taken, I'm not kidding.
00:09:43It must've been hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of photos.
00:09:46I get it.
00:09:47You want a nice new profile picture, whatever.
00:09:48Like, is it a bit silly?
00:09:49Yeah, but whatever, it's fine.
00:09:51The other thing that was interesting was
00:09:52if they were snapping as they walked,
00:09:54because they'd stayed in the same area
00:09:56that was going to have the best sunset,
00:09:58which is where everybody was eating ice cream or whatever.
00:10:01And if someone was sort of snapping away more naturally,
00:10:04more candidly, immediately all of their hands
00:10:07went up to their face.
00:10:08Have you seen this trend where girls sort of do this?
00:10:10So they'll pose with their body,
00:10:12but cover their face with their hand.
00:10:14And again, like I'm trying to get it.
00:10:18I'm trying to not chromogenally point a finger
00:10:21at someone that's 20 years younger than me and go,
00:10:25these kids, okay, so what is it that they're feeling?
00:10:28Why are they doing this thing?
00:10:29What's the best interpretation of this?
00:10:31Like it's a cutesy little,
00:10:33but it wasn't a Marilyn Monroe shocked,
00:10:36open mouth sort of face.
00:10:39It was, I just need to do this.
00:10:41It was like the scene out of "Four Lions"
00:10:43where he's trying to stop the fucking CCTV from watching him.
00:10:46It's another paradox where we're vain and insecure
00:10:50at the same time, but there's context to it
00:10:52because I grew up with the dog ear filter on Snapchat.
00:10:56Please tell me you know what that is.
00:10:57I've seen that one.
00:10:58And I remember the,
00:10:59do you remember the face mask that was bees?
00:11:02No.
00:11:03So you know like the face mask
00:11:04that you're used to having COVID?
00:11:05Yeah.
00:11:06That very quickly became like an object of oppression
00:11:10or something that didn't work or whatever.
00:11:12Yeah.
00:11:13I swear there was one,
00:11:14and people can tell me in the comments
00:11:15whether or not I'm fucking hallucinating this.
00:11:17I swear that there was one that was yellow and had bees.
00:11:21Jared, Google, was there a Snapchat filter
00:11:26of a face mask with bees?
00:11:29I swear, I'm fucking not hallucinating.
00:11:30But I remember the dog one.
00:11:31And then if you opened your mouth,
00:11:33it did a licking thing, right?
00:11:34Yes.
00:11:35But the dog one-
00:11:36Made people want to be dogs.
00:11:39No, but it beautified you as well.
00:11:41So it would like enlarge your eyes and smooth your skin.
00:11:45And so you had 13 year olds using it 'cause it was cute,
00:11:48but then suddenly hating the normal pictures themselves
00:11:51and not knowing why.
00:11:52And it's 'cause it was subtly changing your face.
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Key Takeaway

Frequent use of aesthetic-altering applications like Facetune and Snapchat filters creates a psychological paradox, where young women simultaneously pursue idealized digital avatars and suffer from record levels of body dysmorphia.

Highlights

Digital competition forces beauty influencers to adopt extreme content strategies, such as showcasing Brazilian butt lifts or promoting Botox at age 17 to capture attention.

Teenagers report worrying about wrinkles before completing puberty, largely due to constant exposure to adult influencers who exaggerate neuroticism to drive engagement.

Face-editing applications like Facetune allow users to artificially slim jaws, enlarge eyes, and whiten teeth, creating a psychological discrepancy between real appearance and digital avatars.

Constant use of appearance-altering apps stunts social development, as users fear real-world interactions where they cannot control, edit, or rehearse their image.

Self-love marketing campaigns often serve as vehicles to sell editing tools, leading users to feel ashamed after using apps that were marketed as empowering.

Timeline

The Extremity Cycle in Social Media Content

  • Competition for clicks forces influencers to escalate content intensity.
  • Casual vlogs now incorporate invasive procedures like Brazilian butt lifts as standard beauty routine elements.
  • Social media platforms force beauty, mental health, and political trends toward inevitable, extreme conclusions.

Influencers increasingly adopt extreme tactics to maintain visibility against growing competition. Simple makeup tutorials are replaced by vlogs featuring surgical procedures or intense, 50-step anti-aging routines. Because users spend most of their waking hours online, these extreme examples become their primary source of information, shaping their views on beauty and life.

Impact of Digital Tools on Self-Perception

  • Young women demonstrate a pathological fear of aging, with 12-year-olds obsessively tracking sun exposure and wrinkles on forums.
  • Platforms encourage co-rumination, where individuals excessively discuss problems and escalate personal crises to maintain attention.
  • Apps like Facetune enable precise manipulation of facial features, creating a dependency on digital control over appearance.

The ability to edit every aspect of one's face through apps like Facetune has replaced natural appearance with an idealized avatar. This creates a psychological cost, as individuals become incapable of accepting their actual image without an undo button. This behavior is reinforced by communities on platforms like Reddit, where users validate each other's insecurities through constant, unhealthy comparison.

The Paradox of Empowerment and Reality

  • Self-love messaging frequently functions as a marketing strategy to sell beauty and photo-editing tools.
  • Digital control over images fosters social anxiety by conditioning users to expect perfection and editability in real-world situations.
  • Snapchat filters subtly alter facial structure, causing users to prefer their filtered appearance over their natural physical identity.

Marketing campaigns often frame the use of invasive editing tools as acts of self-empowerment. However, instead of fostering self-love, these tools induce shame and embarrassment when users compare their natural photos to their edited ones. The resulting need for control makes real-world scenarios—where one cannot edit or rehearse their image—feel threatening and anxiety-inducing.

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