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Gen Z co-opted the smiley face emoji, but beware — it means something totally different to them

Gen Z co-opted the smiley face emoji, but beware — it means something totally different to them

News.com.au15-05-2025
What used to be the universal symbol of warmth and joy has taken a sinister turn – at least in the eyes of Gen Z.
The classic smiley face emoji now means something completely different to those under 30, The New York Post reports.
Instead of conveying happiness, the grinning yellow face is now seen as dismissive, passive-aggressive, or straight-up sarcastic.
And if you're sending it to younger colleagues or friends, it could be rubbing them the wrong way.
Hafeezat Bishi, a 21-year-old intern, recently told The Wall Street Journal that she was taken aback when her older co-workers used the smiley emoji in emails and texts.
'I had to remember they are older, because I was use it sarcastically,' Ms Bishi said, explaining that she often views the emoji as conveying a 'side-eye smile' rather than genuine enthusiasm.
Meanwhile Sara Anderson, a 31-year-old cheerleading coach, told the publication that she regularly includes the emoji to add 'lightness' to her messages.
That's exactly the disconnect: what seems friendly to older folks can come off as phony or even biting to the younger crowd.
According to Erica Dhawan, author of Digital Body Language: How to Build Trust and Connection, No Matter the Distance, older generations tend to take emojis at face value, while younger 'digital natives' assign entirely different meanings.
'People over 30 tend to use emojis according to their dictionary,' Ms Dhawan told The Journal, emphasising that for Gen Z, emoji meanings have evolved into a whole new lexicon.
But the generational gap isn't just about smiley faces.
Back in March, Amit Kalley, founder of support site For Working Parents, warned that emojis have become a covert language for teenagers to communicate everything from drug slang to hate speech.
'It's far from an exhaustive list, but it's based on common emojis used to say something very different to what you'd think,' Ms Kalley wrote on Instagram, pointing to a 'periodic table of emojis' that decodes the supposedly hidden messages.
A recent study from Oklahoma State University, meanwhile, found that emoji use can reveal a lot more about your personality than you might think.
Researchers surveyed 285 undergraduates, mostly 20-year-olds, to see how their emoji habits aligned with personality traits.
'Emoji use may be related to strategies to manipulate the perceptions of others and to present a positive impression of oneself,' the study said, suggesting that what you send could say more about you than you realise.
So, the next time you slap a smiley face emoji on a message to Gen Z, think twice – it might not come off as cheery as you'd hoped.
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A sorta-concept album about 'the chaos of emotions you go through in a 24-hour cycle, how you can be soft and strong at the same time, crazy and calm', it finds Laufey adding an extra dash of pop to her signature jazz-classical mélange. 'I think I've already shown the world who I am, so I was less preoccupied with the purity of the music and more interested in what I wanted to say.' To help that vision, she recruited Aaron Dessner as a co-writer and producer (working alongside her usual collaborator Spencer Stewart). Dessner – like Laufey, an identical twin with his brother and bandmate in The National, Bryce – famously collaborated with Taylor Swift in her Folklore and Evermore eras. Growing up, Swift was one of the few contemporary artists Laufey listened to. 'And my favourite albums of hers are the ones she's done with Aaron, so I always wanted to see if I could work with him,' she says. 'I love what we did together. 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Other songs like Too Little Too Late, A Cautionary Tale and Mr. Eclectic (sample lyric: 'Truth be told, you're quite pathetic/ Mr. Eclectic Allan Poe') are vicious and acerbic. They're the kind of songs that will leave you asking, 'Laufey, who hurt you?' She laughs. 'Most of those songs are born out of some sort of personal thought or experience. But they're also taken from anecdotes from my sister and conversations with my friends.' Much of Laufey's rise has been due to her pointed, diaristic writing; in the way modern anxieties punctured the dreamy gloss of, say, a timeless waltz or a retro bossa nova. Being so famous now, does it make the job that much harder? All of a sudden, here are people like me asking, 'So who exactly are you writing about?' Loading 'No, it's not any harder, because I'll never admit to any song being about anyone,' she says. Sure, but what about the fan theories online, the Reddit threads and TikTok videos speculating about her private life? 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