How Bo Burnham’s Jeff Bezos song became a Gen Z anthem about disaster capitalism

The track united generations in disgust

Workers unite

The second life of “Besoz I” was a product of timing.

It emerged as countless workers were suffering from layoffs, pay cuts, and health problems. At the same time, Bezos was becoming the richest person of all time and taking ego trips to space. After his maiden joyride, he thankedAmazonstaff and customers for having “paid for all of this.”

TikTokers quickly tapped into this economic chasm.

They used Burnham’s song to soundtrack Amazon driversbraving natural disasters, warehouse workersgetting whipped, and Bezosmonitoring his “sheep.”

Many of the videos went viral. One TikTok of an Amazon truck driving through floods got more than 10 million views in under a month, while another ofan Amazon Go storeattractedover 7 million views in a day.

Not every interpolation of the track was critical of capitalism. Some creators used the tune to sincerely praise Amazon or celebratetheir own success stories. The song was also recontextualized in TikTok’s tedious“three moods”trend.

In the social media age, an artist can’t determine the meaning of their masterpiece.

The Bezos generation

The 30-year-old Burnham is an archetypal millennial, but his song became a hit among Gen Z.(Fulldisclosure: I am also a millennial, although I dislike my generation even more than those that flank it.)

At under a minute long and infectiously energetic, the track is tailor-made for TikTok-addled brains. Yet that wasn’t the only reason why Burnham’s Netflix special connected with Gen-Z.

The melancholy musical comedy perfectly captures the pandemic life that supercharged TikTok’s popularity.

The show was filmed within the confines of a single room, depicts depression, and explores our fraught relationships with tech. It’s unsurprising that it resonates witha generation that spendsso muchtime onlineand hashigh rates of mental health struggles.

Such issues don’t appear to be affecting Bezos. Indeed, the58-year-old can look forward to countless future generations celebrating his birthday.Like every other horror story antagonist, he knows that true evil never dies.

In the words of Burnham:

Story byThomas Macaulay

Thomas is a senior reporter at TNW. He covers European tech, with a focus on AI, cybersecurity, and government policy.Thomas is a senior reporter at TNW. He covers European tech, with a focus on AI, cybersecurity, and government policy.

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