Michael Crisp, a student at Kansas State University, tweeted: “i’m unfamiliar with zoom etiquette.
#Zoom meeting meme how to
At a Zoom party on Saturday, one college student figured out how to adapt a meme and loop a video of Ricardo Milos, a male stripper, behind him.Īs new Zoom users flock to the platform, social norms are still evolving. Uploading custom backgrounds has become a way for multiple users to screen share funny memes or videos. Teenagers have created TikToks of Zoom hacks, like how to make it appear as if you’re in class when you’re not. (The only way to find a Zoom party right now is through a link to it from elsewhere.)įor the time being, young people are being creative with what they have. They also want to be able to discover fellow Zoomer hangouts.
Moiseyev thinks the platform has potential to become part of Gen Z’s daily life, post-coronavirus, if the platform can incorporate more social features. “Twitch is to YouTube as Zoom can be to TikTok.” “If someone can figure out how to invent a party atmosphere in this socially distant format, then I think it will be a mainstay,” said Lucas Moiseyev, a senior at Carnegie Mellon. Some students developed Zoom-themed drinking games for Zoom parties, adjusting the popular game “never have I ever” to “never have I ever left quarantine.”