In 2022, young people have turned away from the capitalist fever dream that was #girlboss feminism. Instead, theyâre focused on something much more positive: bimboism.
iD Magazineâs definitive announcement 12 months ago declared 2021 âThe year of the bimboâ. Since then, weâve seen countless think-pieces peppered across mainstream media, YouTube explainers, and an incredibly catchy TikTok remix of Taylor Swiftâs âShake It Offâ that drills the line âgot nothing in my brainâ over and over again. Really, weâve just realised that weâre fed up with the constant barrage of thoughts that have come to define existence. And thatâs where the increasingly attractive cultural phenomenon of âbimboâ steps in.
But what is a bimbo? And what does bimbofication entail? And isnât âbimboâ⌠like⌠a slur.
Respectfully, no.
The modern-day bimbo is a fresh approach to intersectional feminism. There is, actually, careful thought behind bimbology, and it could be a way to reach true liberation.
On TikTok, bimboism isnât new. Itâs been rising to prominence over the past two years and, for regular users of the app, is basically vintage ideology â certified TikTok canon.
FAMILIAR ORIGINS
In 2020, as the pandemic ramped up, those of us in lockdown turned to social media to squander the endless hours of isolation weâd found ourselves facing. Clearly, no app filled the void left by our lost social interaction quite like TikTok, with its endless stream of faces, funnies, memes and discourse.
For those new to the app at the time, the way you jumped through the algorithmâs hoops, landing on different â often surprisingly niche â subcultures, was a source of fascination.
I remember it well.
As with all newbies, I started on general TikTok: dance routines, funny home videos, viral skits and pet videos.
Then, as the appâs famed algorithm picked up on small nuances in my interest, gaged predominately by watch time, my feed gradually moved to âhot girl Tokâ, then jumped to âbisexual Tokâ, before it slid over to âedu-Tokâ, which brought me to âleftist Tokâ, and then I somehow ended up back at what I assumed was simply âhot girl Tokâ all over again.
But that wasnât it. This new stream in the algorithm, with its dazzlingly beautiful creators declaring âWear whatever the fuck you wantâ, âI hate all menâ, and, âGood morning bimbos, thembos, himbos, bimboys and any bo you wanna beâ, was something else entirely.
I had landed on bimbo Tok.
WHO IS THE GEN Z BIMBO?
Chrissy Chlapecka was one of the earliest pioneers of bimboism on TikTok. The doe-eyed, blonde-haired, pink-latex-clad, she/they viral superstar shot to prominence on the app in late 2020, at a time when US social media was galvanized by Black Lives Matter, the accelerating pandemic, and the upcoming Biden/Trump election. Chlapeckaâs earlier content focused on providing motivational, inspiring messages for the âgirls, gays and theys, or anyone unfortunate enough to be attracted to menâ. Her brand, characterised by ultra-feminine optics and witty delivery that was at once sweet, sassy and savvy, struck a near-instant chord on TikTok. But TikTok fame is fickle, and Chlapeckaâs comment section received as much love from the girlies, gays and theys, as hate from the people â the majority of them being men â who felt personally attacked by the subject matter. This was true as much for her relationship videos as it was for her more political content â which was adamantly anti-capitalist and anti-Trump. Many commentersâ abuse targeted Chlapeckaâs cadence, the way she dressed, her makeup and blonde extensions. It was rare that the arguments she was making were brought up at all.
âPeople in my comments section keep calling me a bimbo. Iâm just going to go with it,â Chlapecka said in an October 2020 post, captioned "reclaiming thisâ.
âAt least follow my Instagram to give me external validation if you think Iâm hot but not smart. Because you know what, youâre right, thereâs not much going on in my head, thereâs very little.â
It was soon after that Chlapecka officially introduced bimboism, in a video where she answered the question: âWho is the Gen Z bimbo?â
âA bimbo isnât dumb. Well, she kind of is, but she isnât that dumb! Sheâs actually a radical leftist, whoâs pro sex work, pro Black Lives Matter, pro LGBTQ+, pro choice, and will always be there for her girlies, gays and theys,â they said, in a video that went viral immediately and still continues to circulate, now sitting at six million views and 2.1 million likes.
Its success shot Chlapecka, who now has four million followers, to TikTok fame, along with her concept of bimbology.
BIMBOLOGY 101
While Chlapeckaâs gen Z bimboism resonated on TikTok, with its bubblegum pink optics grounded in inclusive, anti-capitalist, jubilantly queer and aggressively kind ideology, her aesthetics did fit neatly into the recognisable stereotype of bimbos over the years. From the âMean Girlsâ plastics, to Elle Woods of âLegally Blondeâ, Cher Horowitz of âCluelessâ, or even Dolly Parton and Marilyn Monroe â the original trope of the bimbo was an ultra-feminine, super hot, buxom, skinny, âgirly girlâ. In film and TV, she was almost always white.
But the strength of a movement that started on TikTok, as opposed to other social platforms, is that the appâs features â sounds, stitches and hashtags â allow a trend to be adopted by any one of its billion monthly users. Over the years, Chlapeckaâs new-age bimbology has been built on by multiple creators whose individual identities span spectrums of gender, weight, race and class.
Shortly after Chlapeckaâs bimbo video was posted, dozens of users leapt on the trend.
One creator, 23-year-old Fauxrich, posted her own take on the bimbo. Clothed in a baby pink tracksuit, she asked, âAre you a hyperfeminine woman? Are you really hot?â
âDo you not care about societyâs elitist view on academic intelligence? Do you support all women, regardless of their job title, or if theyâve had plastic surgery or body modifications?â she continued, applying a fresh coat of lipgloss.
âIâm no doctor, but I think you may be a new-age bimbo!â
Fauxrichâs video went viral. Clicking through the sound reveals a wide range of people reacting to Fauxrichâs questions in their own videos, self-diagnosing the identity of new-age bimbo. There are gimbos (goth bimbos), vintage-style bimbos, thembos (bimbos who use they/them pronouns), gimbos (gay bimbos), alt bimbos and more.
A creator named Alondra Ortiz was inspired by Fauxrich to get into bimbofication, too. Alondraâs goals were to âlook and feel more confidentâ, to take the time to take care of themselves, embrace their natural hair texture, and to start introducing themselves in english-speaking environments by the true, Latinx pronunciation of their name.
For Ortiz, bimbofication was about no longer minimising themselves for the sake of other people â they were reclaiming their identity.
Another creator, Griffin Maxwell Brooks, built on âthe study of bxmbologyâ, in a video where they described, ânobody can tell you how to be a bxmbo, because it isnât about how people perceive youâ.
âThe bxmbo has no gender, no class, no race or ability. The only requirement for bxmbofication is that you embrace and reclaim your body in the name of independence..all that matters is that you are both physically and mentally hot and sexy, on your own terms."
This is perhaps the defining rule of modern day bimboism: Self-actualisation.
ITâS ALL ABOUT LOVE
You have to love yourself to be a bimbo. And if you donât quite love yourself yet, you need to do whatever it takes to reach that point. Whether itâs practising self-care, going to therapy, cutting off whoever it is thatâs abusing you, allowing people to underestimate you,
dressing however you want, or refusing to engage with ignorance. Loving yourself is key to truly taking on the identity.
Whether itâs as an aesthetic, an ideology, or a lifestyle, bimboism is not only inclusive, it is achievable.
Fiona Fairbairn, a Toronto-based university student, recently became the idol of the 2022 bimbo era when her persona Fifi presented the âBimbo Manifestoâ: a guideline for âno thoughts, just vibesâ, which has inspired a new wave of bimboism followers.
âA lot of people are saying Iâm putting feminism back 50 years,â Fairbairn told VICE.
âIâm saying, maybe instead of dedicating our time to people who want to misunderstand us no matter what we say or how we explain it, why donât we just let them, and let the results at the end prove everything.â
In another video, Fifi explained how bimbofication was an âego deathâ.
âYâall are so mad when people call you ugly, stupid or whatever else. Donât go so hard to defend it,â she said.
âLet people underestimate you, let your ego go down so much that you just donât care.â
NO THOUGHTS, JUST SEXY
The idea of weaponised unintelligence isnât new â the trope is intertwined with the canon of âold Hollywoodâ bimbos over the years. From âdumb blondesâ to âgold diggersâ, passing decades have seen men on-screen and off fall to the beguiling manipulation of doe-eyed, beautiful women, who pretend not to know any better in order to make their way in the world.
In the 2020s, it shouldnât be surprising that there is a resurgence of what one TikTokker teasingly dubbed, âweaponised incompetence, but yassifiedâ. But for many feminists whose coming of age was centred around girlbossification â constantly hustling for rights and recognition, accepting eking âprogressâ on the never-ending crawl up the hypothetical ladder â it represents a shift towards finding empowerment by simply refusing to participate. The girlies are sick and tired of proving themselves â thereâs plenty of other shit to worry about.
A recurring theme in bimbology is forcing yourself to think less, especially in times of conflict. Fifiâs âwall methodâ describes how to force yourself to have no thoughts by imagining a white wall. A large part of bimboismâs appeal is in its potential to shield oneself from harm â smooth-brain style.
This is where bimboism has found its moment. Bimboism says you donât have to be unintelligent to choose happiness â you just need to focus on thinking about things that actually matter, like community, setting an example and building others up, which can only be achieved by building yourself up to the point where you arenât plagued by anxieties. Whether you are liked or loved, whether you said the wrong thing, whether you are enough. Bimbos say, âWho cares?â
âAnyone can be a bimbo,â they say. âItâs about applying a mindset to your way of life. Women and queer people have been oppressed by the patriarchy, and being a bimbo is a rejection of all that. Itâs a way of finding empowerment where youâve been taught to feel ashamed.â
IN PURSUIT OF LIBERATION
In the era of social media, ideologies erupt constantly as young people look for ways to identify and thrive. They dissolve just as frequently.
#Girlboss feminism, the âshe-E-Oâ rallying call which characterised the early 2010s, has now become a post-ironic joke. It was an illusion of progress reserved only for the privileged few with proximity to the white wealthy male status quo. It was a mirage of liberation that fell apart under the slightest intersectional scrutiny.
In a 2019 article, writer Emmeline Clein introduced dissociative feminism: characterised by a dark, disillusioned, self-destructive and bitter embodiment of feminism illustrated in Phoebe Waller-Bridgeâs television series, Fleabag.
As Clein wrote, the titular character smirks at her selfishness and self-destruction, while numbing herself to the consequences of her behaviours with alcohol and antidepressants. Rather than blaming the patriarchy for her feminine angst, it is internalised; knowingly delivered in punchline form.
âIâve noticed a lot of brilliant women giving up on shouting and complaining, and instead taking on a darkly comic, deadpan tone when writing about their feminism. This approach presents overtly horrifying facts about uniquely feminine struggles and delivers them flatly, dripping with sarcasm,â Clein said.
There are similar parallels in bimboism. While dissociative feminism has been having its own moment on TikTok, with a slew of posts featuring users embracing their âFleabag eraâ, this cold, detached, dissociative feminism serves only a select few. As Clein wrote, âgiving up on progress is perhaps the epitome of white feminism, and promotes a nihilism that is somewhere between unproductive and genuinely dangerousâ.
But unlike dissociative feminism, bimboism rejects self-destructive behaviour. And unlike girlbossification, bimboism is not rooted in capitalist attachment.
You donât need to buy anything or look a certain way. You donât need to run a business, be a good worker, or step on anyone in your journey to reach âsuccessâ as a bimbo. Bimboism comes from within, and you can achieve it by being unapologetically yourself.
While girlboss feminism says, âI may be a girl, but I can climb the status quoâs ladder and succeed in capitalism just like any other man!â
Bimboism says, âI am literally just here to vibe. Either vibe with me or leave me alone.â