In them, the VSCO girl is usually spouting her sartorial embellishments included in the aforementioned starter pack and offering some sort of abbreviated knowledge on the It eco-conscious movement of the moment (i.e., use metal straws, because: save the turtles). This summer, VSCO girl point-of-view videos became a thing. While the older-younger crowd (20-somethings), if you will, see the VSCO girl as a try-hard parody: someone who tries really hard to look like they didn’t try at all (#Iwokeuplikethis). The younger generation (teens and tweens) see being a VSCO girl as a lifestyle, a girl to look up to in terms of fashion and ideologies. Because there are two sides to every trend-those who embrace and celebrate it, and those who elevate it only to mock it-defining the VSCO girl depends on who you ask.
To put it simply, users edit and filter their photos in VSCO, then post them to the platform, or elsewhere, like Instagram, with the hashtag #vscocam. Which brings you to your next question: What is VSCO? A photo-editing app entrenched with its own filters and social media subculture, VSCO launched in 2012 and has grown its community to 20 million weekly active users who elevate everyday photos from meaningless to absolute. So, according to an unofficial dictionary specific to slang terminology, VSCO girl in part is a term used “for a young, usually white woman who posts trendy pictures of herself edited on the app VSCO.” If you’re like us, the first place you go to for explanation on a new word is the dictionary (a lot can be said for practicality).
The trend, which has found its viral niche among mostly tweens and teens, may already be on its way to fizzling out.To be a VSCO girl, one needs to invest in a "starter pack" that includes Birkenstocks, scrunchies, a Hydro Flask water bottle, and a Fjallraven backpack.The VSCO girl (pronounced "Visco," according to ) is a meme-worthy trend that is reaching its renaissance and owes its popularity to the video-sharing app TikTok.Class of 2020: A look at Gen Z as it graduates into chaos - How the American millennial is overcoming debt, the dollar, and the economy they were handed - College is more expensive than it's ever been, and the 5 reasons why suggest it's only going to get worse Hillary joined Business Insider in 2018 reporting on personal finance. Here's what the generation is up against if the coronavirus triggers another recession. Here's a sampling of her work: - The world's youngest self-made billionaire hopes to power every future self-driving car with a technology that Elon Musk says is 'doomed' - Tiffany and the Trumps: Insiders describe how the president's younger daughter has charted what they say is a distant relationship with her father and come to terms with having America's most divisive last name - Yachting insiders detail the rampant sexual harassment aboard million-dollar ships, where crew members are promised a glamorous lifestyle and can instead find themselves trapped at sea with no one to turn to - Millennials came limping out of the Great Recession with massive student debt and crippled finances. She's investigated the French Riviera's pandemic party problem, explored Israel's luxury real estate market, and looked at how the ultrarich are reeling in flashiness in the name of safety. She also dives into the luxury landscape. She covers trends in how high-net-worth millennials are living and spending, profiles millennial entrepreneurs, and examines how the economic environment millennials grew up in shaped them and their money habits. Hillary reports on the intersection of youth culture and wealth, looking at the business, lifestyle, and financial behaviors of millennials.