This piece examines how TikTok's Agartha trend—featuring hollow Earth and Nazi UFO myths—serves as a vehicle for white supremacist ideologies, using aesthetic and coded elements to blend extremist narratives with mainstream content and evade moderation.
Stacked weekly counts; colour by lean. “n/a” covers government and iwi-Māori sources where lean isn't applicable.
How this topic has been named, week by week. A new alias winning out is usually a framing shift.
How the news corpus has covered this same topic over the last 12 weeks. 1 article from RNZ, Stuff, NZ Herald, ODT, 1News, Newsroom and The Spinoff. Click through to the press view for the full panel.
Up to 12 framings spread across orientations. Each framing is a short phrase the topic extractor generated to characterise the piece's stance — not a quote from the source. Click through to read the original.
using mainstream tags to spread radical content
Hollow-Earth myths and Nazi UFOs on TikTok are bringing white supremacism into the mainstreamSocial-media signal on the same topic, drawn from the social lens. Engagement is likes + 2×shares + 3×replies, the same weighting used across the digest cards. View on /social →
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