Netflix Goes Vertical, Cloning TikTok With ‘Fast Laughs’

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This is already a year of great changes happening on almost our most loved pltaforms and everyone seems to be loving it. Just recently, Spotify launched in over 80 African countries, and now, Netflix has turned vertical with videos just for laughs.

In the all-out war for your eyeballs and thumbs, Netflix just brought in some surprise reinforcements. Yesterday Wednesday 3rd March, the streaming giant launched “Fast Laughs,” for iPhone, a TikTok-esque mobile feature that allows iOS users in some countries to scroll through comedy-focused short clips of Netflix shows. 

Tapping a Fast Laughs tab added to the mobile app will launch a stream of funny snippets from movies, sitcoms, comedy routines, and television shows, according to Netflix.

“Wanna see something funny?” the streaming television service asked rhetorically in a blog post.

“On Netflix, this one little question opens up lots of possibilities from hilarious series and films to laugh-out-loud stand-up specials.”

Fast Laughs clips will come from the vast Netflix comedy catalogue, including shows such as Murder Mystery and Big Mouth and stand-up comedy from performers including Kevin Hart and Ali Wong, according to the Silicon Valley-based service.

“This is the part where we have to say that not all clips will be appropriate for all audiences,” Netflix said in the post.

Fast Laughs was available for iPhone users in select countries, and Netflix said it will soon start testing it on mobile devices powered by Google-backed Android software.

The new feature appeared crafted to appeal to fans of wildly popular TikTok and rides a trend toward viewers enjoying video entertainment in quick hits.

YouTube Shorts — the video-sharing website’s quick clips meant to compete with TikTok — were racking up 3.5 billion views a day during beta testing in India, the platform’s head said last month.

Facebook-owned Instagram responded to TikTok’s popularity with their own short video format called Reels last August.

And in November, Snapchat launched Spotlight, a public feed of content produced by users.