The 'Weird Girl': Coveting Authenticity in a Performer's World

 Issue 3

The 'Weird Girl': Coveting Authenticity in a Performer's World

By: Rhian Kille

‘The clean girl is dead’ cries social media users, and the ‘weird girl’ is primed to take her place. Tiktok, if it is to be believed, shows the popularity of ‘weird girl’ fiction recommendations, ‘weird girl’ fashion ideas and calls for December 2025 to be a ‘weird girl winter’ (often soundtracked by songs off Audrey Hobert’s 2025 debut album ‘Who’s The Clown?’), Most of all women are reclaiming their (non-descript) ‘weirdness’ and celebrating the authenticity of their identity and personality. The authentic individuality, alternative nature and comradery of the ‘weird girl’ offers more freedom and fun than the trends that have dominated social media in recent years, such as the aforementioned ‘clean girl’. More than this, within the weird girl’s popularity is a push back against a vicious trend cycle that encourages social media users to buy a new identity to perform every six months or so, possibly quicker or slower depending just how ‘online’ you are.  

The ‘weird girl’ subculture is linked to recent interest in embracing our childhood selves and interests, but it is also shaded by the current cultural obsession with girlhood. A sense of superiority, of looking down at other women who do conform, also seems like a possible side effect of being a ‘weird girl’. It cannot be said that I’m an unbiased voice on the subject, I can be found at any given time among a gaggle of self-proclaimed weird, strange and off-putting young women - the loves of my life. Even researching for this article has triggered an urgent need cut my hair back into my signature bob, which would inevitably lead to an ill-advised attempt to make the Joan of Arc (Lord Farquad) bob and micro-fringe work for me. However, shining a critical lens on the ‘weird girl’ tells us a lot about what our culture is craving, so consider this a love letter of critical analysis.  

The sub-culture, like any, is not without its pitfalls. The weird girl’s self-acceptance is often hard-won and in spite of opposition, a constant sense of feeling “too much” - stuck on the outside of things, misunderstood. The chip on the shoulder of every adult woman that was once a ‘weird girl’ in her childhood or adolescence can lead to a close sense of community among women who feel that something about them resists “fitting in”. However, it can also lead to a sense of superiority or gatekeeping who gets to call themselves ‘weird’ – who is and isn’t weird ‘enough’ - and a sensitivity to performativity that can create a hostile environment. The deviation from convention, some might say individuality complex, inherent in the ‘weird girl’ does not lend itself well to the potential of becoming a mainstream trend. ‘Weird girls’, now women, don’t take kindly to the women who bullied them as teenagers now buying Shein bloomers and listening to Chappell Roan, things they might have once would have teased them for. Performative bloomers aside, the face of the ‘weird girl’ online, as can be said of almost all social media trends, is still a conventionally beautiful and thin white woman, despite the trend’s clear link to marginalised identity. The weird girl as she appears most often online is a tempered lurch in the direction of escaping conservatism, convention/conformity and the male gaze, but one, in my opinion, in need of nurture, cultivation and encouragement.  

Popular aesthetics are all encoded with values; the clean girl values natural beauty and ‘clean’ living (whatever that means, probably purity). Many of the most popular and lasting fashion and lifestyle trends of the last couple years have had conservative values lurking just under the surface. As Western politics have shifted right, more traditional ideas of femininity have come into fashion, see tradwives and ‘stay-at-home girlfriends’. I would consider trends like brat summer, 2016 makeup and ‘weird girl winter’ as countercultural trends that have sprung up in response. These trends embrace excess in favour of restraint. Other trends, such as bleached eyebrows and the micro-fringe, are examples of an increasingly popular desire to break away from traditional femininity and stop catering towards the male gaze. They reflect how the weird girl is starting to bleed out of the margins and into the mainstream, a cultural reaction to the constant restrictive performance and (self-)surveillance expected of women. In some ways we might see these as subtle rebellions. Women are tired of being told that they should all look and behave the same, and the ‘weird girl’ is leading the way. 

In my brief adventure into the online world of the ‘weird girl’ (this strange young woman has banned herself from TikTok and Instagram) it was obvious to me why weird girl culture has a wide appeal: almost every woman thinks they are ‘weird’ in some way. But it was also obvious where it might be susceptible to promoting what it should oppose. If the ‘weird girl’ becomes the new ‘clean girl’, it will become another social media aesthetic that convinces us to try and purchase and manufacture our identity. The rate with which these trends cycle through train our brains to consider our identities and selfhoods as just another object, another fast-fashion item that can be bought and thrown away. The performance of the self becomes something cheap, temporary and imitated. Social media in 2026 has become an advertising platform more than anything else, which leaves us with the question: will the weird girl’s roots in embracing one’s inner child and authentic self-expression make it ‘trend-proof’? Or will it, like everything else, be diluted into another list of items TO BUY through TikTok shop? 

The desire for ‘weird girls’ and ‘weirdness’ in culture is also undoubtedly a reaction to our cultural obsession with performativity. Recent popular internet language highlights a prominent cultural fixation on false-ness, performance and being inauthentic, from the scourge of ‘performative males’ to cries for a time before actors were media-trained. We are desperate to return to a time where everything wasn’t performance; the rise of ‘weird girl’ represents a desire to return back to ourselves. The integration of the ‘weird girl’ into a lineage of consumerism and a never-ending cycle of influence, imitation and micro-trends would sever her from her original identity. Authentic self-expression cannot be commodified because it cannot be replicated en-masse; as a trend it only highlights empty all these trends are. The rise of ‘weird girl chic’ highlights our desperate desire for authenticity, to abandon self-conscious performativity and the cycles, systems and patterns that keep us copying others, skirting around ourselves.  

I could never bring myself to begrudge the rise of weird girls, whether people are dipping their toes in for the first time or are homegrown, born and raised. I am so excited by the popularity of weird girl artists all the way from Audrey Hobert to Chappell Roan (whose face is looking down at me as I write this from where it is plastered across my walls). I can only hope that some of this weirdness, this celebration of authentic and strange female identities, will remain, and not be thrown out with next week’s rubbish when it is no longer ‘weird girl winter’. Either way, I’ll still be here with my group of weird women, laughing so hard in our eye-catching outfits that we don’t notice the dirty looks being thrown our way.