
There are many people who still enjoy making these. The romanticizeyour life trend originated from Tik Tok user Ashely Ward’s video, which was posted over two years ago now. People still post these Tik Toks, romanticizing their everyday life in doing so. Thanks to the filter, any attempt to laugh appears like a measly attempt at disguising a cry. The point is that this is a trend that has never stopped.

"I'm over it," he continued, after his daughter asked if he was crying over his favorite soccer team's match results, before laughing. "What on Earth are you doing," replied Paul when asked why he was crying. "I'm not sad," he defended, not realizing the look on his virtual face. TikToker puwtok racked up over 1 million views and 140,000 likes with their use of the filter, as his daughter filmed the whole thing.

Reportedly, the Snapchat Lens has already gained over 1.3 billion impressions after debuting just last week. The filter has become the latest to trend on the app with videos easily earning views in the millions as the comedic aspect refuses to lessen despite the amount of clips.

In fact, one viral post even placed the filter on the Kardashians' faces at the Met, racking up over 1 million views. The crying face is something in itself with watering eyes and a downturned mouth, it's arguably the most famous one since Kim Kardashian's. TikTok What Is the Sad Face Filter on TikTok?
