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Why Would Someone Do This?: Unboxing

This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at WMU chapter.

Today I would like to share something that used to baffle me by it simply existing. This is the trend on Youtube, known as unboxing. Unboxing videos are entirely what they sound like. People receive a new product and proceed to unbox it before your very eyes, dangling it’s newness in front of you. Some people have full channels filled with nothing but unboxing videos. Some of these unboxing videos actually come from people who will review the product – in a completely separate videos that comes after the one where they take it out of its box. After a long time of watching these for no reason other than I’m the type of person who likes watching paint dry, I feel like I get it now. Not completely. But just hear me out here.
 
Typically, the videos go like this. Somebody briefly introduces the product; usually it’s something of the tech variety, as well as something expensive. The box usually sits there during this time while its anonymous announcer tells us about it, as if to say “Yep. That’s me.” They usually spend a large amount of time turning the box, showing every inch of it, trying to convince us of its legitimacy. Then the real unpackaging begins.

What’s particularly fascinating, to me, is that each unboxing is treated as if it was their first time opening a box, ever. “It’s covered in plastic.” “Whoa, better get this cardboard out of the way.” “Twisty ties!”  The opening itself is so meticulous, so gently done. It makes me reflect back on all the times I bought a new piece of technical equipment and ravenously ripped apart the box with my teeth until I obtained it; usually throwing out the manual and valuable other parts in the process. Do people really open things like this? With such care and love for each individual piece of packaging equipment?
 
Usually, a large amount of time is spent on the packaging; even moreso than on the product itself. Or else, the actual product and its features are saved for the final minute and a half or so of the video. So then why would someone rather watch this than an actual review of the product?
 
After all, many of these are coming from Youtube partners, or from people who have been paid by whichever company to do this. This. They are not being paid to write a review. They are being paid to cut open a box, take things out of it, and comment on how it’s packaged and how it looks.
 
What’s the appeal?
 

After watching more of these than anybody legally should be able too, I can safely say I have no idea. But if I were to take an educated guess. It would be this.
 

Eventually, after watching so many of these I was counting boxes in my sleep, I realized I’d been
 lulled into a weird state of relaxation. I was in something I wanted to call, “product hypnosis”. There was one video in particular when a guy removed the Nintendo DS from its packaging and then explained how it was “longer than the average DS”. I kid you not; I wanted him to elaborate, to explain why. This was fascinating to me. And it only gets sadder from there. I was routing for anonymous consumer man as he struggled to open the pocket knife. I was feeling his pain when he realized it was too difficult to rip the hard plastic on his own, and went to get a scissor from the kitchen. I was heartbroken when his Nintendo DS didn’t come with a pen.
 
I  feel you man.
 
Unboxing is a clear and relatable process. It has a beginning, middle, and an end. I enjoyed watching these as much as I was willing to admit they were absurd for the same reason I can sit in the kitchen and watch my roommates do dishes.
 
 Also because it makes me feel like I’m emperor of our household.
 
It’s something I know I don’t have to think too hard about. I know each little obstacle will be overcome no problem. It’s the same reason people pay millions of dollars every year to see the same movie over and over again. We know the outcome. The guy gets the product, and then lives happily ever after until it breaks in a week (if it’s an Apple). It’s about sitting back and appreciating the journey, small and consumerist as that journey might be.
Katelyn Kivel is a senior at Western Michigan University studying Public Law with minors in Communications and Women's Studies. Kate took over WMU's branch of Her Campus in large part due to her background in journalism, having spent a year as Production Editor of St. Clair County Community College's Erie Square Gazette. Kate speaks English and Japanese and her WMU involvement includes being a Senator and former Senior Justice of the Western Student Association as well as President of WMU Anime Addicts and former Secretary of WMU's LBGT organization OUTspoken, and she is currently establishing the RSO President's Summit of Western Michigan University, an group composed of student organization presidents for cross-promotion and collaboration purposes. Her interests include reading and writing, both creative and not, as well as the more nerdy fringes of popular culture.