Tag: internet culture

Contrast between real life and Doomposting-driven digital anxiety
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Doomposting: Why the Internet Feels Increasingly Hopeless

There’s a familiar rhythm to late-night scrolling now. A few harmless memes, a trending video, and then—almost abruptly—the tone shifts. Headlines turn darker. Tweets grow sharper. Comment sections spiral into cynicism. By the time you put your phone down, the world feels slightly worse than it did an hour ago. Not because something changed overnight—but […]

Visual representation of AI Content Problem causing uniform and repetitive online content
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NPC Energy: When Life Starts Feeling Scripted

There’s a moment you’ve probably experienced but never quite named. You’re scrolling through your phone, reacting to content you’ve seen a hundred times before. Same jokes, same outrage cycles, same trends recycled with new filters. You pause—not because something surprised you, but because it didn’t. It felt… expected. Predictable. Almost pre-written. That quiet realization is […]

Person scrolling phone with fragmented content representing Corecore trend
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Corecore: The Internet Trend That Feels Like a Breakdown in Real Time

There’s a certain kind of video you stumble upon late at night—fragments of advertisements, influencers talking over each other, a news clip sliding into a meme, all stitched together in a way that feels chaotic but oddly intentional. It doesn’t try to entertain you in the usual sense. It doesn’t even try to make sense. […]

Everyone is the main character concept illustration showing interconnected lives
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Main Character Syndrome: When Life Feels Like a Personal Movie

There’s a moment that plays out more often than we admit. You’re walking down a busy street, headphones in, music swelling just right—and suddenly, everything feels cinematic. The crowd becomes background extras. The traffic noise fades into ambience. For a few seconds, the world seems built around you. It’s a harmless feeling—until it isn’t. What […]

Comparison between factual news and Internet Lore narratives online
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Internet Lore: The Stories the Internet Refuses to Forget

It usually begins with something small. A blurry screenshot. A strange comment thread. A story someone swears happened to “a friend of a friend.” Then, almost quietly, it spreads. It gets shared, reshaped, exaggerated. Weeks later, it’s no longer just a post—it’s something else entirely. Something persistent. Something people believe. That is where Internet Lore […]

Fans promoting music online with hashtags and streaming apps
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Stan Culture: When Fandom Becomes Identity

It starts quietly. A song played on repeat. A tweet liked, then retweeted. A fan account created, half as a joke, half as devotion. Over time, the line between admiration and allegiance begins to blur. Notifications become emotional cues. A celebrity’s success feels personal; their criticism feels like an attack. Somewhere in that shift lies […]

Person stepping out of a smartphone screen onto grass in a sunny park
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Touch Grass: Why the Internet’s Favorite Insult Became a Cultural Diagnosis

The phrase usually arrives mid-scroll. A creator posts a 40-part thread about a TV finale. Someone else turns a minor disagreement into a blood feud. A stranger writes 900 words under a joke tweet with the intensity of a constitutional lawyer. Then, almost inevitably, a reply appears: touch grass. It is dismissive, funny, rude, and, […]

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