Twenty years have passed since I briefly experienced the sting of online mockery, yet looking back, I realize just how fortunate I was to have been a teenager in 2006 rather than in the current digital era. The viral pile-ons of today are ruthless and enduring, but my own brush with internet infamy was fleeting and ultimately consequence-free.
A Fleeting Moment of Shame
It was the summer of 2006 when my friends and I decided to film a hyperactive rendition of Queen’s ‘Bohemian Rhapsody,’ headbanging and lip-syncing with teenage abandon. I later uploaded the footage to YouTube with the tongue-in-cheek title ‘Bohemian Crap-sody,’ falsely implying we were intoxicated—a transparent exaggeration considering we were merely clutching fruit juice.
While the video briefly attracted attention and a few jeers, it quickly vanished into the ether of the early web. Unlike the permanent digital footprint that traps today’s adolescents, I had the privilege of being able to embarrass myself, log off, and simply move on with my life.
Source: The Guardian