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Two Internets, many roles. This is commentary from James Brown. Katherine D.
¶ Understanding the Two Internets
AKA default friend on Substack, makes an intriguing point about the Internet. She says there are two Internets. The normie Internet, polished, algorithm driven and built for engagement. And the subterranean Internet, hidden, messy and guarded by people who don't care. Care about clout. I think she's right.
¶ Navigating the Duality of the Internet
But here's where it gets interesting. Most of us don't choose one or the other. We live in both. Even on the same platform, we play different roles. We're enthusiastic participants in one corner and silent lurkers in another. One moment we're liking memes and commenting on TikToks, the next, we're scrolling through a heated debate, watching but saying nothing, like wallflowers at a digital party.
And if we're honest, and we should be, we'd admit that this isn't that different from the rest of our lives.
¶ The Many Faces of Ourselves
Think about it. Aren't we all a little different depending on the room we're in? At work, we present one version of ourselves. At home with family, another with friends. We're open, but with strangers. Maybe guarded, maybe more quiet. We adapt. We shift. We wear masks. Not out of deceit, not because we don't care, but because that's what life asks us to do. The Internet just amplifies this. It gives us more rooms to enter, more roles to play.
The normie Internet pulls us into public performances, polished, indigestible for the algorithm. The subterranean Internet, on the other hand, lets us retreat, be quieter, rougher around the edges.
¶ The Duality of Online Spaces
And just like in life, we need both places. One to connect broadly and the other to feel seen more deeply. So do you really have to choose one Internet or the other? I don't think so. What matters isn't which space you belong to, but how you navigate them.
¶ Navigating Social Spaces: Identity and Role Play
Whether you're chasing clout or blending into the background, the roles we play tell us something about who we are. What do you think? Does Catherine have a point? Do I? And what about you? Do you find yourself thriving in one space and lurking in another?
¶ Exploring Online Personas
And how different are the roles you play online from the ways you play roles in life? Let me know in the comments and support my work@jamesbrowntv.substack.com on that note, I'm James Brown, and as always, be well.
