Facebook fights have become so prevalent – and increasingly
nasty – that some people have abandoned the social media site just to restore
some peace of mind.
But a growing online trend, fueled by countless
websites, is designed to tap into our seemingly limitless sense of outrage, and
this method of sparking agitation and anger is working exactly as planned. The
sites get their “clicks” and those thousands or millions of visitors to those sites
generate a surge in advertising dollars.
This new form of Internet communication is called “reverse
outrage,” the desire to spout off on Facebook (or Twitter or Snapchat) whenever
a controversy, no matter how small, arises online.
The ultimate example in 2015 may have been the
short-lived outrage over Starbucks’ seasonal red coffee cups, a product design which
was somehow twisted into a “War on Christmas” maneuver supposedly designed to
downplay the Christian aspects of the holiday.
In the end, the story was proven to be a farce, driven
by a small group of extreme evangelists, but it generated collective outrage to
the point of “going viral,” as they say.
In a piece for Vox, Alex Abad-Santos explains that “reverse
outrage” often begins with a group of persistent Internet trolls pushing a controversial
hashtag or video or statement, and the backlash grows in multiples until it
becomes a national phenomenon -- briefly.
In the political arena, the desire to express outrage
is often manifested in response to an online item that is considered racist or
sexist or homophobic. In other cases, Facebook commentators want to show how
outraged they are at gun-grabbers or radical socialists or they just need to
prove that they revere the constitution more than the rest of us.
In the world of pop culture, reverse outrage can be directed
at something as simple as a coffee cup or a movie or even a shade of lipstick.
"Reverse outrage is the righteous Internet backlash against an initial statement or display of outrage — think a boycott or a call to action — however founded or unfounded it may be,” Abad-Santos writes. “It works like a tsunami, starting with an initial shock that's followed by quiet as the bluster and bombast retreats like a low tide, then returns in a megaton surge, often aided by the media.
“The irony is that in the rush to prove one's moral
superiority by speaking out against some racist, sexist, or otherwise hurtful
sentiment … the sentiment is frequently amplified on a scale that wouldn't have
been possible had people not taken the bait.
“Social media has given us an avenue to prove our
worthiness. And we've turned it into an express lane.”
Abad-Santos tells the story of a snarky Twitter message
and photo sent by writer Parker Molloy that seemed rather innocuous: “Went shopping for some makeup. How on earth
is this a lipstick color?”
Molloy’s distaste for a certain shade of red was picked
up by one website, then another, and her reaction to “Underage Red” was
described as “disgusted” and eventually, yes, “outraged.”
Molloy’s bemusement with this phony controversy reached
an eye-rolling moment when the company that makes the lipstick issued a public
statement defending their product.
As Abad-Santos aptly describes this explosion of
triviality, “the media centipede … gobbled up her story, digested it, and then
vomited out another version — and then another and another.”
“… The most disheartening aspect of our rush to
proclaim that we're Good by denouncing something as Bad (is that) we often
don't care about fixing the wrong or adding to the conversation; all we see is
an opportunity to affirm some version of ourselves by taking a side and making
a scene. And in doing so, we've figured out a way to dismantle complex ideas
into simplistic, easily digestible things that, in the end, are ultimately
disposable — until the next fight comes around.”


Exactly the case when politician need a diversion from a scandal, they spark outrage, set on fire another scandal!
ReplyDelete