[The Goods By Vox]( The Tuesday edition of the Goods newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. If you happen to live in the Moncton, New Brunswick, area and have been feeling sort of lonely lately, some good news: Earlier this month, a 23-year-old named Brently and his pal Jeffrey [made a video]( in which they announce that theyâre looking to make new friends. âWeâre pretty cool guys who like hanging out at this park,â Brently explains, adding that theyâre into movies and comic books. It went viral on Twitter when [someone captioned]( the video âthis is the most depressing shit Iâve ever seen.â To be sure, the person who made the tweet was immediately called out for being kind of a jerk toward Brently, who from this and other videos appears to be a genuinely kind and upbeat person and who seems like heâd make for a wonderful friend. But itâs just one example of a specific kind of post Iâve been seeing more of, in which one person makes an earnest plea for connection. A friendship thirst trap, if you will. As social distancing becomes less of a term plastered all over the grocery store and more a relic of the weirdest year ever, all the fun, messy, and sometimes horribly lonely feelings related to having a social life are starting to creep back into our lives. The most recent New York magazine cover story centers on [the return of FOMO](, or the sense that even if our social lives have felt suddenly packed over the past month or two, weâre just as likely to feel left out. âYou may ask yourself (I may ask myself): How did everyone get these invites?â Matthew Schneier writes. âHave they actually been tending to their relationships during quarantine, going to Zoom drinks while I was rewatching The Good Wife? Did everyone get in shape except me?â I keep seeing people encouraging each other to âget out there.â Last week, a [30-day dating challenge]( went mildly viral on TikTok, in which people must delete their dating apps, leave the house, and strike up conversations to meet people the old-fashioned way. IRL, a new social network backed by SoftBank and valued at about a billion dollars, is [targeting teenagers to connect and meet up]( (TikTok is reportedly working with IRL on a product integration). One of the most viral stories to come out of TikTok this year has been the saga of [âMarissa from New York,â]( sparked by a video in which a man overheard a group of friends in a New York City park gossiping about their friend Marissa, then posted what heâd heard on TikTok and told his followers to âfind Marissaâ so that she could confront her supposed friends. The internet found Marissa in a matter of hours, and within days, sheâd launched a project called [#NoMoreLonelyFriends](, devoted to planning public picnics in city parks. (Whether the whole thing [was faked in order to promote said]( project is up for debate, but at least [Marissa is super popular now](!) It feels like the stakes of âgetting out thereâ have never been higher. Itâs birthday season in my particular social group, and each weekend since Iâve been vaccinated I tell myself that this is going to be the one where I stay in and recharge, and each weekend thereâs somewhere I absolutely must go and drink and dance and hug my friends. Itâs been thrilling and wonderful, and yet a nagging part of me is still grumpy about the nights I missed, nights I either wasnât invited to or couldnât make, wondering whether everyone else was having fun without me. I want to be everywhere, with everyone, but I also sort of want nobody to text me ever again. âHi, Iâm at my breaking point, please stop making plans on the weekends during the summer, itâs mid-June and if you wanted to hang out with me on a weekend Iâm not free until late August,â vented [TikToker Jake Cornell](, whoâs become something of an everyman for a certain type of overworked, self-deprecating Brooklyn millennial. The subtext here is that âyes, please stop filling my calendar with plans, but also please donât, because if Iâm not invited Iâm going to absolutely lose my mind.â Itâs a thing thatâs at this point pretty cringe to talk about â âI donât want to go but I have to be invitedâ is a very specific brand of, like, 2014 Twitter humor â and what weâre ultimately describing is just being a regular person who sometimes feels left out but also enjoys watching the worst reality shows imaginable and speaking to nobody. This summer, the one that we were [promised all the way back in March 2020](, the one where everything would suddenly be normal again, that particular ennui comes with a whole new meaning. I get jealous over Instagram Stories of other peopleâs parties even as I post pictures of my own parties; I get jealous reading about the nights that much cooler people than me are having in Brock Colyarâs [excellent new newsletter project, âare u coming?â]( in which he shadows influencers chasing vibes on a Saturday night, even though the idea of being at a Bushwick rooftop party with a bunch of 19-year-old YouTubers sounds exhausting. And yet I think there is something inherently sweet about publicly thirsting for friendship. Loneliness is already a [massive health crisis in the US](and much of the world, even though to admit to it is still a source of shame. Perhaps one nice thing to come out of the pandemic is that it has helped normalize speaking about our individual loneliness and, most importantly, reaching out into the digital void in the hopes that someone else might reach back. Brently, for his part, [has hit 60,000 followers]( since his video went viral. Even if most of them donât happen to live in New Brunswick, hopefully at least a couple of them have become internet friends.
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