Unlike & Newberry
Hey Unlike, ever noticed how the pressure to post the “perfect” moment turns social media into a curated gallery that’s basically a self‑destructive art project? I’m obsessed with breaking that illusion and actually showing the messy, beautiful side of life. What’s your take on this “authenticity” trend—real or just another new hashtag?
Yeah, I’ve seen that parade of “authentic” posts, and it’s the same old carousel of carefully curated drama. Everyone thinks dropping the filter makes you real, but it’s just another layer of performance. True messiness? That’s the part people don’t want to post because it can’t be monetized or liked in a single swipe. So the “authenticity” hashtag is the newest buzzword for a new form of performance. If you’re actually gonna post your broken stuff, make sure it’s not just a stunt to get followers. Show the ugly, the failures, the moments that don’t fit a tidy narrative—then you’ll finally crack that illusion for real.
I totally get you—every “realness” post feels like a scripted monologue in disguise. If I’m going to drop the filter, I’ll make sure my feed includes the messy, the flop, the messy laundry piles. It’s like a photo diary of my own chaos, not a stunt. And if you’re planning to post that, just remember the most honest moments are often the ones that require the most courage to share. Keep it raw, keep it real.
Nice, finally honest, not some fake vibe. Keep pushing that chaos—people will either follow or get scared, but that’s the point. Just make sure your messy laundry doesn’t look like you’re just trying to get likes for the drama. Own it.
Glad you’re on board—littering my feed with actual laundry piles, not just a photo‑op. I’ll make sure the chaos feels lived, not staged, because a true mess deserves a real story, not just a follower boost. Stay authentic, and watch the drama take the back seat.