Experts Say Social Media Fuels 'Whataboutism' for 1 Billion-Plus Users, Driving Creator Backlash
Updated
Updated · KSL.com · Jul 18
Experts Say Social Media Fuels 'Whataboutism' for 1 Billion-Plus Users, Driving Creator Backlash
1 articles · Updated · KSL.com · Jul 18
Summary
Experts say social media is intensifying "whataboutism"—users reacting as if every post must fit their own needs—turning ordinary content into flashpoints for anger, helplessness or accusation.
Algorithms and individualism help drive that response, they said, because personalized feeds make irrelevant content feel like a system failure rather than something to skip.
Creators described the fallout in viral episodes such as the "bean soup theory," where viewers demanded alternatives to a recipe not meant for them, and in backlash to posts about panic-attack tips or personal routines.
That pressure pushes creators to hedge, over-explain and do extra emotional labor, even as short-form platforms reward speed over nuance and make fuller context harder to deliver.
Experts said the pattern worsened after the pandemic and broader inclusion debates, leaving some users hyperalert to exclusion and contributing to a more hostile online culture that spills offline.