Exhibitionist: Observer Exclusive
This is the unique pathology of the social media age. The old voyeur wanted to see without being seen. The old exhibitionist wanted to be seen without seeing. The new hybrid wants both simultaneously: to have their binoculars and their spotlight.
And the saddest part? While they are shouting, the canyon is silent, the sun has set, and the moment—the real, unobserved, un-shareable moment—has passed them by.
Consider the architecture of a “live-stream.” The streamer is ostensibly observing an event—a protest, a party, a quiet walk through the woods. But their primary gaze is not on the event. It is on the floating comments, the viewer count, the potential for virality. They are observing the audience who is observing them observe. It is an infinite regress of looking. The camera becomes a two-way mirror: one side reflects the world, the other side reflects the self. exhibitionist observer
But there is a cost. This split consciousness—one eye on the world, one eye on the mirror—dilutes reality. You cannot truly surrender to a sunset if you are worried about your angle. You cannot truly listen to a secret if you are already planning how to leak it. The exhibitionist observer lives in a perpetual state of deferred living. They are always documenting the present for a future audience, which means they are never fully in the present.
The exhibitionist observer is the person holding up their phone at a concert not to watch the band, but to film the crowd watching the band. They are the tourist who stands on the cliff edge at sunset—not staring at the horizon, but posing with their back to it, ensuring that the sublime view becomes nothing more than a pixelated backdrop for their own profile. They observe life, yes, but only as a prop for their own performance. This is the unique pathology of the social media age
In literature, the archetype might be Dostoevsky’s Underground Man—a man who is painfully self-aware of his own wretchedness and who performs his misery for an imagined reader even as he suffers it. In film, it is the character who talks to the camera, breaking the fourth wall, reminding us that this tragedy is also a show.
But we are no longer content to be just the eye in the sky. We want to be the sky itself, and also the bird flying through it, and also the person on the ground tweeting about the bird. The new hybrid wants both simultaneously: to have
There is a crack in the mirror of modern attention, and through it steps the figure I call the exhibitionist observer . At first glance, the term seems like a contradiction. An observer is a ghost—cloaked in anonymity, a quiet voyeur in the corner, sipping their coffee, watching the world with the serene detachment of a cat on a windowsill. An exhibitionist, by contrast, is the figure on the stage, naked under the hot light, demanding, “Look at me.”