doomscrolling

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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doom +‎ scrolling, from the practice of scrolling through timelines and news feeds on a computer or mobile device.

Noun

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doomscrolling (uncountable)

  1. (informal, neologism) The practice of continually reading Internet news about catastrophic events.
    Synonym: doomsurfing
    • 2020 July 15, Brian X. Chen, “You’re Doomscrolling Again. Here’s How to Snap Out of It.”, in New York Times[1]:
      Step 1 is to acknowledge the burden that doomscrolling creates for our health, Dr. Gazzaley said. “You have to realize you don’t want to live your life in a hamster wheel of complete news consumption,” he said.
    • 2020, Tanya Goodin, My Brain Has Too Many Tabs Open: How to Untangle Our Relationship with Tech, page 167:
      I assured them that while doomscrolling was a difficult online pitfall, it wasn't one they needed to fall in to[sic].
    • 2021 January 24, Tallie Proud, “Twitter accounts to follow to break up the doomscrolling”, in Tallie Proud[2]:
      It would be easy enough to say just stop doing it, but with everything happening in the world right now, it’s impossible to completely avoid doomscrolling.
    • 2021 July 30, “Editorial: Welcome to the 2021 Pandemic Games: Thrills, spills and COVID”, in Boston Herald[3]:
      But this is 2021 and after a year and a half of COVID-19, of racial and socioeconomic unrest, viewers may be tuning in for a respite from doomscrolling daily news.
    • 2022 March 6, James Tapper, “Obsessed? Frightened? Wakeful? War in Ukraine sparks return of doomscrolling”, in The Guardian[4]:
      Now doomscrolling is back in ways not seen since the beginning of the Covid pandemic.
  2. (by extension) Continuously and aimlessly consuming any content on social media, particularly sites that utilize a scrolling format, such as TikTok, Instagram and Twitter.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Verb

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doomscrolling

  1. present participle and gerund of doomscroll