Doomscrolling
Also known as: Doomsurfing
Doomscrolling is the compulsive habit of endlessly scrolling through negative news and social media content, even when it makes you feel worse. The term was coined on Twitter in October 2018 and exploded into mainstream vocabulary during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, when millions of people found themselves glued to their phones consuming an endless feed of bad news. It was recognized as an official dictionary word by Merriam-Webster in September 20234.
Overview
Doomscrolling describes the act of compulsively consuming negative online content, scrolling through social media feeds or news sites despite the toll it takes on your mental health3. The "doom" part captures the dark, anxiety-inducing nature of the content, while "scrolling" refers to the endless thumb-flicking motion on phones that keeps people locked in4. The behavior is closely tied to infinite scroll design on platforms like Twitter, Reddit, and TikTok, which eliminate natural stopping points and keep users engaged longer4.
What separates doomscrolling from regular news consumption is the compulsive, self-destructive quality. You know the content is making you feel terrible, but you keep going anyway. As one Urban Dictionary definition put it: "The amount of time spent doing this is directly proportional to how much worse you're going to feel after you're done"3.
The earliest known use of "doomscrolling" appeared on October 7, 2018, when Twitter user @Callamitys posted: "Taking a break from doomscrolling and being inundated with things and stuff. I'll be back tuesday or something. Here's a thing I'm making"3. According to Wikipedia, the term was coined by Ashik Siddique, now co-chair of Democratic Socialists of America4.
The word sat mostly dormant for over a year before finding its moment. Finance reporter Karen Ho of Quartz said she first encountered the term in a Twitter post from October 2018, noting that "the practice of doomscrolling is almost a normalized behavior for a lot of journalists"2.
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
Doomscrolling isn't a meme template in the traditional sense. It's a shared vocabulary word that people use to:
Self-identify — "I was up until 3am doomscrolling again" is a common confession format on Twitter and Reddit
Call out the behavior — "Put the phone down, stop doomscrolling" as a gentle or sarcastic nudge
Make jokes about current events — Pairing "doomscrolling" with whatever disaster is trending, as in "Sorry boss I can't work I am doomscrolling the coup attempt"
Meme about the cycle — Images or text posts about knowing you should stop but being unable to, often using existing meme formats
Cultural Impact
Full History
Fun Facts
The word sat almost entirely unused for about 17 months between its October 2018 coinage and its March 2020 explosion.
Despite 31% of American adults admitting to regular doomscrolling in 2024, many people who denied the behavior were later found to be doing it anyway.
"Doomscrolling" took only five years to go from a single tweet to an official Merriam-Webster dictionary entry.
The January 6, 2021 Capitol storming tweet about doomscrolling got nearly 300,000 likes in under a month, making it one of the most viral uses of the word.
Derivatives & Variations
Doomsurfing
— The alternate term used by NYT reporter Kevin Roose in March 2020, emphasizing the older internet metaphor of "surfing" the web rather than "scrolling" through feeds[1].
Karen Ho's Daily Reminders
— The Quartz reporter's recurring Twitter posts reminding followers to stop doomscrolling became a recognizable micro-format throughout 2020[2].
Infodemic
— The WHO's term for the pandemic's accompanying wave of misinformation, which became closely linked to doomscrolling discourse[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (5)
- 1
- 2
- 3Doomscrolling - Know Your Memeencyclopedia
- 4Doomscrollingencyclopedia
- 5Doomscrolling - Urban Dictionarydictionary