My decades-long love affair with the Internet is over. That seductive nebula of infotainment and community that introduced me to obscure indie bands to fangirl over, allowed me to nurture long-distance friendships entirely through memes, and made the pandemic lockdowns survivable—tolerable, even—eventually lulled me into an empty state of zombie-brain scrolling.
Once an exciting place of discovery, the web has changed for the worse. It’s now a never-ending loop of contoured cheekbones (that you must aspire to), beach-friendly book covers (that you must buy, but never read), and social change campaigns (that every armchair activist can support from the comfort of their couch). Today, everything feels like an ad, a vapid echo chamber where everyone has the same thoughts, same interests, even the same clothes.
I longed for the sparks I felt when I was introduced to the online world as a teenager—discovering and downloading strange music on LimeWire, writing away my teen angst on Blogspot, and painstakingly searching for literary quotes and song lyrics for my Orkut profile (yes, I know my mid-30s is showing).
To rekindle some of that old enthusiasm, I went down a rabbit hole of ’00s Internet nostalgia and returned with some very cool relics from the digital archive. If you, like me, would like to escape the deluge of bite-sized content even for a little while, here are some websites you could give your attention to instead: