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.

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.”

What drives this? Perhaps it is a fear of insignificance. To simply see something beautiful is a private joy, but it leaves no mark. It evaporates. To be seen seeing it, however, is to claim ownership. It is to say, “I was the witness, and therefore this moment belongs to me.” The exhibitionist observer cannot bear the thought of a tree falling in the forest with no one to hear it—so they make sure to record the sound, and then record themselves listening to the recording.

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