Before the read
Yes. From soft launches to proposals, today’s love stories are shaped for online audiences.
Visibility creates connection, but it also invites judgment, expectations, and performance pressure.
As love becomes content, couples struggle to balance authenticity with curated public image.
The kiss cam was doing what it was meant to do: scanning the crowd, isolating two people, enlarging them on the screen, and entertaining the crowd. Unfortunately, it settled on Kristin Cabot and Andy Byron, co-workers who were both married to other people, and should not have been wrapped in such a tight embrace at a Coldplay concert.
Their comically horrified reactions to being broadcast were immediately meme-able, and within minutes, the internet was aware of the scandal, and their pictures were everywhere. Everybody weighed in with their jokes and judgments. As the incident went viral, it became a textbook depiction of romance in the age of the internet, where intimacy and humiliation are converted to content.
Romance has always had an audience. Before the internet, Prince Charles’s wedding to Lady Diana was one of the most-watched TV broadcasts of all time. In our personal lives, we’ve always known couples whose relationships we admire and look up to. We gather our families, friends, and sometimes acquaintances to witness our love for romantic partners during proposals, wedding ceremonies, and vow renewals. Love has never been an entirely private affair.
However, the size and persistence of the audience have changed, thanks to the world we live in today. Social media has eradicated the boundaries between personal and public life, and intimate relationships have not been spared. People now launch relationships through Instagram stories and confirm breakups through social media captions. The audience no longer simply observes; they actively participate with likes, comments, retweets, and reposts. Although this behavior is more visible with celebrities, it applies to anyone with a social media account and a following. Of course, a a market for “influencer couples” has emerged amongst the social noise. For them, love is the product, and their romance is content. Brands sponsor dates, and arguments are filmed for engagement. The product is sold, and performance is intense because the joint venture must continue. Everything is publicized, monetized, and criticized.