Grindr.The ubiquitous dating app that changed the way queer men meet and hookup celebrated turning 15 this week and with it came a lot of discourse on Twitter X Gay Twitter™.15 years ago today, Grindr was launched.
pic.twitter.com/RuJefjnaSTSubscribe to our newsletter for a refreshing cocktail (or mocktail) of LGBTQ+ entertainment and pop culture, served up with a side of eye-candy.“No response is indeed a response.”For better or worse, Grindr has altered the way we communicate online and IRL.
Besides emboldening people to say things on the app they would never utter in person and nearly extinguishing the once tried-and-true concept of cruising inside gay bars, it’s lead to the controversial practice of sharing Grindr screenshots.While photos in albums that are shared in a conversation can’t be screengrabbed, the same is not true about the private text exchanges within the app.Initially, images of chats were shared as a way to get a laugh out of some of our most awkward social interactions.
However, over time many have grown to find the practice to be exploitative, mean and created purely to garner clout or go viral online.