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Battle of the best friends
June 15, 2025
|The Independent
On her podcast, Lily Allen talked about ranking her mates based on priority. All jokes aside, is it a good idea or would it add efficiency where it doesn’t belong, asks Katie Rosseinsky
Cast your millennial minds back to the year 2006. Social media is in its infancy, and you might even still be using a dial-up modem to access it on your PC. Mercifully, only a few people outside of Silicon Valley have heard of Mark Zuckerberg - but you and all your teenage peers know exactly what MySpace founder Tom Anderson looks like. That's because, as soon as you sign up to his website, a photo of Anderson posing in front of a whiteboard covered in scribbles appears in your “Top Eight” friends list by default.
If you came of age some time in the mid-Noughties, then the words “Top Eight” probably alternately fill you with warm nostalgia and chilly horror. Each profile on the rudimentary social media platform’s website featured a showcase of that user’s eight best friends, in a list ranked by how much they liked them.
And if you were really good at rudimentary HTML, like one of my inner circle? You could code your page in such a way that no one else could see your ranking, allowing you to be even more honest (read: brutal) about your roster. We felt revolutionary, like trailblazing women in STEM, but we were actually just devious and a bit petty.
It was performative popularity at its most blatant; it was also addictive, anxiety-inducing (why has Becky P bumped me down two places since last week?) and probably laid waste to thousands of friendships along the way. I think I’m still carrying residual guilt from the time I demoted a once-close pal because I was spending more time with an older, cooler crowd, prompting us to drift apart entirely (was I ever so cruel?)

هذه القصة من طبعة June 15, 2025 من The Independent.
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