Selfie

2002Internet slang / photo trendclassic

Also known as: selfy · self-shot

Selfie, coined by Nathan Hope in 2002, is a self-portrait photograph taken with a smartphone and shared on social media, becoming Oxford's Word of the Year in 2013.

The selfie is a self-portrait photograph taken with a handheld camera or smartphone, typically shared on social media. Australian Nathan Hope wrote the first known use of the word on an internet forum in September 20021, and the practice spread through Flickr, MySpace, and Instagram before Oxford Dictionaries named "selfie" the Word of the Year in 20136. From bathroom mirror shots to celebrity Instagram posts to the Mars Curiosity rover's self-portrait on Mars, the selfie became the defining photographic act of the smartphone era.

TL;DR

The selfie is a self-portrait photograph taken with a handheld camera or smartphone, typically shared on social media.

Overview

A selfie is a photograph someone takes of themselves, usually with a phone camera held at arm's length or pointed at a mirror. The subject holds or controls the camera, which sets a selfie apart from a photo taken by someone else14. Front-facing smartphone cameras simplified the process by letting users see themselves on screen in real-time while composing the shot6.

The practice covers a wide range of styles: the classic arm's-length shot, the bathroom mirror selfie, the "MySpace angle" (camera held high, looking up coyly), and group selfies. They're commonly shared on Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, and Twitter, often tagged with hashtags like #selfie, #me, or #selfportrait4.

The word "selfie" first appeared in written form on September 13, 2002, on an Australian internet forum run by Karl Kruszelnicki. A user named Nathan Hope posted about falling on his face at a friend's 21st birthday party, writing: "And sorry about the focus, it was a selfie." Hope later clarified that the term was already "common slang at the time" in Australia, not something he invented1.

Self-portrait photography predates the word by over 160 years. Robert Cornelius took a daguerreotype of himself in 1839 by uncovering his camera's lens, running into frame, and holding still during the long exposure. He recorded on the back: "The first light picture ever taken. 1839"6.

Modern selfie culture also drew from 1990s Japanese kawaii (cute) culture, where self-photography was a major preoccupation among schoolgirls. Purikura (print club) photo sticker booths, conceived in 1994 by Sasaki Miho and developed by Atlus and Sega, let users take decorated self-portraits in arcades1. On English-language internet platforms, the alternate spelling "selfy" appeared on Flickr as early as 2004 to tag self-taken portraits, and the first Urban Dictionary definition for "selfy" went up on April 22, 20055.

Origin & Background

Platform
Australian internet forum (first written use), Flickr / MySpace (early spread)
Creator
Nathan Hope
Date
2002
Year
2002

The word "selfie" first appeared in written form on September 13, 2002, on an Australian internet forum run by Karl Kruszelnicki. A user named Nathan Hope posted about falling on his face at a friend's 21st birthday party, writing: "And sorry about the focus, it was a selfie." Hope later clarified that the term was already "common slang at the time" in Australia, not something he invented.

Self-portrait photography predates the word by over 160 years. Robert Cornelius took a daguerreotype of himself in 1839 by uncovering his camera's lens, running into frame, and holding still during the long exposure. He recorded on the back: "The first light picture ever taken. 1839".

Modern selfie culture also drew from 1990s Japanese kawaii (cute) culture, where self-photography was a major preoccupation among schoolgirls. Purikura (print club) photo sticker booths, conceived in 1994 by Sasaki Miho and developed by Atlus and Sega, let users take decorated self-portraits in arcades. On English-language internet platforms, the alternate spelling "selfy" appeared on Flickr as early as 2004 to tag self-taken portraits, and the first Urban Dictionary definition for "selfy" went up on April 22, 2005.

How It Spread

In late June 2005, the first Flickr group pool called "Selfies" appeared, though it was originally created for fans of the band Self and later became a general repository for self-portraits. The first pool dedicated specifically to selfie-style photographs launched in early 2007.

The term jumped beyond personal blogging spaces in September 2007, when TMZ used "selfie" to describe actress Rosario Dawson stopping to take a photo with a fan. By July 2009, "Selfie" earned its own Urban Dictionary entry, described as an activity done for MySpace and Facebook. On Tumblr, a parallel tradition took hold: #GPOY (Gratuitous Picture Of Yourself), a tag that started among the platform's early community of young women and expanded to cover any image or GIF a user identified with so strongly it "might as well" be a picture of them.

In January 2011, the blog Selfie Magic launched with tutorials on taking good self-portraits and popularized the weekly hashtag #SelfieSaturday. Instagram's explosive growth made selfies even more visible. By early 2013, #me was the third most frequently used hashtag on the platform, with over 90 million self-portraits tagged underneath it.

Throughout 2012, selfie coverage hit the mainstream press. The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, Gawker, and BuzzFeed all ran features on the trend. TIME placed "Selfie" at number nine on their Top 10 Buzzwords of 2012 list, defining it as "self-portraits, typically made to post on a social networking website". That September, the Mars Curiosity rover joined in by rotating its camera for a self-portrait on the Martian surface. The Atlantic ran the image under the headline "Mars Curiosity Rover Takes a Selfie," treating the word as common knowledge.

How to Use This Meme

The selfie is one of the simplest formats in internet culture. The typical approach:

1

Hold your phone at arm's length with the front-facing camera active, or position yourself in front of a mirror

2

Frame your face (and whatever background or companions you want to include)

3

Take the photo, review, and reshoot as many times as needed

4

Optionally apply a filter, adjust the lighting, or crop

5

Share on social media with relevant hashtags (#selfie, #me, #SelfieSaturday, etc.)

Cultural Impact

The selfie reshaped how people interact with cameras and with each other online. Before selfies became standard practice, most personal photos were taken by someone else. The selfie gave individuals direct control over their own image, choosing what angle, expression, and context to present to the world.

Psychologists studied the effects. Research showed that people who based their self-worth on "public contingencies" like others' approval and physical appearance were more likely to share photos frequently online. On forums like Reddit's r/amiugly, users submitted self-portraits for anonymous feedback from strangers, a practice that would have been nearly impossible before camera phones and social platforms.

The format crossed into politics, science, and celebrity culture. President Obama posed for selfies at public events. The Mars Curiosity rover's self-portrait on Mars became front-page news. Celebrities like Kim Kardashian and Rihanna made selfies central to their public personas. Beyoncé built an entire HBO documentary around the form.

The selfie also shaped the dating world. OkCupid data revealed that specific selfie styles correlated with dramatically different success rates, with the MySpace angle outperforming every other photo type for women. On Tinder, the tiger selfie trend grew so widespread that New York state passed legislation indirectly targeting the practice.

Full History

The year 2013 was the selfie's peak moment of cultural recognition. In February, Beyoncé's HBO documentary *Life Is But a Dream* drew widespread commentary for its self-shot approach. The Cut counted roughly 25 scenes filmed selfie-style with handheld devices and tallied 577 first-person pronouns across the documentary's 94 minutes, calling the whole thing "a feature-length selfie, basically, from one of the few living humans who can turn 'feature-length selfie' into must-see TV". That same month, One Direction released a self-filmed music video for their Comic Relief charity cover of "One Way or Another," building the entire visual around selfie montages, bathtub shots, and a cameo from Prime Minister David Cameron.

Mashable and ReadWrite both dug into the psychology behind selfie culture in early 2013. Dr. Andrea Letamendi, a psychologist at UCLA, told Mashable that interacting with thousands of people online had "strengthened the impact that others have on our self-value". Dr. Pamela Rutledge, director of the Media Psychology Research Center, argued that social comparison through selfies was a normal feature of human behavior, only problematic when "someone fixates or over-compares to their detriment". ReadWrite's investigation found the #me hashtag cut across demographics, with American teenagers, Saudi Arabian men in traditional headdresses, and new parents all broadcasting their faces on Instagram.

OkCupid's data team had previously crunched the numbers on dating profile photos in a widely cited analysis. Their findings showed that the MySpace angle, universally dismissed as a cliché, was actually the most effective photo type for women seeking messages on the platform. Even after excluding cleavage-showing shots from the dataset, it still outperformed every other style.

In November 2013, Oxford Dictionaries named "selfie" the Word of the Year, with an Australian origin noted. By that December, a heartwarming viral story had made the rounds: San Francisco resident Danielle Bruckman, who lost her iPhone on New Year's Eve 2012, discovered that selfies from a mustachioed stranger were still syncing to her iCloud account. Over the next year, the mystery man uploaded roughly 250 photos, almost all selfies. Bruckman launched a Tumblr blog called "My Cloud Pal," recreated his photos complete with a stick-on mustache, and called the project "(in)appropriation art." She told BuzzFeed that the man "somehow grew on me and I actually enjoy getting his updates and see it as a window to peer into his daily life". Coverage from Mashable and the Daily Mail followed.

The Chainsmokers released their electronic dance single "#SELFIE" in 2014, spawning a Vine fad called "Let Me Take a Selfie" where users lip-synced the track and struck dramatic poses. On June 21, 2014, DJ Rick McNeely from the Fishbowl Radio Network in Arlington, Texas, launched the first National Selfie Day, encouraging selfie sharing under the hashtag #NationalSelfieDay.

A strange subplot emerged that year around selfies with exotic animals. Men on dating apps like Tinder had started posing with big cats in their profile photos, a trend widespread enough to inspire Tumblr blogs like "Tinder Guys With Tigers." Some users estimated tigers appeared in about 10% of men's Tinder profiles. New York state legislators passed a bill banning direct public contact with big cats at traveling shows and fairs. Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal told the New York Post that people could "still pose with bears and monkeys. They just have to take big cats off their list". The media framed it as a "tiger selfie ban," though the legislation actually targeted public safety at roadside zoos and said nothing about sharing photos online. One female Tinder user told Refinery29 the trend was misleading: "I went out with a guy who I saw in a picture with a tiger, and I thought, 'Now there's a guy I could really settle down with.' But, when I met him, I just thought, 'How did this man even get dressed today?'".

Paris Hilton staked her claim to the selfie in a 2017 W magazine profile, telling the interviewer: "If a beeper had a camera, I would have taken a selfie with it". That November, she tweeted a 2007 photo with Britney Spears, captioning it: "11 years ago today, Me & Britney invented the selfie!" The tweet pulled 44,000 retweets and 155,000 likes. Responses flooded in with earlier examples, most notably Robert Cornelius's 1839 daguerreotype shared by the National Galleries of Scotland, which received over 2,100 retweets of its own.

Fun Facts

Nathan Hope, who wrote the first known use of "selfie" in 2002, insisted he didn't coin it, saying the word was already "common slang" in Australia.

A selfie stick was patented as early as 1983 by Japanese inventors Ueda Hiroshi and Mima Yujiro. It appeared in a 1995 book of "101 Un-Useless Japanese Inventions" and was dismissed as pointless before later gaining global popularity.

OkCupid's data analysis found that the widely mocked MySpace angle was the most effective photo type for women's dating profiles, outperforming every other style even after removing photos that showed cleavage.

Danielle Bruckman received over 250 selfies from the stranger who ended up with her lost iPhone, including enough detail to know where he worked and that he went on a diet during 2013.

When Paris Hilton claimed she and Britney Spears "invented the selfie" in November 2017, users responded with Robert Cornelius's 1839 self-portrait, shared by the National Galleries of Scotland.

Derivatives & Variations

MySpace Angle / MySpace Shot

- A selfie taken from above, with the camera angled downward. Popularized on MySpace in the mid-2000s and associated with flattering camera angles.

Mirror Selfie

- A selfie taken by pointing the camera at a mirror, often to capture a full-body shot. Frequently associated with bathroom mirrors.

Usie / Groufie / Wefie

- Group selfie variants where one person holds the camera while including multiple people in the shot.

Let Me Take a Selfie

- A 2014 Vine fad based on The Chainsmokers' single "#SELFIE," involving lip-synching followed by dramatic selfie posing.

Tiger Selfie

- A dating app trend where men posed with tigers to appear adventurous. Became so popular it inspired Tumblr blogs like "Tinder Guys With Tigers" and nearly led to legislation in New York.

Dronie

- An aerial selfie taken using a drone, gaining popularity as consumer drones became affordable in the mid-2010s.

GPOY (Gratuitous Picture of Yourself)

- A Tumblr hashtag tradition for sharing pictures of yourself, related to selfie culture but evolved to include any content the user identifies with.

#SelfieSaturday

- A weekly hashtag tradition started by the Selfie Magic blog in 2011, encouraging users to share a selfie every Saturday.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (40)

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    Selfieencyclopedia
  6. 6
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    Self-portraitencyclopedia
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    Self (band)encyclopedia
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Selfie

2002Internet slang / photo trendclassic

Also known as: selfy · self-shot

Selfie, coined by Nathan Hope in 2002, is a self-portrait photograph taken with a smartphone and shared on social media, becoming Oxford's Word of the Year in 2013.

The selfie is a self-portrait photograph taken with a handheld camera or smartphone, typically shared on social media. Australian Nathan Hope wrote the first known use of the word on an internet forum in September 2002, and the practice spread through Flickr, MySpace, and Instagram before Oxford Dictionaries named "selfie" the Word of the Year in 2013. From bathroom mirror shots to celebrity Instagram posts to the Mars Curiosity rover's self-portrait on Mars, the selfie became the defining photographic act of the smartphone era.

TL;DR

The selfie is a self-portrait photograph taken with a handheld camera or smartphone, typically shared on social media.

Overview

A selfie is a photograph someone takes of themselves, usually with a phone camera held at arm's length or pointed at a mirror. The subject holds or controls the camera, which sets a selfie apart from a photo taken by someone else. Front-facing smartphone cameras simplified the process by letting users see themselves on screen in real-time while composing the shot.

The practice covers a wide range of styles: the classic arm's-length shot, the bathroom mirror selfie, the "MySpace angle" (camera held high, looking up coyly), and group selfies. They're commonly shared on Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, and Twitter, often tagged with hashtags like #selfie, #me, or #selfportrait.

The word "selfie" first appeared in written form on September 13, 2002, on an Australian internet forum run by Karl Kruszelnicki. A user named Nathan Hope posted about falling on his face at a friend's 21st birthday party, writing: "And sorry about the focus, it was a selfie." Hope later clarified that the term was already "common slang at the time" in Australia, not something he invented.

Self-portrait photography predates the word by over 160 years. Robert Cornelius took a daguerreotype of himself in 1839 by uncovering his camera's lens, running into frame, and holding still during the long exposure. He recorded on the back: "The first light picture ever taken. 1839".

Modern selfie culture also drew from 1990s Japanese kawaii (cute) culture, where self-photography was a major preoccupation among schoolgirls. Purikura (print club) photo sticker booths, conceived in 1994 by Sasaki Miho and developed by Atlus and Sega, let users take decorated self-portraits in arcades. On English-language internet platforms, the alternate spelling "selfy" appeared on Flickr as early as 2004 to tag self-taken portraits, and the first Urban Dictionary definition for "selfy" went up on April 22, 2005.

Origin & Background

Platform
Australian internet forum (first written use), Flickr / MySpace (early spread)
Creator
Nathan Hope
Date
2002
Year
2002

The word "selfie" first appeared in written form on September 13, 2002, on an Australian internet forum run by Karl Kruszelnicki. A user named Nathan Hope posted about falling on his face at a friend's 21st birthday party, writing: "And sorry about the focus, it was a selfie." Hope later clarified that the term was already "common slang at the time" in Australia, not something he invented.

Self-portrait photography predates the word by over 160 years. Robert Cornelius took a daguerreotype of himself in 1839 by uncovering his camera's lens, running into frame, and holding still during the long exposure. He recorded on the back: "The first light picture ever taken. 1839".

Modern selfie culture also drew from 1990s Japanese kawaii (cute) culture, where self-photography was a major preoccupation among schoolgirls. Purikura (print club) photo sticker booths, conceived in 1994 by Sasaki Miho and developed by Atlus and Sega, let users take decorated self-portraits in arcades. On English-language internet platforms, the alternate spelling "selfy" appeared on Flickr as early as 2004 to tag self-taken portraits, and the first Urban Dictionary definition for "selfy" went up on April 22, 2005.

How It Spread

In late June 2005, the first Flickr group pool called "Selfies" appeared, though it was originally created for fans of the band Self and later became a general repository for self-portraits. The first pool dedicated specifically to selfie-style photographs launched in early 2007.

The term jumped beyond personal blogging spaces in September 2007, when TMZ used "selfie" to describe actress Rosario Dawson stopping to take a photo with a fan. By July 2009, "Selfie" earned its own Urban Dictionary entry, described as an activity done for MySpace and Facebook. On Tumblr, a parallel tradition took hold: #GPOY (Gratuitous Picture Of Yourself), a tag that started among the platform's early community of young women and expanded to cover any image or GIF a user identified with so strongly it "might as well" be a picture of them.

In January 2011, the blog Selfie Magic launched with tutorials on taking good self-portraits and popularized the weekly hashtag #SelfieSaturday. Instagram's explosive growth made selfies even more visible. By early 2013, #me was the third most frequently used hashtag on the platform, with over 90 million self-portraits tagged underneath it.

Throughout 2012, selfie coverage hit the mainstream press. The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, Gawker, and BuzzFeed all ran features on the trend. TIME placed "Selfie" at number nine on their Top 10 Buzzwords of 2012 list, defining it as "self-portraits, typically made to post on a social networking website". That September, the Mars Curiosity rover joined in by rotating its camera for a self-portrait on the Martian surface. The Atlantic ran the image under the headline "Mars Curiosity Rover Takes a Selfie," treating the word as common knowledge.

How to Use This Meme

The selfie is one of the simplest formats in internet culture. The typical approach:

1

Hold your phone at arm's length with the front-facing camera active, or position yourself in front of a mirror

2

Frame your face (and whatever background or companions you want to include)

3

Take the photo, review, and reshoot as many times as needed

4

Optionally apply a filter, adjust the lighting, or crop

5

Share on social media with relevant hashtags (#selfie, #me, #SelfieSaturday, etc.)

Cultural Impact

The selfie reshaped how people interact with cameras and with each other online. Before selfies became standard practice, most personal photos were taken by someone else. The selfie gave individuals direct control over their own image, choosing what angle, expression, and context to present to the world.

Psychologists studied the effects. Research showed that people who based their self-worth on "public contingencies" like others' approval and physical appearance were more likely to share photos frequently online. On forums like Reddit's r/amiugly, users submitted self-portraits for anonymous feedback from strangers, a practice that would have been nearly impossible before camera phones and social platforms.

The format crossed into politics, science, and celebrity culture. President Obama posed for selfies at public events. The Mars Curiosity rover's self-portrait on Mars became front-page news. Celebrities like Kim Kardashian and Rihanna made selfies central to their public personas. Beyoncé built an entire HBO documentary around the form.

The selfie also shaped the dating world. OkCupid data revealed that specific selfie styles correlated with dramatically different success rates, with the MySpace angle outperforming every other photo type for women. On Tinder, the tiger selfie trend grew so widespread that New York state passed legislation indirectly targeting the practice.

Full History

The year 2013 was the selfie's peak moment of cultural recognition. In February, Beyoncé's HBO documentary *Life Is But a Dream* drew widespread commentary for its self-shot approach. The Cut counted roughly 25 scenes filmed selfie-style with handheld devices and tallied 577 first-person pronouns across the documentary's 94 minutes, calling the whole thing "a feature-length selfie, basically, from one of the few living humans who can turn 'feature-length selfie' into must-see TV". That same month, One Direction released a self-filmed music video for their Comic Relief charity cover of "One Way or Another," building the entire visual around selfie montages, bathtub shots, and a cameo from Prime Minister David Cameron.

Mashable and ReadWrite both dug into the psychology behind selfie culture in early 2013. Dr. Andrea Letamendi, a psychologist at UCLA, told Mashable that interacting with thousands of people online had "strengthened the impact that others have on our self-value". Dr. Pamela Rutledge, director of the Media Psychology Research Center, argued that social comparison through selfies was a normal feature of human behavior, only problematic when "someone fixates or over-compares to their detriment". ReadWrite's investigation found the #me hashtag cut across demographics, with American teenagers, Saudi Arabian men in traditional headdresses, and new parents all broadcasting their faces on Instagram.

OkCupid's data team had previously crunched the numbers on dating profile photos in a widely cited analysis. Their findings showed that the MySpace angle, universally dismissed as a cliché, was actually the most effective photo type for women seeking messages on the platform. Even after excluding cleavage-showing shots from the dataset, it still outperformed every other style.

In November 2013, Oxford Dictionaries named "selfie" the Word of the Year, with an Australian origin noted. By that December, a heartwarming viral story had made the rounds: San Francisco resident Danielle Bruckman, who lost her iPhone on New Year's Eve 2012, discovered that selfies from a mustachioed stranger were still syncing to her iCloud account. Over the next year, the mystery man uploaded roughly 250 photos, almost all selfies. Bruckman launched a Tumblr blog called "My Cloud Pal," recreated his photos complete with a stick-on mustache, and called the project "(in)appropriation art." She told BuzzFeed that the man "somehow grew on me and I actually enjoy getting his updates and see it as a window to peer into his daily life". Coverage from Mashable and the Daily Mail followed.

The Chainsmokers released their electronic dance single "#SELFIE" in 2014, spawning a Vine fad called "Let Me Take a Selfie" where users lip-synced the track and struck dramatic poses. On June 21, 2014, DJ Rick McNeely from the Fishbowl Radio Network in Arlington, Texas, launched the first National Selfie Day, encouraging selfie sharing under the hashtag #NationalSelfieDay.

A strange subplot emerged that year around selfies with exotic animals. Men on dating apps like Tinder had started posing with big cats in their profile photos, a trend widespread enough to inspire Tumblr blogs like "Tinder Guys With Tigers." Some users estimated tigers appeared in about 10% of men's Tinder profiles. New York state legislators passed a bill banning direct public contact with big cats at traveling shows and fairs. Assemblywoman Linda Rosenthal told the New York Post that people could "still pose with bears and monkeys. They just have to take big cats off their list". The media framed it as a "tiger selfie ban," though the legislation actually targeted public safety at roadside zoos and said nothing about sharing photos online. One female Tinder user told Refinery29 the trend was misleading: "I went out with a guy who I saw in a picture with a tiger, and I thought, 'Now there's a guy I could really settle down with.' But, when I met him, I just thought, 'How did this man even get dressed today?'".

Paris Hilton staked her claim to the selfie in a 2017 W magazine profile, telling the interviewer: "If a beeper had a camera, I would have taken a selfie with it". That November, she tweeted a 2007 photo with Britney Spears, captioning it: "11 years ago today, Me & Britney invented the selfie!" The tweet pulled 44,000 retweets and 155,000 likes. Responses flooded in with earlier examples, most notably Robert Cornelius's 1839 daguerreotype shared by the National Galleries of Scotland, which received over 2,100 retweets of its own.

Fun Facts

Nathan Hope, who wrote the first known use of "selfie" in 2002, insisted he didn't coin it, saying the word was already "common slang" in Australia.

A selfie stick was patented as early as 1983 by Japanese inventors Ueda Hiroshi and Mima Yujiro. It appeared in a 1995 book of "101 Un-Useless Japanese Inventions" and was dismissed as pointless before later gaining global popularity.

OkCupid's data analysis found that the widely mocked MySpace angle was the most effective photo type for women's dating profiles, outperforming every other style even after removing photos that showed cleavage.

Danielle Bruckman received over 250 selfies from the stranger who ended up with her lost iPhone, including enough detail to know where he worked and that he went on a diet during 2013.

When Paris Hilton claimed she and Britney Spears "invented the selfie" in November 2017, users responded with Robert Cornelius's 1839 self-portrait, shared by the National Galleries of Scotland.

Derivatives & Variations

MySpace Angle / MySpace Shot

- A selfie taken from above, with the camera angled downward. Popularized on MySpace in the mid-2000s and associated with flattering camera angles.

Mirror Selfie

- A selfie taken by pointing the camera at a mirror, often to capture a full-body shot. Frequently associated with bathroom mirrors.

Usie / Groufie / Wefie

- Group selfie variants where one person holds the camera while including multiple people in the shot.

Let Me Take a Selfie

- A 2014 Vine fad based on The Chainsmokers' single "#SELFIE," involving lip-synching followed by dramatic selfie posing.

Tiger Selfie

- A dating app trend where men posed with tigers to appear adventurous. Became so popular it inspired Tumblr blogs like "Tinder Guys With Tigers" and nearly led to legislation in New York.

Dronie

- An aerial selfie taken using a drone, gaining popularity as consumer drones became affordable in the mid-2010s.

GPOY (Gratuitous Picture of Yourself)

- A Tumblr hashtag tradition for sharing pictures of yourself, related to selfie culture but evolved to include any content the user identifies with.

#SelfieSaturday

- A weekly hashtag tradition started by the Selfie Magic blog in 2011, encouraging users to share a selfie every Saturday.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (40)

  1. 1
  2. 2
  3. 3
  4. 4
  5. 5
    Selfieencyclopedia
  6. 6
  7. 7
    Self-portraitencyclopedia
  8. 8
    Self (band)encyclopedia
  9. 9
  10. 10
  11. 11
  12. 12
  13. 13
  14. 14
  15. 15
  16. 16
  17. 17
  18. 18
  19. 19
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