Internet Culture

Leave Britney Alone star shares everything he’s learned in the past 10 years

Britney is back, and so is Chris Crocker.

Photo of Jay Hathaway

Jay Hathaway

chris crocker

Ten years ago this week, Chris Crocker became famous for his tearful, mascara-streaked rant about Britney Spears and her humanity. “Leave Britney alone!” he famously wailed.

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Shortly afterward, he became one of the first victims of internet fame, one of the first human memes of the social media era. Fortunately, it got better. Crocker has moved on with his life and learned from his experiences, and he’s here to share his wisdom with a new generation of teens.

On his Instagram account, Crocker marked the 10th anniversary of Leave Britney Alone by sharing four things he’s come to understand as an internet celebrity, including the most important lesson of all: “Let the haters kick fuckin’ rocks, man.”

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https://www.instagram.com/p/BY4BXxqlYCc/?hl=en&taken-by=itschriscrocker

Crocker also mentions some of the rough aspects of his teenage years, including his mom’s return from serving in Iraq and her subsequent addiction issues, that he didn’t feel he could talk about at the time.

Crocker also shared the old video, with some words about how much the web and society have changed over time.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BY3lkypFRgK/?hl=en&taken-by=itschriscrocker

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“The internet and YouTube was a very different, less LGBT friendly place at the time. Nothing I said in the video was listened to. I was mocked for my femininity. I was called every gay slur in the book. Talk show hosts questioned if I was a man or woman, after playing the clip. I knew there was no way people would take me serious.”

In the intervening decade, Crocker has been the subject of a documentary (“Me At The Zoo”), done pornpartied with Paris Hilton, made friends with RuPaul, and dropped his long hair for a tighter crop. (Please don’t tell him he “got hot, though.)

Basically, he knows what he’s talking about, and kids would do well to learn from his mistakes and successes.

 
The Daily Dot