I noticed I got a little carried away writing about the Johnny Somali case, so much so that I had to break this into two parts, haha.
But honestly, the more I thought about it, the more I realized this situation goes far beyond one streamer, one country, or one controversy.
Because what this case really exposed is something much bigger:
how modern internet culture has slowly normalized disrespect as entertainment.
That is why I find some of the defenses of Johnny Somali more disturbing than the behavior itself.
Because many people defending him are not actually defending free speech. They are defending entertainment at any cost.
Some people claim:
“He was just joking.”
“It was just content.”
“He was doing it for views.”
“That’s how streamers make money.”
Since when did monetization become a moral defense?
If anything, intentionally harming or humiliating people for profit makes the situation worse, not better.
One of the biggest problems with internet culture today is that the line between “prank” and harassment has almost disappeared. People now use the word “content” as if it magically removes accountability from behavior that would otherwise be unacceptable in normal society.
Imagine behaving the same way without a camera.
Imagine doing those things without donations, subscribers, or livestream audiences encouraging escalation.
Would people still call it funny?
Would people still call it performance art?
Or would they simply call it antisocial behavior?
South Korea’s response shocked many Western audiences because some countries still maintain stronger expectations surrounding public conduct, social harmony, and respect toward others.
And this is where many outsiders completely fail to understand the emotional context behind the backlash.
Some of the locations and symbols involved in his actions are tied to painful historical trauma for Koreans. These are not random internet landmarks. These are deeply emotional subjects connected to national memory, suffering, and historical wounds that remain politically and socially sensitive even today.
To many Koreans, this was not edgy humor.
It was humiliation disguised as comedy.
What some foreigners interpreted as “dark humor” was viewed locally as intentional disrespect toward victims, history, and public dignity.
And honestly, people do not need to be Korean to understand why that matters.
You do not need fluency in a language to recognize when someone is provoking people on purpose.
You do not need cultural training to understand public harassment.
You do not need translation services to recognize arrogance.
This is why I reject the argument that this entire situation boils down to cultural misunderstanding.
No interpreter in the world could have translated basic human decency for him.
And let’s talk about the punishment itself.
Many people online argue that South Korea’s punishment was too harsh. Some influencers claim he is being “targeted.” Others say Korea is too sensitive or too strict.
But what exactly were people expecting?
A warning?
A slap on the wrist?
Another viral clip followed by more donations?
At some point, countries have to decide whether they will tolerate disruptive behavior simply because it generates internet traffic.
South Korea made it very clear:
being a foreign streamer does not place someone above social responsibility or the law.
And honestly, I think part of the outrage from certain internet personalities comes from the fact that they are not used to seeing consequences actually happen.
Online culture has created this illusion that if something is filmed, monetized, or labeled as satire, it somehow exists outside normal accountability.
It does not.
And another uncomfortable truth people avoid discussing is this:
many viewers genuinely enjoy watching public humiliation.
That is why this type of content exists.
If there were no audience rewarding cruelty, rage bait streamers would disappear almost overnight.
Some viewers enjoy seeing social boundaries broken.
Some enjoy watching chaos.
Some enjoy seeing strangers embarrassed or angry.
Some enjoy watching communities being mocked.
And when consequences finally arrive, suddenly the same audience that encouraged the behavior starts pretending the creator is a victim.
That hypocrisy deserves attention too.
Another thing that frustrates me is how quickly some commentators accuse Asian countries of being “too sensitive” whenever they enforce standards foreigners dislike.
There is a subtle arrogance hidden inside that criticism sometimes.
An attitude that says:
“Our version of humor should be accepted everywhere.”
“Our internet culture should override local values.”
“If people are offended, they are overreacting.”
No.
Respecting another country does not mean abandoning free expression.
It means understanding that actions have social consequences, especially when those actions are intentionally provocative.
And contrary to what some people claim online, accountability is not oppression.
Being punished for repeated public misconduct is not censorship.
Facing legal consequences abroad is not racism.
Foreigners are not immune from local laws simply because they have cameras.
What happened in Korea also reflects growing global exhaustion with “performative disrespect” culture online.
More people are becoming tired of creators whose entire identity revolves around antagonizing strangers for clicks. More people are realizing that shock content often contributes nothing meaningful to society except temporary outrage.
And eventually, governments, platforms, and communities begin responding.
Whether people agree with every detail of Johnny Somali’s punishment is a separate conversation entirely. Reasonable people can debate sentencing, legal standards, proportionality, and how different countries handle public misconduct.
But pretending this was simply “miscommunication” feels intellectually dishonest.
This was not about language failure.
This was not about accidental offense.
This was not about ignorance.
It was about choice.
Repeated choice.
The choice to provoke.
The choice to disrespect.
The choice to continue escalating.
The choice to treat human beings, history, and public spaces as props for monetized outrage.
This is not about race.
This is not about East versus West.
This is not about translation.
This is not about interpretation.
It is about whether society should normalize disrespect as entertainment.
And honestly, the most concerning part of this entire situation is not that one streamer behaved badly.
The most concerning part is how many people watched it, encouraged it, defended it, laughed at it, and called it entertainment.
Because that says something deeply uncomfortable about internet culture itself.
At some point, society has to decide whether everything should become content.
Not everything is a prank.
Not everything is satire.
Not everything is “just jokes.”
Sometimes someone is simply being disrespectful.
And sometimes being a decent human being should matter more than going viral.






































