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Slow Burn

Decoder Ring | Who Was Lonelygirl15?

Slow Burn

Slate Audio

Politics, Society & Culture, History, News, Documentary

4.625.2K Ratings

🗓️ 8 April 2026

⏱️ 59 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In the summer of 2006, a teenage girl began posting video diaries to a then-new site called YouTube under the handle lonelygirl15. Within weeks she was a phenomenon—even though no one knew the truth of who she really was. The frenzied quest to change that, to solve the mystery of lonelygirl15, would ultimately land her on the front page of newspapers and the covers of magazines. Twenty years on, lonelygirl15 is both an artifact of an earlier online era and an origin point for the internet as we know it: a place full of video diaries, parasocial relationships, influencers, hyper-engaged fandoms, and the knowledge that you can’t always believe your eyes.

In this episode, you’ll hear from some of the people who investigated lonelygirl15 way back in 2006: culture critic Virginia Heffernan, who writes the Substack Magic + Loss and co-hosts the podcast Omnishambles; entertainment journalist Richard Rushfield of The Ankler; Emmy Award-winning producer Jenni Powell; and one-time cybersleuth Chris Patterson. We also speak with the people involved in making lonelygirl15: Miles Beckett, Mesh Flinders, Jessica Rose Phillipps, and Amanda Goodfried. 

This episode was written by Willa Paskin and Evan Chung, Decoder Ring’s Supervising Producer. Decoder Ring is also produced by Willa Paskin, Katie Shepherd, and Max Freedman. Merritt Jacob is Senior Technical Director.

Thank you to Greg Goodfried, Matt Foremski, and Tom Foremski. Special thanks to Ryan Broderick and Grant Irving of the podcast Panic World, who introduced Willa to the lonelygirl15 story on a recent episode of their show and suggested it might make a good topic for Decoder Ring.

If you have any cultural mysteries you want us to decode, email us at DecoderRing@slate.com or leave a message on our hotline at (347) 460-7281.


Sources for This Episode

Cresci, Elena. “Lonelygirl15: how one mysterious vlogger changed the internet,” The Guardian, June 16, 2006.

Davis, Joshua. “The Secret World of Lonelygirl,” WIRED, Dec. 2006.

Falconer, Ellen. “An oral history of lonelygirl15,” RNZ, June 16, 2016.

Flemming, Brian. “Arguments for a real LG15 fall short,” Brian Flemming's Weblog, Aug. 25, 2006.

Foremski, Matt and Tom Foremski. “SVW Exclusive: The identity of LonelyGirl15,” Silicon Valley Watcher, Sep. 11, 2006.

Foremski, Tom. “How the secret identity of LonelyGirl15 was found,” Silicon Valley Watcher, Sep. 12, 2006.

Foremski, Tom. “The Hunt for LonelyGirl15: Life in a blogger household…,” Silicon Valley Watcher, Sep. 12, 2006.

Glaister, Dan. “Cult blog a fake, admit 'lonelygirl' creators,” The Guardian, Sep. 9, 2006.

Heffernan, Virginia and Tom Zeller Jr. “The Lonelygirl That Really Wasn’t,” New York Times, Sep. 13, 2006.

Heffernan, Virginia. “A Pause for Some Words From Bree,” New York Times, Aug. 23, 2006.

Heffernan, Virginia. “Sweet, Weird, Fraud or Other,” New York Times, Aug. 24, 2006.

LGPedia,” LG15, 2016.

lonelygirl15 and when lies could be fun,” Panic World, Feb. 4, 2026.

Lonely Girl And All Her Friends,” On the Media, Sep. 1, 2006.

Nudd, Tim. “Lonelygirl15 still a mystery, for now,” ADWEEK, Sep. 1, 2006.

Rushfield, Richard and Claire Hoffman. “Lonelygirl15 Video Blog Is Brainchild of 3 Filmmakers,” Los Angeles Times, Sep. 13, 2006.

Rushfield, Richard and Claire Hoffman. “Mystery Fuels Huge Popularity of Web’s Lonelygirl15,” Los Angeles Times, Sep. 8, 2006.

Wendt, Milo A. “LonelyGirl15: It's Not So Lonely In The Bay Area,” milowent, Aug. 30, 2006.




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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

In 2006, Virginia Heffernan was a TV critic at the New York Times and regularly doing something that is now very common.

0:13.5

But at the time, was pretty unusual.

0:16.2

She was watching a lot of YouTube.

0:17.9

Which still my colleagues had not heard of.

0:20.1

I think we had to call it like

0:21.5

the video hosting clearinghouse or whatever. YouTube had just been born the year before in April

0:29.2

2005. And on the internet, there really is before YouTube and after YouTube. Before YouTube,

0:36.7

there were online videos, but distributing, finding, and watching them was a pain.

0:41.2

You had to download them on your computer, or they were shared in email attachments and on

0:45.5

janky websites.

0:46.9

There was always this buffering, buffering, buffering, you know, and you would crash the

0:51.4

site that you were downloading from.

0:53.4

After YouTube, there was an easy way to watch videos,

0:56.4

and there was an easy way for anybody to make and upload their own.

1:01.8

Virginia was thrilled.

1:03.4

I like the idea of creators, like that they were making little films.

1:08.9

In these early days, most YouTube content did not yet rise to this description.

1:14.1

But there was lots of experimentation.

1:16.8

Skateboard fails, parody movie recuts, lots of cats,

1:20.9

and a burgeoning genre Virginia thought of as sad girl videos.

1:26.1

You know, like teenage girls sort of like leaning into the camera

1:29.3

talking about their problems.

...

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