Sharethatboy
If you tag the same 20 people every day to share mediocre content, you will exhaust your social capital.
| Creator | Niche | Followers (approx.) | Impact | |---------|-------|----------------------|--------| | @LunaBeats | Indie‑electronic music | 260 k | First artist to earn >$100 k in a month via Pay‑Per‑View live sessions. | | @MikaSays | Mental‑health micro‑doc | 180 k | Partnered with WHO for a global “Mindful Minutes” campaign in 2023. | | @StreetBite | Street‑food travel | 145 k | Curated a “Taste of Brazil” collection that drove a 30 % surge in Brazilian user sign‑ups. | Sharethatboy
One of the defining rules of Sharethatboy is authenticity. The platform has an implicit ban on heavy Facetuning or CGI backgrounds. The preference is for natural lighting, 35mm film grain, and raw human emotion. In an era of AI-generated perfection, this analog slant feels revolutionary. If you tag the same 20 people every
Social media can be lonely. However, movements like Sharethatboy rely on the rule of reciprocity. If you share someone else’s "boy" today, there is an unspoken social contract that they (or someone in the network) will share yours tomorrow. This creates a self-sustaining loop of engagement that benefits everyone involved. riding the subway
Your personalized feed follows you. Whether you open ShareThatBoy on iOS, Android, or the web extension, your saved items, notes, and completed learning paths stay synchronized—so you can pick up exactly where you left off.
The founders’ stated mission is to “reclaim the social experience for creators who want to share authentic moments without the pressure of endless virality metrics.” Their background—spanning music streaming, independent film, and cloud‑native engineering—shaped a platform that emphasizes:
Traditional influencers are often viewed as unattainable—perfect bodies, luxury cars, sponsored detox teas. Sharethatboy offers the antithesis: real people in real apartments, riding the subway, drinking coffee. It democratizes beauty. The "boy" being shared could be your neighbor, not a millionaire.
