Panoptic shame describes the feeling of being watched by an unseen audience, combined with fear of social judgment. It is the state where people always expect someone to be watching, and because they anticipate criticism, they pull back from risk, from play, and from showing themselves fully (Foucault, Discipline and Punish, 1975).
Gen Z did not grow up with this feeling by accident. Algorithmic feeds, public metrics, and real-time applause or critique have created an environment of constant exposure. Research shows that people aged 14–22 are now experiencing higher levels of shame (The Quarantine Cohort Report, The Akin, 2025). Shame kills creativity, risk-taking, and also authentic connection. Many young people are too embarrassed to dance in public, afraid someone might film it, or hesitant to show excitement, scared at the thought of posting content that does not “perform”. Research shows that 49% of Gen Z say their online image is always at the back of their mind when they go out socialising and drinking (Google, 2019)
The data is stark. When every moment can be captured, stored, and judged by invisible audiences, the natural rhythm of adolescence such as trying, failing in public, and then trying again becomes almost impossible. Young people need permission to be embarrassing, to cringe, to be awkward, without those moments becoming permanent digital proof.
Shame blocks failures, yet those failures build resilience. When 79% of Gen Z report feeling safer expressing emotions through memes than direct statements, and 68% say they have lost friendships due to ironic miscommunication (The Quarantine Cohort Report, The Akin, 2025), it becomes clear that protective emotional armour actually prevents the vulnerability required for genuine connection.
So what role can brands play in celebrating failing, being awkward, or embarrassing yourself a little? A strong example, even if from 2013, is Spotify’s “Because Music Doesn’t Judge” campaign, a witty and humorous initiative that highlighted users’ surprising listening habits. Its message still resonates today: create space for self-expression without shame.
The challenge for brands now is to go further. How can you create environments where social risk-taking is safe, temporary, and celebrated? Where young people can take chances, be awkward, and recover without the lasting digital footprints?

Author
Meera Radhoe
Share the signal.