Every few months, the internet collectively loses its mind over something. A dress. A yodelling kid. A speech. A dog. And then, almost as quickly as it started, everyone moves on. But the person at the centre of that storm? They don’t just move on. Their life gets rearranged. Sometimes beautifully. Sometimes not. This is a proper look back at some of the biggest viral moments of the decade, the stories most people half-remember, and where those individuals ended up once the world stopped watching.

The Dress That Broke the Internet (2015)
It was blue and black. Or white and gold. In February 2015, a photo posted by a Scottish woman named Caitlin McNeill, a musician from Colonsay, triggered one of the most genuinely baffling debates the internet has ever hosted. The dress became front-page news worldwide. Buzzfeed reported 28 million views in 24 hours. Scientists, optometrists, and neurologists were dragged onto television programmes to explain colour perception to a baffled public.
McNeill herself remained largely grounded about the whole thing. She gave interviews, gained a significant social following, and then got back to her music career in Scotland. The dress, it turned out, really was blue and black. But the moment triggered a decade of similar optical illusion debates, none of which quite captured the same collective madness.
Alex from Target (2014, But It Exploded Into 2015)
A teenage checkout worker photographed at a Target store in the United States went viral when his picture was shared millions of times overnight. Whilst this one began in America, the phenomenon it triggered was globally felt, sparking serious conversations in the UK and elsewhere about consent, internet culture, and what it means to become famous without choosing to. Alex Lee, the teenager in question, handled the attention with impressive composure for his age, appeared on television, and later pursued a modest social media career. His story prompted UK broadcasters including the BBC to run pieces on the ethics of unwanted viral fame, something that still resonates in 2026.
The Ice Bucket Challenge: When Viral Meant Something
Amongst all the biggest viral moments of the decade, the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge stands apart because it actually accomplished something tangible. Starting in the summer of 2014 and peaking through 2015, it raised over £70 million globally for motor neurone disease research. In the UK, the Motor Neurone Disease Association saw donations spike dramatically. Celebrities, politicians, and schoolchildren all participated. Researchers later confirmed that funds raised contributed directly to the discovery of a new gene linked to the disease. The people behind it were not looking for fame. They were looking for funding. That’s worth remembering.

Charlie Bit My Finger: A British Classic Revisited
Long before any of us had heard the word “influencer”, two small boys from Weston-super-Mare gave us one of the most-watched YouTube videos ever made. Charlie and Harry Davies-Carr became accidental global stars. The video, originally uploaded in 2007, remained in YouTube’s all-time charts for years. Their father Howard later reflected in interviews that the attention was overwhelming but ultimately harmless. The family sold the original video as an NFT in 2021 for the equivalent of around £430,000. The boys, now young adults, have largely lived ordinary lives, which, honestly, sounds like the healthiest possible outcome.
Susan Boyle: From Village Hall to Carnegie Hall
When Susan Boyle walked onto the Britain’s Got Talent stage in 2009, no one expected what came next. But the video clip went properly viral in 2009 and 2010, crossing into a decade of sustained cultural relevance that makes it worth including here. Boyle’s story became one of the most genuinely moving examples of viral fame translating into lasting career success. She sold over 25 million albums globally. She performed at the Royal Variety Performance. She was diagnosed with Asperger syndrome, and spoke openly about how that understanding changed her life. Boyle is one of very few viral subjects who emerged from the machine with a real career and, apparently, a good deal of contentment.
The Bottle Cap Challenge: Choreographed Chaos
In 2019, the bottle cap challenge swept through social media, with everyone from Mariah Carey to your uncle trying to spin-kick a bottle cap off with their foot. In the UK, it had a particular moment when several Premier League footballers joined in. It was silly. It was harmless. And it demonstrated how viral challenges had evolved from charitable or accidental to deliberately engineered entertainment. Most participants are not doing much differently today, which perhaps says something about how quickly the internet metabolises even its most enthusiastic trends.
Marcus Rashford’s Food Poverty Campaign (2020)
Not all viral moments come from entertainment. Marcus Rashford’s campaign to extend free school meals during the school holidays became one of the most consequential viral moments of the decade. His open letter to MPs in June 2020 was shared millions of times, and the government reversed its position within days. Rashford, already famous as a Manchester United and England footballer, became something larger: a symbol of how individual voices, amplified by the internet, could force genuine policy change. He received an MBE, continued his campaigning work, and the government’s subsequent policy announcements bore his influence. This is what viral moments can look like when they land on fertile ground.
The “Damn Daniel” Moment (2016): A Reminder of Cruelty
Two American teenagers went viral in 2016 when one repeatedly complimented the other’s white Vans trainers. Innocent enough. But it also illustrated the darker mechanics of viral fame: the pair received death threats, had personal information shared without consent, and one family reportedly had to involve law enforcement. The contrast between the silliness of the original clip and the severity of the response it provoked was a warning that many platforms chose to ignore until much later.
The Manchester Bee After the Arena Attack (2017)
This one is different in tone, but it belongs in any honest list of the biggest viral moments of the decade. After the Manchester Arena attack in May 2017, the worker bee symbol of Manchester spread across the internet as a symbol of solidarity and defiance. Thousands of people got it tattooed. Merchandise raised money for victims. For a city, and a country, grappling with grief, the image gave something to hold onto. The bee is now inseparable from Manchester’s identity. Several of the tattoo artists who donated their time during that period have since built significant followings and won awards. Fame, here, came from service.
Where Are They All Now?
If there’s a pattern running through the biggest viral moments of the decade, it’s this: the people who fare best are either those with something real behind them (talent, a cause, a craft), or those who managed to step back quickly and protect their private lives. The ones who suffered most were often the most passive participants, people who appeared in a photo or video without knowing it would be seen by millions.
The internet has a short memory, but the people it briefly obsesses over do not. Their Google results follow them. Their faces are permanently indexed. That’s a peculiarly modern kind of consequence, and it’s one that UK media regulators like Ofcom are increasingly thinking about, as questions around digital identity and image rights creep up the legislative agenda.
What strikes you, looking back across a decade of viral culture, is how rarely the moments that felt most important turned out to be. And how often the quieter ones, a campaign letter, a spontaneous kindness filmed on a phone, a piece of music played in the right place at the right time, turned out to shape something lasting.
The Lesson Worth Taking From All of This
Fame has never been more accessible, or more temporary. The people in this list had no roadmap. Some built brilliantly on their moment. Others retreated entirely. A few were genuinely harmed. The consistent through-line is that no one who went viral was fully prepared for what came next, because nothing could quite prepare them for it.
If you’re chasing your own 15 minutes, it’s worth knowing what the alumni of viral culture have learnt the hard way: the moment is not the thing. What you build in its wake is the thing.
Frequently Asked Questions
What were the biggest viral moments of the decade between 2015 and 2025?
Some of the most significant include the blue/black dress debate of 2015, the Ice Bucket Challenge, the Manchester Bee solidarity movement after 2017, and Marcus Rashford’s free school meals campaign in 2020. Each captured global attention for very different reasons and had very different outcomes for the people involved.
Do people who go viral usually benefit from the attention?
It varies enormously. People with an existing skill or cause to promote (like Susan Boyle or Marcus Rashford) tend to build something lasting. Those who went viral accidentally, without a platform or product behind them, often found the experience disorienting or even harmful. Preparation and intent make a significant difference.
How long does viral fame typically last?
Most viral moments generate intense but short-lived attention, typically peaking within 48 to 72 hours and fading within a fortnight. However, the digital footprint can last far longer, with content remaining indexed in search engines indefinitely, which can affect how individuals are perceived years later.
Can going viral negatively affect someone's life?
Yes, and it has done for several well-documented cases. People who appear in viral content without consent have faced harassment, privacy violations, and in some cases required involvement from law enforcement. UK regulators including Ofcom are increasingly examining how platforms should handle unwanted viral exposure.
What viral moments from the UK went global?
Charlie Bit My Finger from Weston-super-Mare, Susan Boyle’s BGT audition, the Manchester Bee after the 2017 attack, and Marcus Rashford’s school meals letter all originated in the UK and gained massive international audiences. Each reflects something distinct about British culture and the way it resonates internationally.
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