Pavlos Maros
Well-Known Member
- Pronouns
- He/Him/His
I've recently started writing songs. I'm not going to say whether I think I'm any good, that's not the point of this tangent. But I did join a couple of Facebook groups anonymously. I have a name, just keeping quiet.
However, scrolling through these groups, you quickly notice something staggering: people posting themselves singing, genuinely believing they sound amazing, when the reality is often very different. The dissonance is astounding. The gap between self-perception and actual ability is huge. It's almost like a religion.
This is a textbook case of the Dunning-Kruger effect. Those with minimal skill massively overestimate their talent, while anyone competent either underestimates themselves or stays quiet. The loudest, least skilled voices dominate the feed, creating a feedback loop where mediocrity is mistaken for normalcy or even excellence.
Add to that poor recording setups, bad microphones, and the lack of real-time feedback, and the illusion becomes almost complete. People double down on their belief that they sound good, rationalising criticism or ignoring it entirely. It's confidence without competence, amplified by social media, a phenomenon simultaneously hilarious, tragic, and fascinating.
In short, in these anonymous corners of the internet, the Dunning-Kruger effect isn't just present, it's rampant.
Do you have a view as to why?
However, scrolling through these groups, you quickly notice something staggering: people posting themselves singing, genuinely believing they sound amazing, when the reality is often very different. The dissonance is astounding. The gap between self-perception and actual ability is huge. It's almost like a religion.
This is a textbook case of the Dunning-Kruger effect. Those with minimal skill massively overestimate their talent, while anyone competent either underestimates themselves or stays quiet. The loudest, least skilled voices dominate the feed, creating a feedback loop where mediocrity is mistaken for normalcy or even excellence.
Add to that poor recording setups, bad microphones, and the lack of real-time feedback, and the illusion becomes almost complete. People double down on their belief that they sound good, rationalising criticism or ignoring it entirely. It's confidence without competence, amplified by social media, a phenomenon simultaneously hilarious, tragic, and fascinating.
In short, in these anonymous corners of the internet, the Dunning-Kruger effect isn't just present, it's rampant.
Do you have a view as to why?