It’s slime. And it’s satisfying

The internet has become synonymous with stress itself. Is slime, that substance between liquid and solid, an antidote?

By Amanda Hess, Photographs and Video by Yael Malka | The New York Times

One of the internet’s greatest features is satisfaction on demand. Dial up a video tagged “satisfying” and conjure a mesmerizing sensation from your screen. Beautiful bars of soap cut into ribbons, fresh dough squeezed through a pasta maker, icing piped onto a cookie, a spider weaving its web — they scratch some kind of mental itch. The content seems to bypass the brain to access our bodies directly. And satisfaction incarnate is slime, that substancesuspended at the boundaries between liquid and solid, and the onscreen and the physical.

First popularized by Instagram users in Thailand and Indonesia, slime content has invaded the satisfaction internet and oozed into the American middle school. Slime is an art form, a community and an industry: sensory gratification tubbed and sold. From mundane household materials — laundry detergent, glitter, glue — springs an exotic material.

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