ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 12月14日 23時54分


The first time Kelmae Hemphill watched herself overdose, she sobbed. There she was in a shaky video filmed by her own heroin dealer, sprawled out on a New Jersey road while a stranger pounded on her chest. “Come on, girl,” someone pleaded. Kelmae’s life was now everybody’s business, splashed across the news and social media with a new genre of American horror film: the overdose video. As opioid deaths have soared in recent years, police departments and strangers with cameras have started posting raw, uncensored images of drug users passed out with needles in their arms and babies in the back seats of their cars. The videos rack up millions of views and unleash avalanches of outrage. But life is never the same for the people whose bleakest, most humiliating moments now live online forever. “When you type my name in, that’s the first video that pops up — an overdose video,” Kelmae said. @hlswift took this photo of Kelmae. Visit the link in our profile to see more.


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