The video player was clunky. The comments were in Cyrillic. Yet, the film played perfectly.
People were sharing old photos. Grandmothers were posting recipes for pickled vegetables. Teenagers were sharing melancholic synth-wave playlists. It was as if 2020 wasn't happening there.
But in 2020, it felt like the last honest place on earth. It started as a joke. I was looking for an old Hungarian film that wasn't on Netflix, Disney+, or the seven other streaming services I now pay for. A desperate Google search led me to OK.ru. um dia qualquer 2020 ok.ru
That was the trap. The algorithm on OK.ru doesn’t try to sell you anything. It doesn't suggest you "watch next" based on your mood. Instead, it offers you the most chaotic, beautiful randomness. You watch one French New Wave film from 1962, and suddenly your sidebar suggests a 4-hour compilation of Looney Tunes dubbed in Romanian, followed by a documentary about Soviet space dogs.
On this dia qualquer , I watched three hours of a live feed showing a man fixing a Lada Niva in his garage somewhere in Siberia. There were 12 other people watching. We didn't speak the same language, but every time he tightened a bolt, we all hit the "heart" reaction. What struck me most about OK.ru in 2020 was the lack of pandemic panic. While Twitter was a hellscape of political arguments and Zoom fatigue, OK.ru was a time capsule of a world that didn't know it was sick yet. The video player was clunky
For the uninitiated, OK.ru (Odnoklassniki) is the Russian social network that time forgot. While the rest of the world migrated to Instagram Reels and TikTok dances, OK.ru stayed faithful to the early 2010s aesthetic: cluttered layouts, blinking cursors, public groups dedicated to Soviet cinema, and millions of pirated movies.
There is a specific flavor to boredom in 2020. It isn’t the lazy boredom of a summer afternoon from our childhoods. It is the heavy, strange quiet of a world on pause. It was on one such day— um dia qualquer (a random day)—that I found myself falling down the deepest rabbit hole of the internet: OK.ru. People were sharing old photos
But on um dia qualquer in 2020, it was exactly what I needed. It was a reminder that the internet used to be weird, messy, and anonymous. Before the algorithms knew our names, we used to find joy in random corners of the web.