She didn’t expect her next “viral” moment to be this literal. Monica Lewinsky has just revealed she’s tested positive for COVID-19—and the irony is brutal. Alone in her New York apartment, feverish and spiraling back to 1998, she’s forced to confront the scandal that nearly destroyed her, and the internet culture she helped unwit
Monica Lewinsky’s confession lands with a thud because it’s not just about a virus; it’s about a lifetime of being contagious in the public imagination. As she isolates with a fever and a stocked fridge, she’s also quarantined with memories of a world that weaponized her name before social media even had the language for “going viral.” That old humiliation now collides with a very real, physical vulnerability.
- The first Kit had been treated and was stable in an incubator — after H.i.t by a Car!
It was 10 pm when she pulled in. She asked me to look in the carrier and see if the little one was still alive. She was […]
- I went to my granddaughter’s wedding. Right at the entrance, my son stopped me and said, “Mom, your name isn’t on the list
My name is Denise Parker. I am seventy-two years old, a widow, and until that evening I had still been foolish enough […]
Yet this diagnosis also underlines how radically she has rewritten her story. The woman once reduced to a punchline is now a leading voice against cyberbullying, using the same internet that once devoured her to demand empathy and accountability. Her COVID-19 result is cruelly ironic, but it also exposes a deeper truth: the culture that infected her life with shame is still sick, and her survival is its most damning indictment.


