Marissa Wong, Brunei's toilet debate, and the rise of viral journalism
If you want action, go viral. It sounds like a joke — until it starts feeling true. A new KopiTalk with MHO essay examines how a toilet video, public frustration, and a government hotline have opened a much bigger question about viral journalism, accountability, and governance in Brunei.
By Malai Hassan Othman | KopiTalk with MHO
It began, as many public debates now begin, not in a newsroom, not through a formal complaint letter, and not from a press conference — but through a phone screen.
A video. A public toilet. A wave of laughter. A wave of embarrassment. Then, suddenly, an everyday inconvenience became a national conversation.
The phrase itself was crude enough to travel fast: "Berak Bersama Marissa Wong."
On the surface, it sounded like comedy. A Malaysian content creator reviewing toilets in Brunei — turning wet floors, missing toilet paper, broken fittings, bad smells and poor maintenance into viral public entertainment.
But look at what she actually found. At Jerudong Park, she gave the toilets a 7 out of 10 — creditable, but not without criticism. Missing bag hooks. Not a single roll of toilet paper. She contrasted it with the so-called "Premium" toilet that once won a national award, holding it up against the neglected ordinary facilities the public actually uses every day. At Tutong and Gadong, the reviews were far less generous. Broken infrastructure. Facilities patched and forgotten. Communities on Reddit and TikTok that had been complaining for years suddenly found their frustrations amplified by a stranger's smartphone.
There is even an Instagram account — @bruneitoilets — that has quietly been doing this public service work for some time, rating facilities, naming locations, and applying slow but steady pressure. Marissa Wong did not invent the audit. She simply made it impossible to look away.
Beneath the humour was something more serious.
Marissa Wong did not merely make people laugh about toilets. She made them look again at something many had quietly accepted as normal. She took what people usually complain about privately — in cars, offices, family chats, coffee shops and Reddit threads — and turned it into a public reckoning.
That is why the issue travelled. It was not just about toilets. It was about whether Brunei has reached a point where some public problems receive serious attention only when they become embarrassing enough to go viral.
And if that is the case, then the problem is not the toilet. The problem is the system that allows it to get that bad before anyone with authority looks up.
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In the old system, one writes a complaint, waits for acknowledgement, waits again for inspection, and perhaps waits even longer for action.
In the new system, one records, posts, goes viral, and suddenly the machinery begins to move.
That is both impressive and worrying. It is impressive because it shows the public still has power. It is worrying because it suggests that power may now depend less on proper complaint channels and more on public embarrassment.
"The lesson many are quietly drawing is brutally simple: if you want action, go viral."
That should worry every serious public servant.
The recent online discussion around Brunei's public toilet conditions captured this mood very clearly. Viral social media claims that Brunei toilets were becoming "more and more yuck" prompted the Ministry of Development to reiterate that it has a 24-hour toilet hotline. The public reaction was sharp, sceptical and revealing. Some asked whether any real action would follow complaints. Others questioned response times. One commenter on the r/nasikatok subreddit put it with particular bluntness:
"If it doesn't go viral… There's nothing here."
R/NASIKATOK COMMUNITY COMMENTAnother was more specific in their frustration:
"The problem is that these public toilets should have regular cleaning and maintenance. Jangan tunggu orang report and viralkan baru tah kan buat, then pat yourself on the back for being so 'proactive'."
R/NASIKATOK COMMUNITY COMMENTThat second comment cuts deeper than the first. It is not just scepticism. It is a description of a broken maintenance culture — one where reactive management has quietly replaced the discipline of routine inspection and proactive care.
These are not fringe voices. They are the sound of a public that has lost faith in ordinary channels.
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This is the rise of what may now be called viral journalism.
It is not journalism in the traditional newsroom sense. It does not always come from trained reporters, professional editors, verification desks, legal review, balanced sourcing or disciplined public-interest reporting.
It begins with an ordinary person, a smartphone, a grievance, an emotional hook, and an audience ready to press share.
Yet whether we like it or not, it is becoming one of the most powerful forms of public communication in Brunei today.
The newsroom has moved. From the printing press to the smartphone. From the editor's desk to Reddit. From the formal complaint letter to TikTok. From the official statement to the comment section.
And the reason is not difficult to understand. When mainstream media becomes too cautious, the public finds another way to speak. When formal complaints appear too slow, the public turns to social media. When official channels become too polite to expose failure, the viral public square becomes the new watchdog.
In Brunei, this is especially relevant. Many issues in mainstream media are reported with care — sometimes too much care. Official statements are carried. Ceremonies are covered. Announcements are published. But the rougher, more uncomfortable questions of public service delivery are often left untouched, softened, or quietly avoided.
This creates a vacuum. And social media loves a vacuum.
When the formal media space is too narrow, informal media expands. When newspapers avoid difficult questions, citizens ask them online. When official narratives dominate public space, anonymous users, influencers, vloggers and online communities begin to fill the gap.
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This does not mean all viral content is journalism. Much of it is not. Some of it is emotional noise. Some of it is careless. Some of it is unfair. Some of it is half true. Some of it is driven by ego, clicks, anger, revenge, or the simple desire to shame.
But we should not dismiss the whole phenomenon simply because some of it is flawed.
At its best, viral journalism is a civic alarm bell.
It keeps authorities on their toes. It disturbs complacency. It checks the ego. It reminds departments, units, contractors, supervisors and frontline officers that public service does not exist only on paper, during official visits, or inside annual reports.
Public service exists in toilets, counters, roads, drains, waiting rooms, clinics, schools, immigration posts, parking areas, markets and every place where ordinary people meet the machinery of government.
Governance does not fail only at the top. Often, it weakens quietly at the lower levels. It weakens in the unit that does not follow up. It weakens in the maintenance schedule that is not enforced. It weakens in the cleaning contract that is poorly monitored. It weakens in the officer who assumes nobody will check. It weakens in the department that believes a hotline is enough, without proving that the hotline produces timely results.
Viral journalism notices these things. It exposes not only the problem, but the attitude behind the problem. It reveals indifference. It reveals slow response. It reveals the gap between official assurance and public experience. It shows whether a facility is being maintained as a matter of duty, or only cleaned up after someone makes noise online.
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That is why the toilet issue matters.
A public toilet may look like a small subject. It is not. A dirty public toilet speaks of hygiene. It speaks of dignity. It speaks of public health. It speaks of tourism image. It speaks of maintenance culture. It speaks of whether someone is inspecting what should be inspected — and whether a department knows the real condition of the facilities under its responsibility.
Nobody needs a policy paper to know that a filthy toilet is unacceptable. Nobody needs a consultant's report to understand that missing toilet seats, broken pipes, no soap, clogged sinks, wet floors and bad smells are not signs of efficient public management.
Of course, the public also has responsibility. Dirty toilets do not happen by themselves. Some users behave selfishly. Some vandalise. Some leave a mess and expect others to clean it. Civic education matters. Toilet etiquette matters. Personal discipline matters.
But public irresponsibility cannot become an excuse for institutional indifference. If a facility is under public responsibility, the responsible authority must have a system for cleaning, monitoring, repair, enforcement and follow-up. If vandalism is recurring, the system must respond to recurring vandalism. If parts are repeatedly stolen, the system must adapt. If toilets deteriorate again after repairs, the system must ask why maintenance is not sustained.
That is governance.
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To be fair, the authorities have not remained entirely silent.
The Ministry of Development has circulated a public notice inviting members of the public to submit complaints on cleanliness issues involving both public and private toilets. The notice gives a 24-hour WhatsApp hotline — 2383407 — and urges immediate reporting.
That response matters. It shows that the issue has been acknowledged. It also shows that the authorities understand public toilet hygiene can no longer be treated as a background matter, especially after the debate gained national traction.
But a hotline alone is not enough.
A hotline can receive complaints. It cannot, by itself, clean a toilet. It cannot replace a broken seat, repair a leaking pipe, refill the soap dispenser, unclog a drain, inspect a cleaning contractor, discipline poor supervision, or make sure the same toilet does not return to its old condition one week later.
That is why the next step must be visible. If the authorities want to demonstrate seriousness, Brunei should see not only a hotline number, but a proper public toilet response mechanism — perhaps a dedicated "toilet buster" team — tasked to inspect, respond, repair, monitor and report. Tasked, in short, to make the hotline mean something.
Such a team would show that the government is not merely receiving complaints, but acting on them. It would help identify repeat problem locations, weak contractors, unclear ownership, poor maintenance cycles and departments that respond only after public embarrassment.
The hotline should not become another number people call into silence. It should become the front door of an accountable public hygiene response system.
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This is where viral journalism functions as an informal audit. Not a perfect audit. Not always a fair audit. Not always a complete audit. But an audit nonetheless.
It tells those in authority where the public is losing patience. It tells them where official systems are not trusted. It tells them where supervision has failed. It tells them where small problems have become symbols of larger frustrations. And it tells them what formal reports may not say bluntly.
The people are watching. The smartphone has become the public's witness. The algorithm has become the amplifier. The comment section has become the unofficial feedback channel. In some cases, the viral post has become the audit report nobody commissioned but everybody reads.
This is why viral journalism is thriving — and the reasons go deeper than money.
Those who create viral content are often chasing something more primal: peer validation, social status, and the immediate psychological reward of being seen and shared. Researchers describe this as "social currency" — the digital age's version of credibility and influence. A single viral moment can position an ordinary person as a thought leader, a civic hero, or simply someone worth listening to. Even the fear of being left out plays a role: the anxiety of becoming invisible, of missing the moment when everyone else is watching and sharing, pushes many creators to participate whether or not the content is carefully verified.
Some viral journalism is genuinely idealistic. It amplifies issues that would otherwise be ignored. It gives voice to the voiceless. It applies the kind of pressure that formal complaint systems, by design, rarely generate.
But it also carries danger.
"Virality is not the same as truth."
A viral video may show a real problem but not the full context. A viral accusation may raise a legitimate concern but misidentify the cause. A viral complaint may be emotionally valid but factually incomplete. And in an age when a voice can be cloned, a photo generated, and a screenshot fabricated, a half-truth can circle the world before a correction leaves the building.
This is why Brunei must not romanticise viral journalism. But it must not fear it either. The wiser response is to learn from it.
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Authorities should not treat viral complaints merely as nuisance, disrespect or social media mischief. They should treat them as free public intelligence. Each viral complaint reveals something worth studying: where the system is slow, where supervision is weak, where the public is losing patience, and where official assurance no longer matches lived reality.
Instead of asking only, "Who made this viral?", the better question is: "Why did this have to go viral before we acted?"
That question is far more important.
Because if the answer is that nobody listened before it went viral, then the problem is not social media. The problem is governance. If complaints were made but not followed up, then the problem is not the influencer. The problem is the response system. If a department already knew but did not act until embarrassment came, then the problem is not public noise. The problem is complacency.
In that sense, viral journalism can contribute to good governance. Not because it is perfect. Not because it replaces professional journalism. Not because every viral post is accurate. But because it creates pressure in a system where pressure is often too weak, too polite, or too easily absorbed by bureaucracy.
Good governance needs feedback. It needs scrutiny. It needs discomfort. It needs people willing to point out that something is not working — and departments that know the public is watching not only ministerial speeches and policy launches, but also the toilet door, the broken pipe, the dirty floor and the unanswered hotline.
A government confident in its service delivery should not fear public scrutiny. A department doing its job should welcome feedback. A unit serious about improvement should not wait for viral embarrassment before acting.
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The public, too, must mature.
If viral journalism is to become a force for good, it must develop its own ethics. Record responsibly. Verify before accusing. Protect innocent individuals. Avoid racial, personal or defamatory attacks. Focus on the issue, not humiliation. Demand correction, not destruction. Push for accountability, not mob justice.
That is the difference between civic pressure and digital recklessness.
Brunei does not need a culture where everyone fears being secretly recorded for malicious reasons. But Brunei does need a culture where public authorities understand that neglect, indifference and complacency can no longer hide easily.
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This is the real lesson from "Berak Bersama Marissa Wong."
The humour worked because the public recognised the truth behind it. People laughed, but they also understood — the smell, the broken fittings, the wet floor, the missing toilet paper, the embarrassment and the wider failure of maintenance culture.
Humour became the hook. Embarrassment became the pressure. Virality became the enforcement mechanism.
That may be effective. But it is not ideal.
A country should not depend on viral videos to keep public toilets clean. It should not need influencers to remind departments to supervise basic facilities. It should not wait for ridicule before correcting what should have been corrected through routine inspection and responsible management.
The real test now is not whether the toilet hotline exists. The real test is whether it works. Will complaints be answered quickly? Will action be visible? Will repeat locations be tracked? Will contractors be monitored? Will departments report outcomes? Will the public see improvement not only after embarrassment, but before embarrassment becomes necessary?
That is where the issue moves from social media comedy to governance reform.
The dirty toilet may be cleaned. The viral video may fade. The online comments will move on to another issue by tomorrow.
But the question remains.
How many other problems are waiting for a viral video before they are taken seriously?
"Viral journalism is not the enemy of good governance. Silence is."
But if Brunei is to learn from this new public square, both the authorities and the public must understand one thing clearly: going viral may expose the problem. Only good governance can solve it.
— MHO
KopiTalk with MHO



