So we continue to type the phrase into the void, backwards and forwards, hoping that if we reverse the word, we might also reverse the curse. We want a world where “please” means something, where the basket can be full, and where the mirror shows not a hungry ghost staring at a screen, but a person who has finally caught the fish and is ready to stop searching. Until then, the query stands. Elgoog, more fish please. And after that, a little more. And then, just one more.
There is a profound loneliness embedded in the phrase. A real fishmonger does not need to be asked “more fish please” twice; a real community knows when the basket is full. But elgoog is not a person. It is a cold, luminous interface. Saying “please” to it is like talking to the stars. The phrase captures the weird, hollow politeness of our digital lives—the way we type “thank you” to a chatbot, or apologize to a GPS for missing a turn. We are performing social rituals in a vacuum, hoping that the mirror will someday nod back. elgoog more fish please
Yet the phrase is also a confession of insufficiency. No amount of fish is ever enough. The aquarium of the modern self has a leaky bottom. We consume a headline, and we immediately want the analysis. We watch a thirty-second clip, and we want the full movie. We find one fact, and we ask elgoog for a hundred more. The “more fish” is the engine of the attention economy—a system that does not profit from satisfaction, but from the perpetual state of wanting. If Google gave us a definitive answer, the search would end. But elgoog, the mirror-deity, understands that the true product is not the fish, but the hunt. So we continue to type the phrase into
The first part, is a revelation in reverse. Google, as a name, was a playful misspelling of “googol,” the mathematical term for 1 followed by one hundred zeros. It promised infinite indexing, the total capture of human knowledge. To reverse it—to spell it backwards—is to perform a small act of deconstruction. It suggests that the great oracle we have built is not a window onto the world but a mirror facing ourselves. When we type “elgoog,” we are not searching the web; we are searching the search engine’s own unconscious. We are asking not for facts, but for what the machine has learned about our wants. The mirror reflects our own fragmented, scrolling consciousness back at us. And what does that consciousness want? The second part provides the answer. Elgoog, more fish please
The request is disarmingly simple. Why fish? In the digital ecosystem, fish are a perfect metaphor for the content we endlessly consume. They are slippery, numerous, and live in a medium (water) that distorts and magnifies their appearance. On social media, “more fish” means another viral video, another hot take, another dopamine hit of novelty. On a search engine, it means the next page of results, the deeper link, the answer just beyond the one you just read. The word “please” is the tragicomic grace note. We are polite to the algorithm. We say please to a piece of code because we have internalized the etiquette of the infinite scroll. We believe that if we ask nicely, the digital ocean will yield another creature.