**Headline:** *"Mackenzie Shirilla Gets the Netflix Doc Treatment—And the Internet Can’t Decide if It’s Justice or a Cautionary Meme"*

Headline: “Mackenzie Shirilla Gets the Netflix Doc Treatment—And the Internet Can’t Decide if It’s Justice or a Cautionary Meme”

Viral News Snippet:

In the latest twist of true crime meets ironic internet culture, the tragic case of Mackenzie Shirilla—the Ohio teen convicted of murdering her boyfriend, Dominic Russo, by deliberately crashing her car into a wall at 100 mph—has been turned into a documentary. And yes, the internet is already comparing it to Tiger King levels of “wait, am I supposed to laugh?”

Why is this trending? Because the irony is chef’s kiss. Shirilla, who infamously said “I love you” seconds before the crash, is now the subject of a documentary that has viewers split between horror and accidental comedy. Meme historians are pointing out that the internet has officially entered a new phase: “Tragic Crime as Binge-Worthy Content.” The most viral joke? “Her love language was ‘vehicular manslaughter.’”

Meanwhile, TikTok users are stitching clips with “I Know What You Did Last Summer” soundtracks, while X (formerly Twitter) is flooded with takes like, “She literally drove her relationship into a brick wall—and now she’s a Netflix protagonist. Irony is dead and we killed it with memes.”

The documentary’s producer hasn’t commented, but fans are already writing pitch lines for the sequel: “She did 100 mph for attention. Did she get it? Yes. But not the kind she wanted.”

Meme historian take: “We used to cry at tragedies. Now we binge them, meme them, and ask ‘what’s the moral here?’ The answer: There isn’t one. That’s the joke.”