As proof of its staying power, the trend has already spawned a whole generation of new products, apps and websites to go along with it. A Kickstarter crowd-funding project based in Hong Kong recently garnered nearly 10 times their funding goal (a total of $94,943 USD) by introducing a product called the Muku Shuttr, which allows users to take smartphone selfies from any distance via a handheld Bluetooth remote. Last fall, selfie addict and bonafide idiot Justin Bieber invested $1.1 million USD in a selfies-only app called Shots of Me. Meanwhile, while Selfie.com is still a techno-mystery (the landing page offers only the cryptic message "See you soon"), there is a lovingly maintained site called MySelfiePage.com that opens to a list of playable music videos, all relating to selfies. Once you sign up (which I did, in the name of journalism, using a fake email address and a picture I found online of a man holding a cat) you enter a rather depressing virtual realm that resembles an AOL chatroom from the mid-90s, offering personal profiles, selfie albums, and something ominous called Selfie Roulette which was too slow to load for the Citylife server/my attention span.