Journalism reclaimed it for preachy headlines like " Doing It All: You're Probably Doing It Wrong." I've used it. But, unlike many such things, the meme didn't die. Bush talking into a the earpiece, rather than mouthpiece, of a telephone).
In the early 2000s, you could often find it as the all-caps wording on "FAIL" images (like, say, a guy taking an electric shaver to his forearms, or George W. Like so many such things, "You're Doing It Wrong" started as a meme. "You're doing it wrong" has become a common headline cliche, a sassier, snarkier version of "8 Questions You Were Too Embarrassed to Ask" and "You'll Never Believe What Happened Next." H ere, according to the Internet/journalism/your fellow humans, is an incomplete list of all the things you-yes, you-have recently been doing wrong: The people who are employed to write things for the Internet. Well, not the Internet (if, when it comes to precision, we are Doing It Right). Your capacity to work? To love? To live your life? You may not have asked for the Internet's opinion on these matters, but it will tell you anyway: It thinks you are Doing It Wrong. The Internet-with all due no offenses and sorry, buts-does not think you are on top of your game.
Because the Internet does not agree with your sparkly sense of optimism. Then you might want to get off the Internet. Are you having a good day? Are you feeling rested, and happy, and ready to conquer the week ahead with your signature mixture of aggression and aplomb? Are you on top of your game, and thus on top of the world?