Are you extremely telegenic? Lord knows I am. And so every time I attend a Major League Baseball game, I assume at some point the broadcast cameras will be distinguishing enough to find my awesome face and share it with the world. And hey, if I’m on TV, I want to see that! My TV brings me so much joy, and now you’re telling me I’m on the inside looking out? But I forgot to set my DVR!

Fret not, my fellow beautiful people: There’s a new app called 15 Seconds of Fame, which boldly declares itself “the newest and most advanced social media app.” Now partnered with Major League Baseball, the app gives fans an easy way to find clips of any time they appear on a big-league broadcast.

It all sounds pretty straightforward: You download the app, upload the selfie, and check into whatever game you’re attending. If you appear on TV during the game, the app will send you a video clip once the game is over. If you catch word that you appeared on TV during a game but failed to check in beforehand, you can check in afterwards and get the same footage.

That such a technology exists is incredible and at least mildly terrifying. Feels like spy stuff, to be honest. But hey, we all make trade-offs in life, and we’ve all by now conceded most of our privacy to the encroachment of social media. And hey, this one’s cool! It lets you know if you were on TV and then sends you video of the time you were on TV!

According to a press release, 15 Seconds of Fame’s “proprietary technology uses unique algorithms to ingest, sort, clip and deliver crowd video from any sort of camera feed.” It sounds complicated. They don’t have stadium jumbotron footage available yet, but they’re working on it.