Drunk dialing refers to anintoxicated person makingphone calls that they would not likely make ifsober, often alonely individual calling former or current love interests.
Drunktexting, emailing, and editing internet sites are related phenomena, and potentially yet more embarrassing for the sender as, when the message is sent, it cannot be rescinded; the message may be misspelled (due to being drunk), and it might be reviewed and shared among many.

A 2021 study, that examined the relationship between drunk texting andemotional dysregulation, found a positive correlation. The findings suggest that interventions targetingemotional regulation skills may be beneficial.[2]
InKurt Vonnegut's 1969 novelSlaughterhouse-Five, the main character describes his tendency to drunk dial:
I have this disease late at night sometimes, involvingalcohol and the telephone. I get drunk, and I drive my wife away with breath like mustard gas and roses. And then, speaking gravely and elegantly into the telephone, I ask the telephone operators to connect me with this friend or that one, from whom I have not heard in years.
In the 2004 filmSideways, Miles Raymond (Paul Giamatti) gets drunk and calls his ex-wife while at a restaurant. When he returns to the table, his friend Jack (Thomas Haden Church) asks him, "Did you drink and dial?"
TheNew York Post,[4]The New York Times,[5] andThe Washington Post,[6] have all reported on drunk dialing. Cell phone manufacturers and carriers are helping callers prevent drunk dialing.Virgin Mobile has launched an option to help its users stop drunk dialing by initiating multi-hour bans on calling specific numbers[7] and theLG Group introduced the LP4100 mobile phone, which includes abreathalyzer.[8] Although the breathalyzer function was incorporated to help the user assess fitness to drive, rather than fitness to phone, the owner can program the LP4100 to restrict calls to specific telephone numbers on certain days or after a certain hour, a feature that might help limit drunk dialing by eliminating calls when the user is more likely to be intoxicated. This requires prior planning or awareness that one will become intoxicated at a later time. Some reports indicate that this phone, or a planned future version for U.S. release, would activate the call-blocking function in tandem with theblood alcohol content results from the breathalyzer.[9][10] A mobile appDrunk Mode was launched in April 2013. Drunk Mode prevents users from calling or sending messages to specific contacts for up to 12 hours. A reported feature also sets notifications every 30, 60, 90 or 120 minutes to remind users not to engage in certain "drunk behaviors".[11]