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Filling the static and silence

Loneliness can be overwhelming to the extent of despair. It’s practically an innate need of living things to connect with something or someone that acts not only as a mirror to our subjective experience, but also as validation that our subjective experience is not singular. No matter how desperately we want to believe, at times, that our struggles are ours alone—someone somewhere can, at the very least, relate on some minute level. 

I was not a particularly social child growing up. I had no patience for childlike activities or conversations, so it went without saying that discussions with adults were far more enjoyable. The trouble with this, however, lay in the fact that I could never take these discourses home with me or to the playground or the cafeteria or anywhere else where I was supposed to act like a kid among other four-footers. Needless to say, my friends were oft books and chatter limited itself to whatever the singer of the song on the record/radio/cassette tape had to say. That I read Moby Dick over the course of a week in sixth grade might speak more about my isolation than anything else.

My stereo and later the iPod eventually filled the static and silence in later years. There was nothing so holy as hearing someone talk about your life without having ever met you, but telling the story so much more eloquently than you ever believed yourself able. (This remains the case—music connects us to emotions and experiences that are both real and fantasized. Why else would Presidential candidates have pep rally playlists?) Nirvana, Placebo, and The Manic Street Preachers crashed through my version of the 90s and Steppenwolf was my turntable favorite, among others.  

Either way, these things took me away from the bubble that I felt I occupied.

Where we previously had books (David Foster Wallace, Elizabeth Wurtzel, Joan Didion) and our favorite bands, the internet and social media cropped up. In a way, the threads that tie us together via social media take what books and bands do and add steroids. Eloquence is one thing, to have an actual conversation with someone that gets it is something else. While you know some vague detail about the people with whom you trade favorite authors or show up at the same shows, the internet affords some speck of anonymity (if desired) when it comes to the gritty, bare bones discussions. You can bare your soul without necessarily having to readily admit it to someone that knows you face to face.

I remember discovering forums and message boards a good ten or fifteen years ago and what a find. You had a handle, you had an avatar, and you could share your secrets without having to share “who” you were. (Of course, now there’s Post Secret, which trumps all of this!) Somehow, even if you felt lonely in your daily life, you could turn on the machine (listen to the bloody modem for those that remember dial-up), and there was suddenly a whole world full of people that “got it.”

People ask now, “Why mess with social media? It seems kind of self-indulgent and a giant waste of time.” I say, why not? It would be like asking, “What’s the point of travelling to other places?” or “Why read the news or magazines?” We are a product of need for other living beings (including plants and animals and whatever else serves as your companion.) Even if one doesn’t particularly like the company of others and prefers a solitary existence (yes, that includes me, the perpetual roommate-free single dweller), we still have a sometimes begrudging need for validation of our existence, of our experience from/by something/someone else.

Even if it’s only a mirror. Figurative or not.  

    • #90s music
    • #DFW
    • #Elizabeth Wurtzel
    • #Joan Didion
    • #Manic Street Preacher
    • #Nirvana
    • #Placebo
    • #Steppenwolf
    • #books
    • #despair
    • #dial-up
    • #iPod
    • #internet
    • #loneliness
    • #magazines
    • #modem
    • #music
    • #news
    • #social media
    • #solitude
    • #validation
    • #static and silence
    • #the sundays
    • #monochrome
  • 3 days ago
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Social Media Consequences Can Be Wonderful

One of the beautiful, latent consequences of involving and engaging oneself in social media is the discovery of shared moments, thoughts, and experiences between two or more completely unrelated followers. To discover that not only do I share a random connection with a total stranger, but to also discover that two strangers that I follow that do not follow each other share the same random connection is kind of serendipitously wonderful. We are not as disconnected as our eyes and brains might cajole us into the thinking.

    • #social media
    • #strangers
    • #connections
    • #it's a small world
    • #friendship
    • #serendipity
    • #consequence of social media
    • #i love tumblr
  • 4 days ago
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Journalists the world over are struggling to cope with a social and mobile tsunami of ‘user generated content’, to use an increasingly inadequate phrase. Twitter and YouTube will overwhelm news organisations who can’t master their potential.

A common mistake for those seeking to cope with this profound disruption is to confuse technology with innovation. Algorithms, apps and search tools help make data useful but they can’t replace the value judgements at the core of journalism.

Genuine innovation requires a fundamental shift in how journalists think about their role in a changed world. To begin with, they need to get used to being ‘curators’; sorting news from the noise on the social web using smart new tools and good old fashioned reporting skills.

Mark Little (via soupsoup)

Source: soupsoup

    • #journalism
    • #social media
    • #twitter
    • #youtube
    • #web
    • #innovation
    • #technology
    • #mark little
    • #quotes
  • 8 months ago > soupsoup
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Privacy, social media, and Google

Sometimes we keep our social profiles separate for very valid reasons and social media platforms—or technology companies—shouldn’t circumvent those efforts as a means of upping their own social capital value or out of some need to be more “socially-connected.”

What I post and the reasons behind what I post to Twitter are entirely different than what I post to Facebook. What I post to this blog is not always something that I would write about for the paper. Why? Because I have different audiences on every platform and frankly, I have a need for some level of privacy in what has become a very public world. What a novel idea.

Privacy on many of these sites continues to be a point of discussion. Whether it’s utilizing a secured url for login pages on Facebook or Twitter or having the ability to turn off the friendly little cookies that allow you to comment via your Facebook page about articles, videos, and whatever other schlock you might be looking at, privacy is important. People don’t like their information being rifled through—no matter what’s its being used for or not being used for.

Google is the latest to initiate a new “social feature” without being upfront. I run a search on Google this evening and guess what pops up?

When signed into Google, the platform automatically searches for public profiles on social networks that might match yours and it does this without asking your permission to do so first. Doesn’t this sound a little bit like the passive privacy adjustments Facebook’s been crucified for in the past? My Twitter profile is public at this point, but I make a point of privatizing other profiles that I have for the purpose of filtering audiences. I’ve made a point of disallowing Google to keep track of my search history. I’ve now made a point of barring Google from searching for profiles to “connect” to my Google account. I did these things to maintain that minuscule level of privacy that I’d like to keep without having to completely take everything down. 

This isn’t really so much about Google, though. This is about the fact that the concept of privacy has gone away. Not only is it not given most of the time, but increasingly it’s assumed that no one really wants any privacy. We know that we’ve given you our information. We’ve utilized the tools you’ve given us to keep confidential what we deem necessary. How dare you thumb your nose at us in order to get what you want. What happened to personal and professional ethics?

    • #privacy
    • #social media
    • #google
    • #twitter
    • #social connect
    • #culture
    • #linkedin
    • #quora
    • #flickr
    • #yelp
    • #sharing
    • #social distribution
    • #editorial
    • #commentary
    • #tech
    • #social trends
  • 11 months ago
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benjaminandhisblog:

Beautifully shot video of iconic blogger - Scott Schumann, aka, The Satorialist.

A beautiful example of why social media is what it is and at its very best. At the very foundation, it connects people. As Mr. Schumann says, it’s the moment and every moment that he shares with his world is, in turn, shared with the rest of us. You have a blogger whose story is being shared in a Youtube clip, which is now being shared via Tumblr.

Source: benjaminandhisblog

    • #twitter
    • #tumblr
    • #social media
    • #youtube
    • #the sartorialist
    • #about
    • #mini-documentary
    • #video
    • #connection
  • 1 year ago > benjaminandhisblog
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Day Creature: the French word for ‘writing.’

I'm a music journalist and freelance writer. Formerly the online section editor for the UCD Advocate in Denver, I currently write for Colorado Music Buzz, 303 Magazine, and other publications.

If you'd like to get in touch with me, I can be reached via email at salamander@salchrist.com.

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