I thought that I used different
types of new media a great deal, but knowing the many media outlets that are
available, I only use 2-3 on a daily basis. My smartphone is like an extension
of me and if I don’t have it on me 24 hours a day, 7 days a week I wouldn’t
know what to do. It makes me a bit sad realizing how dependent I am on my
phone, but in today’s society, technology runs the world and I jumped on the
bandwagon a long time ago like almost everyone else. Facebook, Twitter, and TMZ
(sad, but true) are the applications that I use on a daily basis. These sites
keep me in touch with the current events, whether they are important like an
unfortunate school shooting or frivolous like who’s wearing what on the red
carpet. I check each site a few times a day and even after I’m done with my
daily ‘sessions’, I may put the phone down for a couple of minutes and without
even realizing it, I pick it right back up to go on the internet or type in a
note/reminder for myself. I feel a bit scared to get attached to other media,
such as, Pinterest and Instagram in fear of me wasting more time on unnecessary
information.
Social media has grown so much over
the last decade that it’s practically impossible not to participate in one way
or another. There are still some people, mostly older, who have chosen not to
get a Facebook account or anything of that nature; however, these same people
are still a part of social media when they choose to comment on an online
article or ‘share’ information they receive via e-mail. As mentioned in Blur,
“Communication’s history also suggests that new technologies do not change
human nature. They simply allow us to express and satisfy our curiosity about
the world beyond our own direct experience in different ways” (Kovach &
Rosenstiel, 2010). The older generation will still pick up a newspaper to read
about current events, but they may also get on the computer and pass
information they’ve learned onto their friends and colleagues. With today’s
social media, information is passed from person to person a lot quicker than in
the past.
As far as how it’s influenced my
perspective on events, I would say social media has made me see some events as
less important than I would have seen them in the past. There are so many
posting’s out there from small topics to large, important ones; however, since
everyone is allowed to share information through social media it’s sometimes
hard to distinguish what is major and what isn’t. Obviously, the multiple
school shootings around the US are major stories, but what happens when one
shooting is bypassed by the next, and then the next, and then the next. Once a
new tragedy occurs, the ones directly before it tend to come out of the
public’s focus and they’re on to the next. Then we have stories about
celebrities that will literally take over social media sites, even if there critical
news to discuss. So I may go from reading a piece about growing hunger in
third-world countries to becoming engulfed in what Kim and Kanye are going to
have for breakfast…it’s a bit absurd. While I like the concept of social media
and its availability for the masses to give their two cents and share what they
want the world to know, I also think it can be a lot to handle at times.
Sadly you sound a lot like me, LOL. To use some social media lazy typing. Since starting this class I to have realized how I have become greatly and almost dependent on my phone. I will check it many times throughout the day, I text like a beast and I am always checking around on Facebook. Many times this is done during the workday. I have a position that has a large amount of downtime and not very stimulating. I believe your comment about things like schools shootings is becoming almost the norm and you don't know how to react to this one or that one. To some degree I feel almost numb. Your comment about the hunger third-world hunger and than reading about Kim and Kanye eating breakfast is so true. We have this constant amount of stimulation and we can read about anything and everything. One minute you're reading something in Psychology today and the next you're reading about Angelina Jolie having another baby in a matter of minutes. Very good blog.
ReplyDeleteDesiree - I really like your example of how social media can bombard us with all types of stories, so we can move from frivolous to serious with just the swipe of our finger. This takes away the hierarchy of news that we would find in a print publication or even online with the site organization. Now all news is presented as equally important when it's just another link in our news feed. How do you think that changes are ability to tell what is important and what is not?
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