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Marc Summers
I must behave

Registered: Jan 2005
Location: New York, USA
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| quote: | Originally posted by HardTranceProd
But the question is, why did you create the account in the first place? Did you have a lot of friends who you hoped would read your blog and leave comments? If this was a fashionable trend, why was it fashionable? What was the goal of your joining MySpace. |
I made an account to keep track of friends. I did write blogs that were big hits in my school at the time. I think the cool thing about it was that the blogs were really smart, and dealt with issues in our school, as well as current events. I really got people involved in some great discussions the next day in school, including some teachers (Which was kind of creepy).
But then, our school made it's own myspace group, and people would create really stupid threads about beating people up, and the fights would get dragged on the next day at school.
That's when I left, actually.
___________________
"You won a new refrigerator, great! Where you gonna put it?" - Tony Danza
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Nov-13-2006 02:48
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HardTranceProd
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2004
Location: Washington DC
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| quote: | Originally posted by Lilith
Add too that, its just full of sad, boring people I'd rather not know and to be honest, I really dont care about.
Not too say, I'm probably quite boring and uninteresting too but I'm not exactly wanting too announce that fact too the whole wide world.
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Okay, I'd like to stick with this quote because this is exactly the kind of social insight that I wanted to discuss.
My point is, the people represented on MySpace are "the majority culture". Boring and uninteresting they may be, but they are the ones who are popular in school, have large networks of friends, follow the normal course of relationships and dating, etc.
Yet, looking at their pics, I am frightened by how bland and sheltered their lifestyle is. They appear to have few interests or hobbies; they do not welcome those outside their circle. So: what does this say about the majority culture? Is it phony? Is it all a pretense?
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Nov-13-2006 03:35
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pmoisse
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Oct 2001
Location: Amsterdam, NL (formerly Montreal QC)
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Personally, I have zero interest in getting a myspace account.
If I want to meet people, I will meet them in various social settings. Sometimes these meetings happen due to first "meeting" them on a messageboard or whatever, but to me, I haven't actually met them until I've talked with them in person.
If contact/communication etc. moves onto something more conversational like MSN, that's great. If it doesn't, that's fine too.
I'm currently on 6 messageboards (3 music/clubbing and 3 car/racing...3 of which are international) and that's more than enough as far as I'm willing to put any kind of effort into checking regularly. If people want to get in touch via personal message, it's there for them.
If I meet people in any situation, I have no problems sharing my msn or email info if I get a decent feeling from them.
All of this can be achieved without dealing with the maintenance/upkeep/hassle/spam/marketing that seems to be myspace. I have nothing against people who use it for social networking/personal promotion. It's a useful tool with a huge potential audience. But, I think that this is also redundant given that most people I know are also socailly networked through various messageboards and personal websites/blogs.
myspace is the new ipod. It's a virtual fashion accessory that everyone seems to need except that it has the potential to affect individiual lives in more ways than just growing your circle of friends. Whether for better or worse is up for individual argument which will play out over time. Sadly we've seen how myspace can be used to harm people. People who want to harm people will likely do so whether myspace is there as a tool for them or not, but again, that's open to debate.
The social networking aside, I also have little interest in airing most aspects of my life on some website where people read about you for whatever reason. If I have stories or adventures to share, I will take the time to type out an email to my friends & family instead of spending the same amount of time to type the same message to random people....and I still have to send the email to my non-myspace friends to announce that there's something new and exciting on my myspace page. I just don't see the point.
Ultimately, for me, all of my friends already know my phone/email/msn/messageboard contact info, so they can always find me.
Just my $.02
Paul
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Nov-13-2006 03:41
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pmoisse
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Oct 2001
Location: Amsterdam, NL (formerly Montreal QC)
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| quote: | Originally posted by HardTranceProd
My point is, the people represented on MySpace are "the majority culture". Boring and uninteresting they may be, but they are the ones who are popular in school, have large networks of friends, follow the normal course of relationships and dating, etc. |
But do they really have that many real-life friends? This is what I don't really understand. As an example, if you are in highschool and you see these people every day, why do you need to spend more time communicating through a computer? Are people using a computer as a social filter/buffer/safety blanket? I worry that this type of change in social skill-set development might have a negative effect on how someone can function in real-world social situations. They will eventually have to deal with a whole world of socially challenging situations that they will have to live, in person, not from behind a screen. This is just one guess at how this might affect what is likely the largest demographic on myspace.
| quote: | | Yet, looking at their pics, I am frightened by how bland and sheltered their lifestyle is. They appear to have few interests or hobbies; they do not welcome those outside their circle. So: what does this say about the majority culture? Is it phony? Is it all a pretense? |
I guess this is the new escapism....but one that's still grounded in some degree of reality (the degree is up to the individual user). I wonder how many people have multiple alias' that aren't divided in a personal/professional context (ie: artists/musicians/dj's)? If you engage in what amounts to being slightly szchitzophrenic (sp?) on a personal social networking site like this, how does this affect you in "real life" if at all? The potential ramifications of this are kinda freaky in a way, but that being said I do not believe for a second that any government should regulate this in any way other than hateful or otherwise distasteful (read: more than simple nudity) content which is likely already the case.
My take on your question about hobbies/interests etc. is that I would be interested to see statistics of what exactly those interest and hobbies are, and if they are more internet/electronic (video games etc)/otherwise socially reclusive? Or are people still participating in real, active, get-off-your-ass stuff like sports, photography etc etc.? I wonder how it breaks-down over certain ages groups?
All this being said, it's realy none of my business how anyone else spends their time, nor will I really put any effort into researching this myself (other than participating in this thread lol!)
I'm honestly interested to see other responses, since I really haven't given myspace more than 5 minutes of my time.
Paul
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Nov-13-2006 04:17
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King Ecnal
PGA

Registered: Jan 2005
Location: Massachusetts
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I do not know if this has been said yet... because I'm not reading through all of that, because I think the majority of posts here are myspace bashing... so...
If you look up the numbers... the people under the age of 18... or even the 18-25 crowd, are the minority of myspace. The over 35 crowd is very large, and its very surprising, I heard it on NPR, when youtube got bought out.
The point is, don't hate myspace because of the teenie boppers.
and, I like myspace, because I can fuck around on it, and I'm very sarcastic, and I've met a lot of sarcastic people, which is always a positive... thats lame, but whatever..
I'm pro-myspace...
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lance
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Nov-13-2006 04:34
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