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Posted on 09/11/06 @ 9:32 pm
(This is an addendum to "BGB Blogcast #41 - 55 Minutes of Fun".)
Flash-forward two years later, a Facebook expansion to include major corporations and my new job at Big Company, Inc. and now I'm finally on Facebook. And counting the days, hours, minutes and seconds until I cancel that account. Why, you ask?
Most of these social networking sites (MySpace, Orkut, Friendster, etc.) fall in the trap of just letting you add people as "friends" all willy-nilly. I've been fairly piecemeal about who I add, trying to track down cousins, high school friends, college buddies…OK, let me stop there. There's only two college-age cousins of mine whom I know. One I've mentioned on the blog — Chef Nigga. He rejected my invitation, the little ingrate. The other cousin, Figure 8, is grown and livin' it. Last I saw her, she was some yelping little brat nipping at the ankles of her grandmother. Now she's…well…an adult. Damn, I feel old. Anyway, you have all these "friends" (I saw one profile with like 900+ friends…who the hell KNOWS that many people?)…and, well, having them isn't so much the problem as it is having them now try to question you. For me, it's my current lifestyle (even though I haven't seen or talked to most of these jokers in ages), my hobbies and even my music choices. Like I need some jack-faced trick I hurled insults at in grade 12 trying to get a number on me because I like Buddhism and No Doubt. She actually sent me a message saying that I need to stop listening to "that White shit". Oh, and of course, all the "why didn't you pledge" questions. I'd say damn near everyone I knew from HS or college pledged in some sorority or fraternity. Personally, the idea of joining a frat doesn't appeal to me. And if I get one more question about it, I'll just tell them that I didn't pledge because I don't have$600 and a propensity to get my ass whupped for brotherhood. Capiche? And looking at the pictures of them in high school and college with friends of mine and such…well…it's bringing back some bad memories about high school and college that I thought I had forgotten. And that pisses me off. To add insult to injury…now my "friends" can see my every move on that site. Facebook recently introduced the notion of the "mini-feed", so people can view your profile and see everything you've said, people you've added, places you've commented, etc. It's all pretty stalkerish, and enough people made a fuss about to get them to add privacy elements…but guess what? I can still see all of my friends' actions, and I really don't want or care to know all of that. I guess I can always avert my gaze when I log in, but it's still not something that should be switched on by default and that can't be turned off. There's supposedly a planned Facebook exodus on September 15th. I just might join in that. Filed under: Past Tense and Personal Comments:
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I remember when I first heard of 



I totally agree. Myspace is the same way. People that I didn't talk to in high school EVER (i wasn't a snob..i mean not really) now want to pretend like we were the best of friends. You try not to hurt people's feelings but they start sending umpteen messages and invites and you are like ummm…i don't really know you like that. And then you have the guys who have decided you are their one and only… after one picture. It's horrible. Oooh got to run, just got a new friends request (I am so just kidding).
Smooches!
Said by Kris — 09/13/2006 @ 4:08 pm
I finally deleted my MySpace account around Labor Day. I started mine after constant, annoying peer pressure from a friend who was using it to get dates. There's just not a lot of functionality on MySpace, at least not enough to keep me interested. Maybe if I were 13 years old I'd be fascinated but I'm a grown a$$ woman! Once you collect a gang of friends, add a new song or video to your page or choose a garish layout that takes years to load, what do you do on MySpace?
Said by Didi — 09/15/2006 @ 4:03 pm
A few years ago I did that Orkut nonsense. I had "friends" wanting to be added who I never ever met in my entire life (I don't know nobody in Brazil, 'k) and started a few groups on there with piddling messages posted by a few devotees. After a short while it all seemed pointless–probably because it was.
All these sites are missing one key element: purpose. You create a page and people link to you. Then what? They haven't come up with any real purpose for being.
Listservs and blogs remain far better social networking vehicles to my mind, because you can actually engage people in conversation.
Said by Bernie — 09/16/2006 @ 8:28 pm