So, this is my first post in this
blog as part of my Social Media & Society GenEd class, and the question
posed by the teacher for this post is,
“What is your perception of social media? Do you think it is a fad or the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution?”
“What is your perception of social media? Do you think it is a fad or the biggest shift since the Industrial Revolution?”
Well, considering I took a
Sociology class during the summer term where we in fact discussed the
Industrial Revolution, I’d have to answer that with, “Possibly.”
A revolution is usually some form
of rebellion, or an action that brings about a new age, but the true definition
of a revolution is something that keeps moving around and around.
Social Media indeed brings a new
age to mankind, building upon the Digital Age, and all the technological
advancements in information creation and control from that era.
Twenty years ago, the word “Blog”
didn’t even exist yet.
But then again, twenty years ago,
people didn’t think the Toronto Blue Jays could beat the Atlanta Braves in the
1992 World Series.
My point is, some people would
consider Social Media the biggest fad since neon hot pants, but the truth is,
Social Media is both a bridge AND a tether.
While it brings people closer
together, proving six degrees of separation truly exists daily through
Facebook, it’s also not unlike a dog’s leash, with the ability to link your
Facebook, Twitter, and other social media sites and apps to your cellphone, it
truly eliminates the illusion of personal privacy, where people can not only
text or e-mail you to your cellphone, but also contact you on social media and
it’ll show up on your smart phone or wireless device.
Parents can easily monitor their
children this way, since teenagers are very vain these days, and couldn’t care
less about what they post, thus showing their parents exactly who they are,
unlike the pre-internet age, where a teenager actually possessed a level of
secrecy about their personality to their parents.
Gone are the days when a teenager
would go off to drink beer in a forest with friends, and their parents would be
totally in the dark about it.
Now Lil’ Johnny goes to drink
with his friends, and wakes up the next morning to his parents in his hungover
face, because Lil’ Suzie tagged him in pics from the drinking session when she
got home.
Oops.
There are some upsides to Social
Media, although I use the term “upsides” loosely in this case, and I’ll tell
you why.
One major upside is advertising;
when I said I use the term “upside” loosely, I’m referring to the music
industry. They can get the word out
about Justin Bieber or Nicki Minaj’s new album a lot faster now than they could
twenty years ago thanks to word-of-mouth over Social Media.
It used to take expensive TV,
radio, and print campaigns to promote musicians’ new offerings to the public,
over a span of weeks, where now, it takes a mere day and one simple post on a
fan’s page to spurn the interest of literally millions of fans towards the new
album up to weeks before it even hits the shelves.
Not that the shelves matter.
In this age of digital media,
more and more people are buying/downloading their music online, thus eliminating
the need for a carbon copy, like a CD or cassette tape.
This is not the world I grew up
in.
But then again, this is not the
world my parents grew up in either.
They watched TV get colour, vinyl
give way to 8-track, and eventually audio cassette. And eventually playback technology came home,
from the BetaMax, to the VHS, to DVD, HD-DVD, and now Blu-Ray.
Next.
Interest post, Bob. You initial analogy for the tether was an interested way to look at it, as well as building upon the idea of the Digital age, something that I wish I had thought of to add to my own Blog. I see your stance, but I wish you had taken a firmer stance than "possibly". All in all, a good read.
ReplyDeleteThanks Patrick, the mediums of media have come a long way over the course of history.
ReplyDeletePlus, I chose "Possibly" because there have been many a fad over the three decades and change that I've been on this mudball, and Social Media is only one of them, and there'll be many more fads before I shift off the mortal coil, so we'll see what comes out as bigger in the next forty to fifty years.