Digital Update (or, why I’m better on Twitter)

25 01 2009

Last week was pretty standard for the first week of classes.  Along with my in-class introduction – “Hi, I’m Nina and I’m a first-semester senior in Gallatin, originally from NJ…” – I also developed the usual anxiety over adapting to a new schedule while frantically searching amazon.com for used/cheaper textbooks.  Of course, what was not usual (um, unusual) about last week was the Presidential Inauguration of Barack Obama.  I watched the oath/Inaugural Speech in the student center on a huge screen and later listened to the parade via CNN/Facebook’s livestream (imagine hearing crowds cheering in the background as you’re working).

Despite the busy week and the fact that I should be reviewing Supreme Court cases, I’ll attempt to list the news I’m currently excited about.  If this bullet format seems like a trend of mine, you can attribute it to my love for Twitter – which happens to fit my scattered thoughts perfectly.  As I’ve said before, Twitter is always the best place to see what I’m doing/thinking (also known as virtually lurking me – it’s okay, that’s kind of the point).

  • In addition to CNN/Facebook’s livestream and feed of Facebook updates, Microsoft Photosynth was taking people’s 2D photos of the event and overlapping each picture’s unique perspective to create a 3D experience. Last spring, a speaker came to my Anthropology of Media course and actually demonstrated this technology – he showed us how thousands of individual tourists’ photos of Notre Dame could be “stitched together” in a way that allows people to explore popular destinations from their computer.  From what I remember, you can click on any single layer (representing an individual photo) and the program will show you the exact position from which the picture was taken (i.e. where the photographer was standing).
  • The Undercurrent Social Island(TM) is in full effect, as Julia put it the other day. We’re avid socializers and self-proclaimed digital ninjas (hii-yah!):
Ana and Sean, Julia took the photo. I'm hunched over, writing something down.

Also in this pic: Ana and Sean, Julia took the photo. I'm hunched over, writing something down.

Sorry for the rushed post.  Until next week.





Don’t Hate On Twitter

1 12 2008

Update: this post is now on Undercurrent’s blog as well. Word.

A month or so ago, I gave a presentation to my Thinking About Seeing class (a Gallatin seminar about visual communication – art, media, etc.) about Marshall McLuhan‘s theory as it applies to the Internet today. That is, “the medium is the message” in that the internet collapses time and space restrictions while facilitating real-time communication within online communities, ultimately altering our perception and awareness, and thus “retribalizing” the world into a new “global village” where people “react and interact simultaneously to every stimulus.” (Yes, I just tried to cram several of McLuhan’s central theses into one run-on sentence.) To give a web example, I introduced and explained Twitter as a medium for “citizen journalism” and a network through which to build community and conversation. Considering that the internet is an inherently interesting and relevant topic to college students, and the fact that I was channeling my tour guide skills, the presentation went very well.

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One of my presentation slides

Certain people’s reactions to Twitter, however, really bothered me. One girl immediately raised her hand, accused me of “drinking the Kool-Aid,” and exasperatedly declared, “But it’s NOT REAL.” Another boy waited until the next class to inform me, “I was laughing all weekend thinking about you Twittering.” I initially thought he was curious and suggested he join Twitter, to which he replied with disgust. This pretentious close-mindedness still frustrates me, even a month later. After all, I’m quite the Junior McLuhan when trying to analyze the contemporary desire to cling to “the real world” of print and all things non-digital. In other words, people who hate on Twitter, or the digital world in general, do so because they’re romanticizing past media; by attaching “realness” to print media, they’re expressing nostalgia for the kind of physical tangibility (specifically touch and smell) that the internet cannot provide. Of course, the fact that the internet transcends the realm of the “real” derives from this very lack of physicality, for physicality in media is bounded to time and space.

Despite what these digital skeptics believe, Twitter has recently received MSM attention in light of social media’s response to last week’s terrorist attacks in Mumbai. The New York Times defined Twitter as “a short-message service that has evolved from an oddity to a full-fledged news platform in just two years,” whereas CNN began its article with the following statement, which has since been edited out: “It was the day social media appeared to come of age and signaled itself as a news gathering force to be reckoned with.” Both sources wrote about the utility of Twitter and the way it enabled those living or staying in Mumbai to tweet about the situation as it unfolded. One of my Twitter followers, @gsik (Gaurav Sikka), only recently moved from NYC to Mumbai; I found out about the attacks when his tweets appeared in my feed. Based on his updates, I quickly checked MSM sources online to confirm what was happening. Two or three days into the attacks, Gaurav blogged about his experience – including his mention on CNN and various interviews. In his words: “I’ve always been a huge Twitter fanboy but am still marveling at its worldwide adoption over the past several hours as an instant communication and event tracking tool! Tipping point for twitter? I think so.”

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The #mumbai hashtag allowed for all relevant tweets about Mumbai to be aggregated into one tweetstream

This “tipping point” has been in the making since I first joined Twitter in May, as evidenced by the social media community’s response to other crises or breaking news – i.e. the earthquake in California, Tim Russert’s death, Election 2008, and #MotrinMoms. But after the events of this past week, Twitter has proven its value in the so-called real world. Because the internet, whether or not people choose to acknowledge it, is rapidly becoming an integral part of the real world. It is real because it can no longer be separated from real news or real people. The relationship between the real and digital worlds flows in both directions – it is one of constant dialogue between official sources and social-media-enthusiasts-cum-citizen-journalists.

The latest MSM opinion in this conversation? It comes from CNN’s conclusion that “although Twitter remains a useful tool for mobilizing efforts and gaining eyewitness accounts during a disaster, the sourcing of most of the news cannot be trusted,” ultimately amounting to “an endless circle of recycled information.” (Somehow, I find this statement self-serving – probably because only CNN provides trustworthy news?)

Mathew Ingram makes a strong argument against this stance that Twitter provides unsubstantiated journalism, instead emphasizing how Twitterers quickly corrected the false reports on the status of the attacks in Mumbai. And as VentureBeat adds, “Twitter is just another source” of journalism, albeit one that happens to come directly from those at the scene. Therefore Twitter isn’t just a “circle of recycled information” – it fosters conversation between people who share information and those who want to know if that information is true. Twitter and social media constitute a launching pad for further inquiry or research into any news topic.

TechCrunch blatantly puts it best: “You can jump up and down and shout all you want that Twitter isn’t a real news source. But all you are doing is viewing the world through a reality lens that’s way outdated.” The digital world is merging with the real world in a way that infinitely expands access to information and connectedness with others – what remains is the decision whether to embrace and benefit from new media, or to denounce it and get stuck in the past.

Image from www.darkroastedblend.com

Image from www.darkroastedblend.com





73-year-old Japanese Porn Star

28 07 2008

Shigeo Tokuda is Japan’s leading man when it comes to senior citizen porn. He’s starred in over 200 adult films with elderly as well as young women. Apparently the Japanese market is prime for elderly porn because it has the largest population percentage of senior citizens than any other country in the world. For Tokuda’s second and much more exciting career, he says he won’t retire again (he spent his first career as a travel agent) until he’s at least 80 years old.

Here’s the CNN video/interview on the story. And here’s the awesome CNN Shirt for the story – talk about great headlines. My other favorite? “Males win more mates after dye job.”