Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Mediascape 5 years from now
Friday, November 26, 2010
Beautiful Katamari
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Analyzing Facebook
Lit & Media Studies
Extra Credit
11.17.10
Facebook was founded by Mark Zuckerberg, with the help his roommates and fellow computer science students. Initially, Facebook was limited to Harvard students and then spread to other colleges in the Boston area such as the Ivy League and Standford University. After a while, it opened up for high school students and eventually it became a website for anyone over the age of 13 to join. Facebook has the most worldwide active monthly users, followed by Myspace.
Facebook, employing over 1,400 people and having 8 offices, gathers most of their revenue through advertising, which is another unique thing about Facebook. It does not bombard you with advertisements, except for some on the sides, which pertain to your interests. Most people don't want to deal with pop ups and annoying ads, so Facebook dodged a big bullet with their easy to operate design. Facebook has also been banned in several countries and in most working environments, including schools, it has been banned due to it being so distracting.
Personally, I used to use Facebook. I knew people who had accounts and swore that I would one day give in and make an account. Unfortunately, they were correct, as I was trying to fight the media and the urge. But to be honest, the way it's presented and how easy it works, with all the options it allows you to have make it a lot better than Myspace. Even myspace realized that Facebook had a certain something that was attracting all of the users and began doing the little options you could do on Facebook, but not on Myspace. At the beginning, I would keep in contact with my friends and family back home in Toronto, Ontario in Canada after I moved, which was an easy way of having them close to me, although not physically. After it started becoming the new best social network, Facebook began to expand more so on the photo aspect, games, quizzes and the style of the entire site. It's now read like the paper, everyday, to a younger generation, yet even the adults have sprung an interest to this website. I can firmly say that my entire family on my dad's side has a facebook, which is a lovely way to keep in touch, but there are always consequences.
There used to be something called privacy. It's quite rare now and I almost am not sure if it exists anymore. For example, Twitter is a site where you can update what you're doing all of the time, which to be blunt, no one really cares what others are doing every ten minutes, so whats the need? We've glorified diminishing privacy and then complain we don't have any. All in all, I think Facebook will be the top social network for a good amount of time, unless we decide more privacy is a good thing.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Modern Media-Original
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
This photograph is well known, at least in my department of Photography and Digital Imaging, because it’s so over photoshopped, it isn’t realistic at all. A Ralph Lauren advertisement of Filipaa Hamilton, which if you’ve ever seen her, isn’t this stick thin or awkwardly shaped. When I look at this, honestly, I’d like to believe it’s a mistake, but this is a very good example of media pushing its limits with body image. Unfortunately, there are young girls and woman who base themselves off of these images, and they just aren’t realistic. I see a sick woman in some nice clothing and that’s about it. But people with body issues, see a beautiful girl that is skinny, beautiful, and well dressed. I think people have been trained to see these kinds of images and believe them. I’ve recently actually been astonished to find out that friends of mine had no idea you could touch up skin. This is faulty representation of what woman are supposed to look like. For example, Marilyn Monroe. Although, she wouldn’t have been as big of a celebrity if she didn’t die at the time she did, she was a real representation of a beautiful woman. A size 13 has never looked so good and she wore it well, which reflected the women of that time and how people felt about themselves. I think the magazine’s intentions were to use their product, along with a female, to portray a certain feel or outcome of there product. For example, if you use Ralph Laurens product you will be this beautiful, skinny, “perfect looking”, I guess.