My name is Jim. I’m married to Danna with two kids and live in Austin, TX. I grew up in San Antonio and went to Churchill High School. I work at FG SQUARED and co-founded a production company www.05min.com. I like We Should Be Dead, IFC and long walks on the beach.
And why am I telling you all this? Frankly, I’m not sure.
The Social Network gives us pause as we glimpse into the impetus of how we became so willing to freely give out this type of personal information.
Aaron Sorkin and David Fincher create a “Goodfellas for Tech Nerds” with their narrative – although there’s more legal backstabbing than back alley beatings. This movie does have all the elements of a compelling story – Girls, Power Struggles, Jealousy, and Betrayal. At its core is Mark Zuckerberg’s understanding that humans are a narcissistic race with an inclination toward exclusivity (are you cool enough to be in my circle?). I cringe to think how intelligent life from some distant planet would view such a race (and please, don’t anybody show them our reality TV – especially Bachelor Pad or Rock of Love).
The film portrays Zuckerberg (played flawlessly by Jesse Eisenberg) as a socially awkward, emotionally robotic humanoid who’s creating something that will help him meet chicks (or seek his revenge on them). He’s also trying to regain his reputation from a Harvard stunt gone wrong involving the rating of female body parts.
Some have surmised that Mark Zuckerberg’s real-life $100Million donation to the Jersey school system is to counteract any bad publicity he might gain after people see this movie – and according to the $23 million opening weekend box office plenty will be seeing it. Personally, I don’t think he came out that badly. Regardless of your opinion on Zuckerberg he did change the game, forever.
The movie made me think about life before Facebook. I admit, I went in kicking and screaming – forced to join since FG SQUARED was moving into the social media space. But once the band aid was ripped I did find it slightly addictive – who was Facebook triangulating as my suggested friends for today and why? Many of my “People You May Know” groups are tied solely to two friends – Sarah and Courtney – who know each other but I rarely see them out together. Then there’s finding lost roommates, high school acquaintances, old girlfriends, I even found a makeup artist for a shoot through Facebook. Sure it offered a new kind of constant connectivity but was it worth the time?
I think Betty White said it best when she was thrust into hosting SNL through a Facebook campaign – “I really have to thank Facebook…I didn’t know what Facebook was, and now that I do know what it is, I have to say, it sounds like a huge waste of time…In my day, seeing pictures of people’s vacations was considered a punishment.”
So true, Betty, so true.
I don’t Facebook (which is now a verb) as much as I used to but I do occasionally like to check my friend’s status, look through their photos, post my own and I, like many others, use it to correspond (communicating through Facebook surpassed emails about a year ago).
I will say, if an alien race did land on the planet tomorrow and wanted to know how we came to this state of Facebook – I’d suggest they first watch The Social Network followed by the “You Have 0 Friends” South Park episode: http://www.southparkstudios.com/full-episodes/s14e04-you-have-0-friends – then friend me on Facebook and we’d discuss in further detail.
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