Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 22, 2021

Quote of the Day (George Clooney, on Celebrities’ Twitter Presence)

“If you're famous, I don't—for the life of me—I don't understand why any famous person would ever be on Twitter. Why on God's green earth would you be on Twitter? Because first of all, the worst thing you can do is make yourself more available, right? Because you're going to be available to everybody. But also Twitter. So one drunken night, you come home and you've had two too many drinks and you're watching TV and somebody pisses you off, and you go 'Ehhhhh' and fight back. And you go to sleep, and you wake up in the morning and your career is over. Or you're an a--hole. Or all the things you might think in the quiet of your drunken evening are suddenly blasted around the entire world before you wake up.”—American actor-director George Clooney quoted in Tom Junod, “George Clooney's Rules for Living,” Esquire, December 2013

Well, I suppose that the publicist for George Clooney finally persuaded him to the contrary, because four years after this Esquire rant, the actor-director opened his own “George Clooney Official” Twitter page. Nevertheless, Mr. C. must have warned that he would strictly limit his involvement, because the tweets and retweets consist mostly of pictures of himself and his wife, with minimal commentary.

Every other day, if not more often, Clooney must nod his head over his foresight of nearly a decade ago. Though hardly shy about expressing his opinions, he knows that old-time movie stars loomed large for a reason other than the big screens of the Golden Age of Film: that overexposure removes the mystique invested by fans.

Moreover, as someone who admitted to Newsweek 10 years ago that his past life of substance and and womanizing precluded a life in politics, Clooney knows all too well the perils of going online and venting to the world before you’ve had time to think it over and calm down. Even if you’re not a party animal but simply love the sound of your own voice (an occupational hazard in the entertainment industry), you run a big risk of looking stupid.

Bette Midler, that means you.

You’d think that the singer-actress would have learned her lesson from three years ago, when she tweeted that women “are the n-word of the world,” or especially last year, when she mocked Melanie Trump’s accent and called her an “illegal alien”—in both cases, sparking a backlash that led the outspoken entertainer to issue uncharacteristic apologies.

But here she was at it again this week, when frustration over Joe Manchin’s opposition to the “Build Back Better” social spending plan of the Biden administration led her to lash out at the Democratic Senator from West Virginia for wanting to keep all Americans like his state: “Poor, illiterate and strung out."

Less than an hour later, Midler was backtracking with a tweeted apology to West Virginians (“Surely there’s someone there who has the state’s best interest at heart, not his own!”)

No matter. In politics, this would have been considered a gaffe, a statement that, for anyone not named Donald Trump, would have halted any possibility for further advancement.

In entertainment, plenty of people feel that she was right the first time. And therein lies the problem.

Statements like Ms. Midler’s only reinforce the conviction of many in Red America that liberal elites are condescending and unworthy of support (even someone like her, who has funded programs for neighborhood revitalization and wounded veterans). She made it that much harder to move back into the Democratic column a state that had once firmly backed the New Deal.

An additional history lesson might be in order here. Ms. Midler, like all non-indigenous Americans (including me), are descended from groups who, for the longest time after arriving on these shores, were “Poor, illiterate and strung out.” 

Maybe she should get a copy of Oscar Handlin’s The Uprooted so she can better understand how alienated and resentful the recipients of taunts such as hers felt in the 19th century—and how belittling those remarks remain to the underprivileged and marginalized of this country, whoever they are and wherever they live.

(The photo of George Clooney accompanying this post was taken at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 9, 2011, by Ed Van-West Garcia.)

Tuesday, November 20, 2018

Quote of the Day (EW’s Adam Markovitz, on Twitter as Toddler, Back in 2009)


“Will Twitter be the next Facebook or another Friendster-style fizzle? While the company doesn’t release user data, Twitter’s most popular user, President Barack Obama, has 339,500 followers on the site — a fraction of his 5,767,400 supporters on Facebook (he hasn’t posted since Jan. 19). Still, Internet gurus say the site may be here to stay.”— Adam Markovitz, “The Truth About Twitter,” Entertainment Weekly, Mar. 13, 2009

Reading this article, which appeared three years after the birth of Twitter, is as instructive as it is dismaying nearly a decade later. Obama’s 5.8 million supporters stood at 101 million after a July purge by the site slimmed his total by 3 million, while Donald Trump had 53.1 million after the same process. 

Astonishing, isn’t it, to think that Obama stayed off the site for more than a month at the start of his administration. Would that his successor had shown similar restraint.

Even in 2009, Entertainment Weekly vaguely glimpsed that Twitter could be a vehicle for shallow, unmediated communication between an entertainer and his or her fans. What the magazine didn’t understand—God, who would?—was that it would become a daily means of misdirection and mendacity.

In the early 20th century, Theodore Roosevelt viewed the Presidency as a “bully pulpit”—i.e., a wonderful preaching position. A little over a century later, a far different Republican—one of the “malefactors of great wealth” that TR warned against—uses Twitter to “bully” or intimidate whoever gets in his way. 

Not all inventions turn out for the public good…

Thursday, November 1, 2018

Quote of the Day (Bill McKibben, on Threats Made Over Social Media)


"Threatening to kill or rape someone shouldn’t be banal. It should shock everyone who comes across such a threat. And that should go without saying, except that increasingly it doesn’t, not in a world where the president has said that he longed for the days when disruptive protesters were carried away from the scene ‘on a stretcher.’ It’s perversely heartening to see that the apparent murder of the Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi seems to have temporarily interrupted business as usual. Such shock and outrage is crucial, because in a world where dissenters are dismembered, there’s no hope for change. The prospect that you’ll be killed for what you say makes discussion essentially impossible. A society in which critics fear death is a society with fewer critics, and hence with fewer chances for change.”—Environmental activist Bill McKibben, after online posting of his home address with death threats made against him, in “Let’s Agree Not to Kill One Another,” The New York Times, Oct. 21, 2018

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Quote of the Day (Jonathan Franzen, on Social Media as a ‘Protection Racket’)



“[Social media] feels like a protection racket. Your reputation will be murdered unless you join in this thing that is, in significant part, about murdering reputations. Why would I want to feed that machine?” —American novelist Jonathan Franzen quoted in Emma Brockes, “Jonathan Franzen Interview: ‘There is No Way to Make Myself Not Male,'” The Guardian (U.K.), Aug. 21, 2015

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Quote of the Day (Helen Mirren, Likening Social Media to ‘A Stinky Old Pub’)



“It reminds me of a stinky old pub. In the corner would be this slightly disgusting old man who sits there all day, every day. If you went up and talked to him, you’d get the kind of grumpy, horrible, moldy, old meaningless crap that you read on Twitter.” — Actress Helen Mirren, quoted in David Hochman, “A Wise and Witty Dame,” AARP: The Magazine, June/July 2014

Monday, September 24, 2012

Quote of the Day (Andy Borowitz, on Twofacebook)



“I’ve invented Twofacebook, the antisocial network. You start being friends with the entire world and defriend people one by one.”—Humorist Andy Borowitz, on Twitter, February 5, 2012