Thursday, March 19, 2015

Day Three

Paper Towns 

Thursday, March 19th, 2015

Essentially the only media that I have consumed today has been the official trailer for the movie inspired by the John Green novel Paper Towns. This movie, set to release on July 24th of this year, has been in the works for many years. For awhile it appeared that it would not become a reality, but finally my dreams are coming true. Paper Towns is real!

I woke up this morning with the intention of watching the Today show. I had been planning on doing this for a week, because that is how long I had known that John Green was going to be debuting the trailer for Paper Towns on the show. I waited patiently for the trailer to finally come, and I am so glad I did. The trailer provided me with a small glimpse into a movie based on one of my favorite novels, and I felt an immense sense of joy when I realized that a world I care so much about was finally real. So I watched it again. I essentially stalked John Green's twitter page for two hours while waiting for it to become available on YouTube. I shared in on Facebook and commanded my mother and sister to come see it with me this summer. At this point, anyone who cares enough to know knows that I am in love with Paper Towns. 

It excites me that I can help introduce others to the excellent experience that is Paper Towns simply by sharing the trailer on social media. The availability and ease of conversation about the things one cares about can be quite relieving when you have no one to physically speak to. Sharing your excitement with the world is good, because it allows people to see who you really are and imagine you complexly (the goal of Paper Towns). That being said, I LOVE PAPER TOWNS, AND I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THE NOVEL. If anyone is interested in watching the movie with me this summer, let me know. I'll probably be viewing it one thousand times. 

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Day Two

My Obsession with YouTube

March 17th, 2015


As previously discussed, we are all continually surrounded by many different forms of media that we do not necessarily choose to be influenced by. And although these are important influences in our lives, I have found that, personally, I notice the influences of the types of media I consciously choose to consume more than the subliminal messages coming from advertisements, music, movies, etc. For this reason, I think a lot about YouTube.

 "But isn't that just the place to watch cute cat videos and listen to music, Andrea?" 

No.

Sure, several years ago YouTube contained mostly inappropriate videos and shoddy vlogs, but in the ten years since its creation it has evolved into something beautiful. The channels I am most interested in come from the minds of John and Hank Green. Beginning in 2007, John and Hank became part of the internet community by starting one of those terrible vlogs, Brotherhood 2.0. It was a project the brothers created to bring themselves closer together. It was only supposed to be one year long, but, much to the surprise of the viewers, the brothers still vlog twice a week, every week on their very popular YouTube channel Vlogbrothers. The brothers have also helped craft 26 other YouTube channels such as CrashCourse and SciSchow (educational programs free to everyone), The Lizzie Bennet Diaries (a modern-day vlog style interpretation of Pride and Prejudice), and How to Adult (a series for young adults struggling to make it). This is the type of media that I choose to let influence me. 

I spend multiple hours a day watching videos on topics ranging from astronomy to Boko Haram. Yes, I must admit that occasionally I indulge in a silly video (right now it's The Narwhal Song). I entertain and educate myself through this one site that I am obsessed with. Despite the literal billions of people who love and support knowledge through YouTube, its use is often illegitimized. For example, when three well-known Youtubers were able to interview President Obama via YouTube this year, many people from the "real news" on television dismissed these interviews as silly and beneath the office of Presidency. Yes, the content creators often do silly things in their personal vlogs, but these Vloggers interviewed the President with respect and asked important questions about immigration, college education, and net neutrality. If you ask me, the use of YouTube isn't childish or outlandish, it's smart. The YouTubers who interviewed the President have a total of 18,581,069 subscribers, while the top five cable news networks only have a total of 2.9 million viewers during prime time. 

YouTube has become a place where the world can see the President in a more personal light, where content can be shared freely to educate the public, and where the internet can raise over 2 million dollars in two days (via the Project for Awesome). As a mass consumer of YouTube's content for about six years, I have seen the evolution the platform has undergone, and I am convinced that its media prevalence is only going to continue to grow in size and in influence. And it better. Otherwise, how would I watch all those cat videos?




Links to mentioned channels 
Vlogbrothers: www.youtube.com/vlogbrothers
SciShow: www.youtube.com/scishow
CrashCourse: www.youtube.com/crashcourse
The Lizzie Bennet Diaries: https://www.youtube.com/user/LizzieBennet
How to Adult: www.youtube.com/learnhowtoadult

Saturday, March 14, 2015

Day One

The Inevitability of Media Consumption

Saturday, March 14th, 2015


I woke up this morning without the thought of checking my e-mail. I didn't want to check my grades, browse Facebook, or watch any of my favorite Vloggers. I just wanted to read, clean, and relax on my Saturday. It seems like an easy enough idea, but I've found out that being disconnected from the media and the world is a difficult feat. 

My morning seemed to be going along uninterrupted by the media. I had done my laundry and swept the floors already without being bothered, but while beginning to read Paper Towns by John Green, my phone buzzed. Without thinking, I picked it up and checked my Facebook notifications. A picture, a message, and three hundred posts later, I realized what I was doing. I had broken my supposed time of seclusion for social media so easily. It was like second nature to remove myself from the real world and consume the media that was literally in my hand.

While pondering the idea that I had failed so easily, it came to my attention that I failed at my goal of secluded relaxation long before the Facebook notification. On my desk sat products with brand names that serve as advertisements. I had picked up my Elle magazine and flipped through a few pages. My roommate listened to music and an inappropriately loud volume, and I had heard it and the Pandora advertisements. I had even read the morning paper, for crying out loud! At this moment it really struck me that I could not avoid media stimulation just by staying off of my phone and computer. It is everywhere. 

I think that many people make the same assumption that I made today: media pervasiveness only applies to social media. But we couldn't be more wrong. It's not just Twitter and Instagram that influence our lives. Papers, emails, text messages, music, clothing, and products of all kinds contain media that are designed to influence us into buying something, thinking a certain way, or feeling something. I think it's important for us to remember that. We aren't alone just because we are alone. It's nearly impossible to escape the media.