There are a number of services online that make an "e-penis" list of the things I've listened to, read, played, or watched. I religiously update both my Shelfari and MyAnimeList accounts, and Last.fm takes care of itself as does Steam. I'm trying to find a comparable site to keep my movie reviews and ratings, and I was using Flixster on Facebook until I logged into the application with my actual Flixster account and it deleted the year and a half of ratings and reviews I had made while not technically "logged in." Great feature. IMDb is likely the place to go, and Mashable put out a list of 10 top social networking sites for movie lovers.
I'm both curious and squeamish about exploring what makes these kinds of sites so addictive. Squeamish because I'm afraid all I can point to is they help me feel like I've done something "productive" with activities that might not otherwise be considered "productive". Sure, I just logged two hours in Team Fortress 2 and grabbed a handful of achievements, or I finished three more episodes of Nodame Cantabile, but I could have been spending that time studying Japanese. I can't help but come to this conclusion because I also tend not to be very social on these sites. Sure I've got real life friends on Shelfari and Steam, and I keep an eye on their updates, but I'm mostly content to see myself chip away at the massive list of films I haven't seen or books I haven't read.
Is there inherent value in having these lists? Beyond justifying how I spend my time and sometimes not being able to remember all the media I've consumed.
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Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Digital Selves
Labels:
anime,
flixster,
games,
imdb,
japanese,
last.fm,
mashable,
music,
myanimelist,
nodame cantabile,
shelfari,
social networking,
steam,
team fortress,
tf2
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2 comments:
I'm on the side of "any content you create, no matter how pointless, is good."
Seriously. Not enough people on the internet generate content (less than 20%!!), and if these list aggregators and social networks are lowering the barrier to entry, then I'm all for it.
Besides, you and I both know that digital identity management is a legitimate job skill nowadays.
Those are both good points. Thanks for the insight man.
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