Review: It’s Complicated: the social live of networked teens

danah boyd’s 2014 book on the lives teens live on social networks

danah boyd boasts a slew of titles including Principle itscomplicatedResearcher at Microsoft, visiting professor at New York University’s Interactive Telecommunications Program and faculty affiliate of Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet and Society so safe to say I knew going into this book boyd didn’t wake up one day and decide to research this topic. boyd has published many papers and essays on the subject of social media and how it affects society. boyd’s title, “It’s Complicated,” is a great way to sum up her research of how teens use social media and how it effects their personal relationships with one another.

boyd keeps a casual approach to what some would consider a dry topic. Rather than getting lost in psychological terminology or behavior, boyd writes of her experience and findings in a way that will keep you in tuned to the teens she interviews and their approach to social media and the lives they live on each network. I found this as a relief seeing as anytime I have been forced to read what I would refer to as a boring academic text has been difficult and unmemorable.

Along with giving the ages of the teens interviewed, boyd gives their race and their location as a means of showing the diversity of the individuals used in her years of research. Places such as Iowa, Michigan, Boston, Los Angeles and New York are visited and the different social media mentioned shows the evolution of teens and social media use. Myspace, Twitter, LiveJournal and Facebook are among them. By distinguishing between the location, age and race of each teen, boyd gave her findings more strength and credibility because she didn’t focus on a sole group with a few outliers.

One of my favorite parts of the book could be used as an abstract and hits boyd’s point home:

“As teens struggle to make sense of different social contexts and present themselves appropriately, one thing becomes clear: the internet has not evolved into an idyllic zone in which people are free from the limitation of the embodied world. Teens are struggling to make sense of who they are and how they fit into society in an environment in which contexts are networked and collapsed, audiences are invisible, and anything they say or do can easily be taken out of context. They are grappling with battles that adults face, but they are doing do while under constant surveillance and without a firm grasp of who they are.”

Boyd’s strength is her organization of her research. Split into chapters such as privacy, bullying, addiction and inequality, each chapter gives the reader an in-depth look at how teens are effected and play a part of or create each subject.

One of the more distracting aspects of the book is the repetition. I believe boyd wrote each chapter with as much supporting evidence as she could and it gets to be redundant after so many pages of reading about a different teen with the same general conclusion. For example, in the chapter on privacy boyd starts off with a male 17-year-old from North Carolina referred to as “Waffles” about privacy and he responses, “Every teenager wants privacy. Every single last one of them, whether they tell you or not, wants privacy.” We are then moved to 17-year-old Bly Lauritano-Werner and her National Public Radio piece on her mother crossing boundaries of privacy by viewing Bly’s LiveJournal account, then we meet Alicia, Shamika, Carmen, Serena, Jenna, Mikalah, Kat and Christopher. It can be overwhelming keeping track of these teens within one chapter and their views on privacy.

“It’s Complicated” can be summed up by one of the sentences that stands out from the text, “In short, they’re [teens] navigating one heck of a cultural labyrinth.”

Social media: how journalists should present themselves

Social media has presented opportunities and drawbacks to journalism but there are some ways to stand out as a credible source to the public for news

One of the biggest concerns of any journalist should be not only how they use social media to get their content to the public but also how they present themselves to the public. Who would trust the words of a journalist with no credentials or worse yet nothing written in their about section of Twitter?

If unaffiliated with a particular organization, I would put journalist, reporter, freelancer, etc. so people know your Tweets will likely be news oriented. Also, letting people know areas of interest is a good heads-up so the public can seek you out as a good source for news on gender, politics, music, entertainment, etc. For example, my Twitter about section says (below):Screen Shot 2015-04-07 at 7.16.11 PM

I want people to know if they want sports news then I am definitely not the person to seek out for information. Also, because I am not affiliated with a news organization and am still a student, I made sure to specify that I am a journalism student at Wayne State University.

Being aloof or mysterious isn’t all that much of a draw. The more open you are with the public about the work you do the higher the chance of gaining the public’s trust. I’m not saying blast posts about what you’re doing at every second of everyday but instead be open about interests and open to dialogue with those replying to tweets or commenting on blog posts.

Because I view Instagram as a more laid back social media, my info is more laid back to match the setting. I post pictures involving anything from news, music, art, blogs or lastly some personal things to show I am human and not a robot.IMG_0044

Notice on both profiles I have links to one of the blogs I created. I know if I put a blog post up about the death of a popular rock star, people are going to look at Twitter and know within five minutes of it happening rather than clicking on my blog story unless they want the details. The Guardian did a story in November about how social media has effected journalism. Even though blogs are great for getting your content out to the masses, it is important to keep up with the social media machine because it’s the first source people go to in order to find answers.

Twitter scavenger hunt provides different looks at social media

There is a better way to learn about how social media effects our daily lives and how people feel about it than reading it in a textbook. In Professor Stine Eckert’s Web Design for News Content class, students were given a scavenger hunt to be completed on Twitter and roughly 45 minutes to wonder the halls and campus of Wayne State University to ask student and professors how they feel about social media, how they get news and how they get news on campus. Students were required to Tweet their finds with a picture of the student or professor that was quoted and use the hashtag #hive55 as an easy way for fellow students to find and comment on posts. Posts were then collected and uploaded onto Storify for a cohesive story.

What resulted was a fun and eye opening way to find out how fellow students and educators view social media.