From mobile phones to twitter, they are all
interconnected. I proliferate myself on twitter, have the application on my
phone and receive email updates from their administration. Just as I was with
my mobile, I’m obsessed! Although I am not interested in talking about my experience today...
Twitter is a social networking site that
allows 140-character expression to update your followers with what you are
doing. However twitter is being utilised for reasons other then socially
engaging. Celebrities are using the site to proliferate their status, and it is
also being used as a communication tool in crisis situations. People are now
able to band together and unify in a disaster, and fans are able to follow
their favourite celebrities and praise their being (If only I were talented!)
Celebrities are the first to
exploit twitter for communication, they use twitter to expand their profile and
increase public awareness. They
propagate themselves effectively utilizing social media tools, prolonging their
celebrity standing. Twitter has become one of the most popular tools; take Kim
Kardashians for example, she has 14, 809, 525 followers (twitter), making her one
of the most followed user on the site. Psychologist David Giles writes, “The
ultimate modern celebrity is the member of the public who becomes famous solely
through media involvement” (Bainbridge et al. 2011). This suggests that the success
of a celebrity relies upon media attention, however the public sphere withholds
power, the audience is skilled in the art of celebrity making and celebrity
breaking, theorist Ellis Cashmore insists, the consumers have control (Cashmore
2006). This is where twitter holds its appeal; it allows these celebrities to
create a connection with their audience and accumulate followers, even if they
withhold no particular skill (cough*, Kim Kardashian, cough*).
Cashmore argues,
society spends more time following the lives of celebrities than they do
‘legitimate’ news (Cashmore 2006). Ironically celebrities twitter following is
dramatically higher than news following (twitter). Although twitter users,
whether they realize it or not, are twittering news stories everyday. Sharing
opinions, discussing stories and politics and even updating people on their
day, are all examples of people sharing news stories, no matter how
insignificant.
Although this does
delve further, and in the past it has saved lives. People are now unifying
through hash tagging on twitter in a time of crisis, they are also updating
events in real-time and are sourced as genuine information. For example: The
number of tweets sent out of Tokyo after a massive earthquake in 2011 was over
a thousand a minute (Meire 2012):

So today when I reflect it is not
on my own personal experience with twitter but how hegemonic groups are using
Twitter to enhance their profiles and reach their audiences. Also how the
everyday citizen can now make an impact in the world- through their
140-character voice! Twitter is an evolution, and as long as the world has
celebrities and disasters, Twitter will continue to be influential.
References:
Bainbridge,
J, Goc, N, & Tynan, L 2011, Media and Journalism: New Approaches to
Theory and Practice, 2nd edn,Oxford University Press, South Melbourne.
Cashmore, E. (2006). Celebrity culture. (p. 312).
USA: Taylor and Francis E-library. Retrieved from <http://books.google.com.au/books?hl=en&lr=&id=r0zjIYHbz_IC&oi=fnd&pg=PP1&dq=celebrity/
culture ellis cashmore&ots=t45Cpc-PcI&sig=mM8XHuLT_jVl4sBEB6VpSk9sShs>
"Discover Tweets." Twitter. N.p., n.d. Web. 12 Dec. 2012. <http:/https://twitter.com/>.
Horrocks, P 2010, “BBC tells news staff to embrace social media”, weblog, viewed 3
December 2012,
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/pda/2010/feb/10/bbc-news-social-media>
Meier, P, 2012, Twitter Screenshot, How crisis mapping saved lives in Haiti, viewed 9 December 2012, <http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2012/07/02/crisis-mapping-haiti/>
Hi Tara, I am just going back over some blogs... you have a fantastic writing style - very ethereal. I look forward to more. Cheers
ReplyDeleteLisa
“The ultimate modern celebrity is the member of the public who becomes famous solely through media involvement” (Bainbridge et al. 2011). That seems to describe most of our television celebrities and all of the commercial music industry. It really does break my soul haha
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