Human interaction has changed drastically over the last decade due to short message services and Facebook. Many teenagers have lost valuable skills in personal communication, and this can affect them for the rest of their lives and careers. Eye contact and handshakes cannot be transmitted through electronic text, giving the feel of trust and interest between two speakers. Emotions can also be difficult to convey to someone miles away from you, so serious matters may unintentionally become watered-down very quickly. Years before Facebook and short messages became widely popular, personal news would be told in front of large groups of people who were chosen to know. In recent years, these announcements would be seen by everyone on a timeline and just“liked” with no real feedback.
Facebook did manage to replicate one conversational aspect between people as would happen in the real world, groups. Real conversations take on different tones and topics within groups, such as school mates or colleagues. These groups are about as personal as Facebook gets, and these groups are used for sharing information or organizational purposes. In the professional world with people who started careers before Facebook know the value of having communication skills, because more than likely it is how they landed their job. Newer generations started adding acquaintances they recognized to improve friend lists instead of establishing physical connection with people they should be interacting with. Could this mean human communication has permanently changed the way different generations interact and develop real world skills? Has Facebook ruined the way people prefer to interact long with losing base with sharing appropriate topics with a small subset of people? These are my questions.
Demographics are a huge part of networks, and you can find almost any type of person from any area of society. Although most people using social media are from newer generations, this does not mean older generations are having an easy time maintaining vital relationships and the ability to properly judge what is appropriate to post. Often time’s news of a newborn child is now shared with a simple witty photo by parents, and users show congratulations with likes or favorites. Before Facebook, the same parents might have addressed it over some sort of large gathering. New changes in someone’s life is now coming from an isolated source instead of being a firsthand source, and this is challenging a way that has been in effect since humans first learned to communicate.
For this documentary I will be focusing on the newer generations who use facebook. I will also try to find some subjects who maybe do not use facebook often or at all. I want to try to see the picture from two different views. I believe this issue of losing physical human interaction needs to be addressed. Hopefully by bringing this to more attention would induce more physical interaction among people. The audience should care because who wants to be completely alone someday with just your online friends. Is this what the world could be coming to? Once I find all the people I am going to interview, I am going to start shooting. I will have two locations, Dayton and Lexington. I would really like to shoot it at a park hopefully with some socializing going on in the background. As for arranging footage, I have an idea of alternating between opinions that agree with this and opinions that disagree. I think this will create a sense of debate going on within the film.
For this documentary I will be focusing on the newer generations who use facebook. I will also try to find some subjects who maybe do not use facebook often or at all. I want to try to see the picture from two different views. I believe this issue of losing physical human interaction needs to be addressed. Hopefully by bringing this to more attention would induce more physical interaction among people. The audience should care because who wants to be completely alone someday with just your online friends. Is this what the world could be coming to? Once I find all the people I am going to interview, I am going to start shooting. I will have two locations, Dayton and Lexington. I would really like to shoot it at a park hopefully with some socializing going on in the background. As for arranging footage, I have an idea of alternating between opinions that agree with this and opinions that disagree. I think this will create a sense of debate going on within the film.
I like your topic idea, but I'm wondering how you can "show" deep connection from eye contact on camera. This will be trickier than you think.
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