Something To Consider

"The computer scientist Jaron Lanier reckons that social media, by its nature, makes you into an arsehole. It encourages arseholey behaviour by rewarding it with more notifications, engagements, and all the rest of it. His new book, discussed at a recent Idler evening with the Guardian's John Harris, is called Ten Arguments For Deleting Your Social Media Accounts Now."

Ben and I were discussing earlier how there is going to eventually be a backlash against technology itself, but long before that happens, there will be a huge, pervasive backlash against social media. I believe we're seeing the seeds of that already. I get the sense that people are just flat out disgusted with what they're seeing online via Twitter, Facebook, and other platforms: the lies, the unabashed hate, the wanton, willful ignorance.

I haven't been on Facebook in half a decade. I've uninstalled Twitter from all my devices, meaning I have to go through the website if I ever want to step into that cesspool, and that's more trouble than it's worth. I'm almost ready to give up on Instagram as well, but I'm not quite there yet (too many hot menz and other interesting images).

Happy Birthday Steven Stucker

Comic actor Stephen Stucker would've turned 71 years old today. The man who played impish Johnny in Airplane! (1980) and Airplane II: The Sequel (1982)—a character who relished sales at Penney's and who noticed Leon's fluctuating largeness—became one of the first public figures to announce that he had AIDS. Stucker relied on metaphysical healing, vitamins, a positive outlook, and a healthy diet to combat the syndrome, which he suspected he had as early as 1979 and which he somewhat questionably attributed to past blood transfusions and intravenous drug use. He passed away in 1986 at 38.