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Detox. You will not miss Twitter and it will not miss you

I have seen good journalists degenerate into Twitter tub-thumpers during lockdown, picking feuds and screaming out policy positions

July 8, 2021 10:26
Andy Warhol GettyImages-800102036
LONDON, ENGLAND - JUNE 23: Andy Warhol's first self-portrait (estimated £5-7 million) goes on view at Sotheby's on June 23, 2017 in London, England. (Photo by Michael Bowles/Getty Images for Sotheby's)
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The prophecy falsely attributed to Andy Warhol that in the future “everyone will be famous for 15 minutes,” hasn’t aged well. The forecast certainly captured the media world of the 1990s and early 2000s, when an explosion in the number of TV channels required hosts of micro-celebs. But it missed social media culture. These days, too many people for the good of society, or indeed themselves, want fame every day, and are pushed into neurotic agony by their failure to find it.

You can measure the pain by the words that are being minted to describe it. “Vaguebooking” (from a merger of vague and Facebooking) describes incoherent and emotional calls for support and affection from apparently desperate people. They may be fishing for sympathy in the same pool where people fish for compliments, or they may be on the edge of a mental collapse and in need of encouragement from strangers. You can never tell.

“SMV” (sexual market value) is used mostly by frustrated men, complaining that women on dating apps overestimate themselves and will overlook men who are not particularly-attractive and not particularly successful.

You can also measure the pain by anecdote. I have seen good journalists degenerate into Twitter tub-thumpers during lockdown, picking feuds and screaming out policy positions. Becoming an online loudmouth may garner attention and followers, and editors may be impressed enough by your reach to offer you work. At least that is the rational explanation. The truer reason is they are victims of the desire to attract attention.