I love you, Saturday.Ĭore reasons for posting: Image Crafting (I’m successful I’m happy I have a great social life), Jealousy Inducing Tailgating, Giants game, night out with Dave, Matt, Paul, and Andy.Guess who just got her TFA acceptance letter!!!.
To lay out the most common types of offenses: 7 Ways to Be Insufferable on Facebookīragging is such a staple of unfortunate Facebook behavior, it needs to be broken into three subsections: 1a) The “I’m Living Quite the Life” Bragĭescription: A post making your life sound great, either in a macro sense (got your dream job, got your degree, love your new apartment) or a micro sense (taking off on an amazing trip, huge weekend coming up, heading out on a fun night with friends, just had an amazing day) So the person is essentially spreading their sadness, and that’s a shitty thing to do, so it’s on the list.įacebook is infested with these five motivations-other than a few really saintly people, most people I know, myself certainly included, are guilty of at least some of this nonsense here and there. This is the least heinous of the five-but seeing a lonely person acting lonely on Facebook makes me and everyone else sad. The author is feeling lonely and wants Facebook to make it better. The author wants to make people jealous of him or his life.ĥ) Loneliness. The author wants attention.Ĥ) Jealousy Inducing. The author and the author’s life are interesting in and of themselves.ģ) Attention Craving. The author’s thoughts, opinions, and life philosophies matter. The author wants to affect the way people think of her.Ģ) Narcissism. On the other hand, annoying statuses typically reek of one or more of these five motivations:ġ) Image Crafting. But I’ll happily take mildly amusing-at least we’re still dealing with the good guys. Ideally, interesting statuses would be fascinating and original (or a link to something that is), and funny ones would be hilarious. You know why these are unannoying? Because things in those two categories do something for me, the reader. To be unannoying, a Facebook status typically has to be one of two things: To examine this a bit, let’s start by discussing the defining characteristics of statuses that are not annoying. It comes down to a pretty simple rule: A Facebook status is annoying if it primarily serves the author and does nothing positive for anyone reading it. It made me think about what makes terrible Facebook behavior terrible, and why other Facebook behavior isn’t annoying at all. I read it again and again, fascinated by how something could be so aggressively unappealing. It was everything bad about everything, all at once.īut instead of distancing myself from the horror, I soaked in it.
#Reddit one piece 935 skin#
I had the same facial expression I’d have on if someone made me watch a live event where people had their skin slowly peeled off. What a world.īy the time I finished reading, I realized that my non-phone hand was clutching tightly to my forehead, forcefully scrunching my forehead skin together. Went to amazing weddings in Upstate New York. Drank the best orange juice I’ve ever had with Davey Welch. Had a conversation about Barack Obama with David Gregory.
I got to hang with Owen Wilson, and worked with Will Ferrell on an amazing project. I started yoga (thanks Jake Fisher & Jonah Perlstein!). I started dating my angel, Jaime Holland. I left my amazing job at NBC to move back to Chicago. I’m going about my afternoon pleasantly, when I open my email and a friend has forwarded me what she calls a particularly heinous Facebook status from her news feed, written by someone we’ll call Daniel.