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A Facebook Movie: Social Media Becomes Part of Traditional Media

Posted in social media impact, social media tools. on Thursday, July 8th, 2010 by Bailey Tags: Evolution of social media, Social Media for Social Change, Social Media Integration
Jul 08
The Facebook MovieTwo weeks ago Columbia Pictures released the first preview for their new movie that will come out this fall, the “Facebook movie,” or, what is actually titled The Social Network. The movie tells the story of  Mark Zuckerberg (played by Jesse Eisenberg), the founder of Facebook, during his college years and his launch of the social networking site from his Harvard dorm room. A feature film about Facebook? What were they thinking? Maybe that Facebook is one of the fastest growing and most popular social networking sites with over 400 million active users, and bound to be a sure hit at the box office.

This movie just goes to show that social media networks, especially huge players like Facebook or Twitter, are starting to infiltrate other types of media. Not only are  news sources, television shows, celebrities, radio, and athletes using and referencing social media tools to communicate with their audience in new ways, but social media has become such a powerful force, it is an attraction itself.

The Social Change For Traditional Media Outlets

In order to keep up, traditional media outlets are adapting to incorporate social media into their programs. Radio shows take song requests via tweets, athletes use social media to talk about their training sessions or team news, TMZ Celebrity News keeps a live feed of their Tweets on the bottom of their online news page, and Tosh.O has a Twitter segment on his Comedy Central show, encouraging feedback from his audience.

News stations are using Twitter or other social networking sites to get first hand accounts and stories in real time, like the recent LA earthquake. This is made even more possible by the increasing incorporation of social media in technology, like cell phone apps. People can post a status update, tweet, and check in from anywhere, anytime, and share it with everyone.

Constant Evolution

As we continue to view new ways that social media is infiltrating various information distribution channels, the face of communication is constantly changing. Social media isn’t just online anymore — it’s everywhere.

What do you think? Where else have you seen social media used in a new or surprising way?

 

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Ehawse1

Nice Bailey :)

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Ehawse1

Nice Bailey :)

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David Cyphers

Hi Antonio,On your social networks, you can always adjust privacy settings so that friends/connections need to be approved before they can contact you. But unfortunately there is no perfect solution to the problem that you are describing (other than a secretary).If you aren't looking to converse with people that are curious, then social media will be a frustrating venue in which to communicate, because it is specifically designed to encourage people finding other people, and to encourage over-communication. Therefore, you can either choose to only communicate via less social means, or you can try and mitigate the people that contact you through social media. The best ways to prevent the general population from contacting you are:1. Set your privacy settings to the most private, so only people that are approved can contact you. 2. Don't list contact information anywhere3. Sign up to these social services by using a brand new email address to register. This will prevent people from finding you via your email address, and will also keep all of your "social" emails in one place.Email me at andrew@thecyphersagency.com if you want help with any of these things - I can walk you through the steps. Thanks for the comment! I hope my answer helps you!

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Darren

Nice post, Bailey.

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Darren

Nice post, Bailey.

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Antoniocanova1801

How can I use social media to promote a home business, without getting lots of noise-level inquiries and emails that would require responses. Say I have a very narrow band of actual prospect clientele but loads of people would be curious and not clients. In other words how do you separate wheat from chaff and not get buried with emails that will never turn into sales?

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David Cyphers

Hi Antonio, On your social networks, you can always adjust privacy settings so that friends/connections need to be approved before they can contact you. But unfortunately there is no perfect solution to the problem that you are describing (other than a secretary). If you aren't looking to converse with people that are curious, then social media will be a frustrating venue in which to communicate, because it is specifically designed to encourage people finding other people, and to encourage over-communication. Therefore, you can either choose to only communicate via less social means, or you can try and mitigate the people that contact you through social media. The best ways to prevent the general population from contacting you are: 1. Set your privacy settings to the most private, so only people that are approved can contact you. 2. Don't list contact information anywhere 3. Sign up to these social services by using a brand new email address to register. This will prevent people from finding you via your email address, and will also keep all of your "social" emails in one place. Email me at andrew@thecyphersagency.com if you want help with any of these things - I can walk you through the steps. Thanks for the comment! I hope my answer helps you!

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Antoniocanova1801

How can I use social media to promote a home business, without getting lots of noise-level inquiries and emails that would require responses. Say I have a very narrow band of actual prospect clientele but loads of people would be curious and not clients. In other words how do you separate wheat from chaff and not get buried with emails that will never turn into sales?

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Trackbacks

  1. SocialMedio says:
    July 8, 2010 at 5:09 pm

    A Facebook Movie: Social Media Becomes Part of Traditional Media http://bit.ly/cJ6qsj

  2. Darren Easton says:
    July 9, 2010 at 1:44 pm

    A Facebook Movie: Social Media Becomes Part of Traditional Media http://bit.ly/cJ6qsj

  3. David Cyphers says:
    July 9, 2010 at 1:56 pm

    A Facebook Movie: Social Media Becomes Part of Traditional Media http://bit.ly/cJ6qsj

  4. Jocelyn Rimbey says:
    July 9, 2010 at 1:56 pm

    RT @adsattca: A Facebook Movie: Social Media Becomes Part of Traditional Media http://bit.ly/cJ6qsj (great post @bailey021 – im so proud!).

  5. Shah Dhaval says:
    July 9, 2010 at 2:04 pm

    RT @adsatTCA: A Facebook Movie: Social Media Becomes Part of Traditional Media http://bit.ly/cJ6qsj

  6. Bailey says:
    July 9, 2010 at 3:09 pm

    Check out my blog post :-) A Facebook Movie: Social Media Becomes Part of Traditional Media http://bit.ly/cJ6qsj

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