Beach!

Beach!
love>>>>

Monday, March 28, 2011

Oppsosition to my argument that facebook is a major distraction.

http://www.suite101.com/content/facebook-and-college-students-advantages--disadvantages-a245600
I think When the article says that facebook is a good social networking tool that helps people stay connected and is therefore a good thing for college students is true but noit in all cases. If you are in class and on facebook and your chatting about your weekend instead of focusing on work then you are obviously being distracted which is no bueno. They also say that facebook can serve as a networking resource after college when you are looking for a job but i think it can also serve as a hinderance because if a future employer looks at your facebook and doesnt like the statuses you've posted or the pictures you have then you may not get the job.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Another Political Cartoon

 I love political cartoons, whats are your opinions about this one?

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Argumentative Writing: Who's side are you on?

 How do i fairly show both sides of an argument, when i am very strong minded about the side i have chosen. This is gonna be hard :) but i like a challenge.

Monday, February 21, 2011

A Funny SNL skit about Mark Zukerburg :)

I dont know if anyone else has already used this but im using it again!..... Heres the link! http://tv.gawker.com/#!5746877/watch-mark-zuckerbergs-surprise-snl-cameo... btw the guy who plays Mark Zukerburg in the " Social Network" is kinda hot.:)

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Facebook

Facebook starts so much drama! like i really believe that my family could be on jerry springer right now! ugh! i love facebook because i can upload pictures and stay in almost constant contact with my friends and family but dang! keep my business of FACEBOOK!

Sunday, February 6, 2011

mobility!

Being that im writing my evaluative essay on the mobility of facebook as it relates to different cellular devices, i realized how good it is to always have facebook on my phone receivimg messages 24/7! when im waiting on that certain someone to message me back with important details im glad i dont have to sit in my room and wait for my computer to load to receive it. having facebook on my phone is awesome except when everyone is having a hissy fit about who won the super bowl!!

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Why me!

Have you ever met someone who has like the worst luck ever!... if you have not then stop and say hi to me because my luck is the worse!... let me start by telling the story of how i got soaked last night because my sorority sister( who shall remain nameless) desides to make a late night taco bell run and the gods in the heavens knew i was in the car so her window broke and would not roll up. Have you ever been rained on while trying to eat a bean burrito? its not a good thing...:(

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

The facebook EFFECT!

I dont know about anyone else but i just cant seem to get into this book. Its boring the crap out of me!.. everyone says its good but i dont get it?????... the facebook effect!

Monday, January 24, 2011

The NY times review of the Social Network

Movie Review
Merrick Morton/Columbia Pictures
Jesse Eisenberg in “The Social Network.”

Millions of Friends, but Not Very Popular

What makes Mark Zuckerberg run? In “The Social Network,” David Fincher’s fleet, weirdly funny, exhilarating, alarming and fictionalized look at the man behind the social-media phenomenon Facebook — 500 million active users, oops, friends, and counting — Mark runs and he runs, sometimes in flip-flops and a hoodie, across Harvard Yard and straight at his first billion. Quick as a rabbit, sly as a fox, he is the geek who would be king or just Bill Gates. He’s also the smartest guy in the room, and don’t you forget it.

More About This Movie

Merrick Morton/Columbia Pictures
Defriended: From left, Andrew Garfield, Joseph Mazzello, Jesse Eisenberg and Patrick Mapel in “The Social Network.”
The first time you see Mark (Jesse Eisenberg, firing on all cylinders), he’s 19 and wearing a hoodie stamped with the word Gap, as in the clothing giant, but, you know, also not. Eyes darting, he is yammering at his girlfriend, Erica (Rooney Mara), whose backhand has grown weary. As they swat the screenwriter Aaron Sorkin’s words at each other, the two partners quickly shift from offline friends to foes, a foreshadowing of the emotional storms to come. Soon Mark is back in his dorm, pounding on his keyboard and inadvertently sowing the seeds of Facebook, first by blogging about Erica and then by taking his anger out on the rest of Harvard’s women, whose photos he downloads for cruel public sport: is she hot or not.
(“The Social Network” opens the 48th New York Film Festival on Friday and opens in theaters next Friday.)
Although the names have remained the same, “The Social Network” is less of a biopic of the real Mr. Zuckerberg than a gloss on the boot-up, log-on, plug-in generation. You don’t learn much about him other than the headlines, beginning with Facebook’s less-than-humble start in 2003. Despite its insistently unsexy moving parts (software, algorithms), the movie is paced like a thriller, if one in which ideas, words and bank books blow up rather than cars. It’s a resonant contemporary story about the new power elite and an older, familiar narrative of ambition, except instead of discovering his authentic self, Mark builds a database, turning his life — and ours — into zeroes and ones, which is what makes it also a story about the human soul.
The price of that ambition, at least as dramatized here, is borne by those around Mark, who remains a strategic cipher throughout: a Facebook page without a profile photo. Charmless and awkward in groups larger than one, he rarely breaks into a smile and, if memory serves, never says thank you. He seems wary at some moments, coolly calculating at others: when his eyes haven’t gone dead, you can see him working all the angles. One of those angles, according to Mr. Sorkin’s script, which follows the outline of “The Accidental Billionaires,” Ben Mezrich’s book about Facebook, was one of the site’s co-founders, Eduardo Saverin (a very good Andrew Garfield), a fellow student of Mark’s as well as his first big check writer and personal chump.
Eduardo strides in early, his collar turned up against the Cambridge winter, and quickly moves in on our sympathies, which Mr. Eisenberg, guided by his supremely confident director, never does. Mr. Garfield can sometimes wilt on screen as if in surrender, but here his character merely sways, held up by an essential decency that makes Eduardo so appealing and such a contrast to the sometimes appalling Mark. (When Mr. Eisenberg makes Mark’s face go blank, the character seems scarily emptied out: it’s a subtly great, at times unsettling, performance.) Mark might be the brains in this unlikely friendship, but Eduardo is its conscience and slowly bleeding heart. Though he knows better, he hangs on even after he’s been cut loose.
The plot thickens after Erica dumps Mark, and he meets a pair of near-comically-perfect supermen, the identical twins and future Olympic rowers Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss. (An amusing Armie Hammer plays both brothers with wit and the aid of different hairstyles, special effects and a body double.) The Winklevosses emerge as unlikely objects of Mark’s interest and, much like Erica, his eventual contempt. The twins and their friend Divya Narendra (Max Minghella), have a Web site idea and need Mark’s programming help. They’ll pay (and how!), but the gig, they grandly explain, will also rehabilitate Mark’s reputation on campus after the hot/not scandal, a patronizing moment that echoes Mark’s breakup with Erica. “You’d do that for me?” he asks the twins flatly, recycling a line Erica once used on him.
The conspicuous paradox that “The Social Network” plays with is that the world’s most popular social networking Web site was created by a man with excruciatingly, almost pathologically poor, people skills. The benign view of Facebook is that it creates “a community,” a sense of intimacy, which is of course one reason it also creeps out some of its critics. As the virtual-reality visionary Jaron Lanier puts it bluntly in his manifesto “You Are Not a Gadget,” Facebook also reduces life to a database. In “The Social Network,” a character lashes out at both Mark and “the angry” who haunt the Internet, but Mr. Lanier takes the view that it’s fear that drives the idolizers of what he calls the “new strain of gadget fetishism.”

Anxiety

Why must you screw with me! here i am minding my own business and you come around to make my life harder than it has to be!... gah :(
One day i will be rid of you FOREVER! but until then kiss my ass!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!. both checks!.... BAM!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

My Wordle!!

<a href="http://www.wordle.net/show/wrdl/3015055/Mriah_Carey_Everything_Fades_Away"
          title="Wordle: Mriah Carey Everything Fades Away"><img
          src="http://www.wordle.net/thumb/wrdl/3015055/Mriah_Carey_Everything_Fades_Away"
          alt="Wordle: Mriah Carey Everything Fades Away"
          style="padding:4px;border:1px solid #ddd"></a>

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Pocket Full Of Sunshine...:)

So im listening to Natasha bedingfields song " Pocket Full Of Sunshine",  and im wondering what it would be like to actually posses  a pocket full of sunshine and a love that was just yours and nobody elses. I dont think its possible to only love one person throughout your whole life time... just a thought?!... I do like the general message of the song and her funky british accent!> you cant control me! you cant control me!