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Social Media Isn't Real (Even if it Looks Like it is) | Samantha Cohen | TEDxYouth@SRDS

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    [no audio yet]
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    [applause]
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    Social media is a drug,
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    and I, like so many people today,
    am totally addicted.
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    I'm addicted to scrolling.
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    I'm addicted to making every account
    on every social media site look perfect.
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    I'm addicted to liking, to commenting,
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    to seeing photos of random celebrities,
    to seeing drama of random celebrities,
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    and to refreshing the same page
    over and over again.
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    And with every drug comes a high--
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    a moment when one feels
    they're on top of the world
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    and nothing can stop them...
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    until everything just comes
    crashing down again.
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    For me, even if the picture I've posted
    looks nothing like me or isn't real at all,
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    when the likes and the comments
    start pouring in, that's the high.
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    I feel people MUST like me,
    my self-esteem goes up,
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    and I feel this temporary happiness
    and this temporary joy...
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    until a couple hours pass by
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    and the likes and the
    comments slow down,
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    and me and my self-esteem
    just kind of go crashing down again.
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    Social media can slash
    down your confidence
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    and, in a fraction of a second, make you feel
    like the loneliest person in the world.
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    And this is a problem that persists now
    within our modern society.
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    With a couple of taps
    on a smartphone,
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    anyone can make any account
    on almost any social media site
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    and make up a whole life
    that they don't even have.
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    And as our technology gets
    better every single day,
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    it becomes easier and easier
    for people to post a picture
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    where they look
    20 pounds skinnier,
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    to Photoshop themselves
    into a party they never went to,
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    or in more extreme cases,
    do things like this,
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    where they put a toilet seat
    up against a window
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    so it looks like they're going
    on an exotic vacation,
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    even if they're actually not.
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    This phenomenon is
    particularly prominent
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    in what is now known as
    "influencers" on social media.
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    Influencers look like
    they live the amazing life.
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    They are usually on any social media platform
    (but specifically Instagram and YouTube)
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    and have millions of
    followers or subscribers.
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    As I said before,
    their life looks perfect
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    and even companies use them to
    promote products for easy advertising.
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    Looking at a social
    media influencer
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    can make the average person
    feel pretty insecure at times.
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    An example of one of these
    influencers is James Charles
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    [audience members cheer
    and Sam chuckles]
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    a 19-year-old makeup artist
    with over 15 million followers.
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    I'll admit it: He doesn't look bad
    on any single photo on his Instagram.
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    HIs makeup is always flawless
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    and he never shows you the time or
    the money it takes to put all that on,
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    so it looks quick and easy
    and like he did it in a minute.
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    Another one,
    Hailey Baldwin Bieber.
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    She has over 18.3 million followers
    and she posts pictures of herself
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    on the most beautiful
    beaches in the world.
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    Spoiler alert: Nobody
    wakes up and looks like that.
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    It takes time, energy, money,
    and so many different resources.
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    And I'm not a fancy influencer
    but I'll admit, I do it myself.
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    I mean, I know this talk is probably gonna
    be shared somewhere on the internet,
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    so I dressed up
    better than I normally do.
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    In real life,
    my hair is large and curly,
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    I wear glasses, and I prefer to wear
    big sweatshirts over anything else,
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    but on every single
    photo on my Instagram,
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    my hair has been straightened,
    I have my contacts in, my makeup's done,
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    and I'm dressed up
    far better than I do regularly.
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    Me, influencers,
    and so many other people now
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    only put on Instagram what
    we want other people to see.
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    When you're scrolling
    through Instagram,
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    you only see what the Instagrammer
    has specifically designed,
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    specific moments in their time
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    when they're looking happy
    and they're dressed up
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    and no one has to see
    any other part of their life.
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    According to sociologist Julia Albright
    from University of Southern California,
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    "People's persona online may be
    much more fabulous, much more exciting
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    than the everyday life
    that they're leading."
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    And this isn't a problem
    just for teenagers anymore.
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    I mean, my grandparents
    have Facebook.
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    I was born in 2001 on this weird,
    Generation Z/Millennial cusp,
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    and I'll find that I spend hours
    on Instagram and Snapchat
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    and just end up
    feeling sorry for myself.
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    I wonder why people I haven't
    even spoken to in years
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    look like they have their
    entire life together and I don't.
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    I wonder why it looks like
    everyone's having the best time ever,
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    and with these photos quite
    literally in my face all the time,
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    it's so easy to wonder:
    "Why am I not that pretty?"
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    "Why am I not that skinny?" or
    "Why am I not that popular or cool?"
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    I had a conversation with
    a teacher of mine, as well,
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    a millennial, who says one of the worst parts
    about social media is going onto Facebook
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    and seeing people she used to go to high
    school with now raising their own families.
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    This makes her wonder:
    Is she raising her family right?
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    And how can she make
    her son just as good
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    or even better than every single
    other kid she sees on Facebook?
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    And I've seen it in my
    little sister too, Generation Z.
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    I see her swiping
    through Snapchat,
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    wondering how it looks like every
    other middle schooler in the world
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    is the most secure
    person in the world.
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    (We all know that's
    probably not true.)
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    Although social media
    can make us so lonely,
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    it's so easy to feel alone when it looks
    like every other person has it together
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    and you feel like you don't.
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    So it shouldn't take any big scientific
    discovery to promote the claim
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    that social media has detrimental
    effects on our mental health,
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    but scientists have done the study
    and it has proven true.
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    Melissa G. Hunt from University
    of Pennsylvania stated
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    that using less social media
    than you normally do would lead
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    to significant decreases in
    both depression and loneliness.
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    And George Aalbers from
    University of Amsterdam stated:
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    "...passive media use...
    co-occurred
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    with a loss of interest, concentration
    problems, fatigue, and loneliness."
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    So what do we do?
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    We can't just avoid social media.
    It's everywhere.
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    It's on our news, it's in our schools,
    it's in our homes, it's in our workplaces.
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    It's impossible to just forget about it,
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    but it has given us a huge
    advantage in some ways.
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    We have the ability to communicate
    more than ever before, and that's amazing.
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    I'm about to go to college
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    and I've talked with people
    from all around the world
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    that I'll be going to
    school with next year,
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    and I've talked with my
    roommate so many times.
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    When my parents went to college,
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    they had no idea who they'd
    be living with for the next year.
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    And my TED Talks from the past two years
    have been put on YouTube,
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    and my message about mental health has
    spread to people who I will never know.
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    So in the words of Stan Lee and
    his favorite comic book, "Spiderman,"
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    "With great power
    comes great responsibility."
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    Social media has given
    us an amazing advantage
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    to communicate, to share ideas, to bring
    people from all around the word together;
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    but it has also made it easier for people
    to fake their lives, fake a personality,
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    and for us to become more insecure.
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    And going back to the Instagram influencers,
    it's hard sometimes to just remind ourselves
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    that not everyone is gonna
    look like their favorite celebrity.
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    Jameela Jamil, an actress known
    for the NBC show "The Good Place"
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    has now started a
    campaign called "I Weigh."
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    The purpose of her campaign is
    to call out and show celebrities
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    and point out to regular people
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    that celebrities and influencers have
    amazing resources to some of the best food,
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    the best personal trainers, the best gyms,
    and the best magazine editors in the world.
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    So no wonder they look better
    than the average person.
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    Jamil has also called out celebrities who
    are now using their fans' weight insecurities
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    to sell diet pills so everyone
    can look just as good as they do.
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    Jamil has become the beginning
    of an amazing campaign
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    to make us feel better
    in our bodies
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    and NOT to compare ourselves with every
    single person we see on the internet.
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    And sometimes, when
    you're just at your worst,
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    it's better just to delete
    the apps off your phone.
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    Sometimes, as I said,
    when I'm feeling my worst,
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    I just delete the apps off my phone.
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    I don't delete the accounts necessarily,
    but without the apps physically there,
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    there's nothing for me to be
    just checking throughout the day.
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    And usually I can go
    for weeks at a time
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    until I feel comfortable enough
    that I can re-download it
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    and it won't affect my
    mental health so much.
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    So I know it's hard,
    but I ask all of you:
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    Take one day, just delete
    the apps off your phone,
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    whatever it is (Instagram, Snapchat,
    Facebook, Reddit, Tumblr, MySpace).
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    Whatever it is, delete it for one day,
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    and I promise that it'll be like a
    huge weight taken off your chest.
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    And who knows, you may find
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    that you have more time
    to do things you like,
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    like making music, dancing,
    or volunteering with kids.
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    So if there's one message
    that you take from this talk,
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    it's [that] I hope you know
    that you are not defined
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    by the amount of likes and comments
    on your posts on social media.
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    Social media is not real, and no way can
    a single account on a social media website
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    encapsulate the entire brilliant personality
    of a single human being. Thank you.
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    [cheers and applause]
Title:
Social Media Isn't Real (Even if it Looks Like it is) | Samantha Cohen | TEDxYouth@SRDS
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
08:55

English subtitles

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