Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Kanye West Performs New Material At Facebook Headquarters

Just a couple of months ago, everyone was looking for Kanye West and now he’s pretty much everywhere. He stopped by Facebook headquarters yesterday to perform new songs off his upcoming album.

 
Find out the deets when you read on…
 

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Mr. West stopped by everyone’s favorite social networking site, Facebook, in Palo Alto California, to perform his tracks off his fifth album which is rumored to be titled "Good A** Job."
 
He hopped on top of a table, in a black suit, and performed four songs acapella including “Mama’s Boyfriend,” “Lost in the World,” “Chain Heavy,” and “Sweat On My Face.  
 
 
 
 

Check out Kanyeezy in action:

 

 

 

 

He writes a thank you note to his fans and Facebook via his blog:
 
To all my friends at Facebook,
 
Many times in life I’ve had to deal with moments of doubt. And as it’s been a minute since I’ve performed any fresh material in front of an audience, this could’ve been one of those moments… but it wasn’t. Your energy was a gift so electric, so genuine, that it really helped me give my best. The energy was so inspiring I had to keep going!
 
I just hope you got as much from me as I got from you…which was everything!
 
Love to all my fans, especially at Facebook.
 
Kanye West
 

The album is scheduled for release in September and will feature verses from Rick Ross and T.I. as well as production from DJ Premier and Q Tip.

Nice little tease for all you Kanye fans.

 

 

The Young, Black, and Fabulous

Kanye West Joins Twitter; Makes a Fool Out of Himself at Facebook

3 of the biggest narcissists on Twitter: Oprah, Ashton Kutcher and Puff Daddy, are moving over to make room for one more.
Yes, Kanye West has joined the social networking microblogging site Twitter.com. Here is his first tweet.

Maybe it’s because I was bored, but I finally watched one of the videos taken at Facebook headquarters yesterday [...]
Sandra Rose

Kanye West Gets Suited & Booted And Performs At Facebook HQ… Smells Like Something Big Is About To Happen!!!

Kanye West performs for Facebook HQ

Kanye West doesn’t really put on his dancing shoes for anybody… it has to be the right price. Since he can’t walk up into MTV looking for love seems like he has turned to Facebook. Today, Yeezy performed four songs for Facebook employees…

Don’t be surprised if Kanye West takes over Facebook by the time his album is about to drop.




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Kanye West Performs Spoken Word For Facebook HQ Employees! [Video]




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Did Users Flee To Facebook Because MySpace Was “Too Ghetto”?

Facebook versus Myspace

Research among techie circles has produced an argument that Facebook’s success is due in part to white folks leaving “the ghetto” of MySpace. We thought this made for a good discussion piece. Pop the hood for more on this theory and to weigh in

A new analysis by Microsoft researcher Danah Boyd argues that Facebook’s success is due in part to “white flight” from MySpace.

We were talking about the social media practices of her classmates when I asked her why most of her friends were moving from MySpace to Facebook. Kat grew noticeably uncomfortable. She began simply, noting that “MySpace is just old now and it’s boring.” But then she paused, looked down at the table, and continued.

“It’s not really racist, but I guess you could say that. I’m not really into racism, but I think that MySpace now is more like ghetto or whatever.”

So begins the book chapter White Flight in Networked Publics — How Race and Class Shaped American Teen Engagement with MySpace and Facebook (pdf) part of the forthcoming book Digital Race Anthology.

Danah Boyd, author of the chapter, stirred up controversy once before, in 2007, by noting that during the period beginning in 2006 when teens began to flock to Facebook, teens’ preference for either MySpace or Facebook appeared to fall along lines of race and class.

Subsequent statistical analyses of the characteristics of users of online social networks by researchers, marketers and bloggers, she notes in her latest work, backed up her claims that white and asian teens who belonged to higher socieconomic strata (and who aspired to college, with which Facebook at the time was associated) were attracted to Facebook, while latino, black and working-class teens tended to opt for MySpace. Boyd notes in her chapter:

Analysts at two unnamed marketing research firms contacted me to say that they witnessed similar patterns with youth at a national level but they were unable to publicly discuss or publish their finding, but scholars and bloggers were more willing to share their findings.

Boyd’s current work argues that MySpace took on many of the aspects of a “digital ghetto” in the minds of teens who used the site, leading to “white [and asian] flight” from the site, analogous to the white flight from the city to the suburbs that took place in the U.S. beginning in the 1960′s. Boyd continues:

Consider the parallels. In some senses, the first teens to move to the “suburbs” were those who bought into a Teen Dream of collegiate maturity, namely those who were expressly headed towards dorm- ‐based universities and colleges. They were the elite who were given land in the new suburbs before plots were broadly available. The suburbs of Facebook signaled more mature living, complete with digital fences to keep out strangers. The narrative that these digital suburbs were safer than the city enhanced its desirability, particularly for those who had no interest in interacting with people who were different.

Boyd argues that MySpace’s inability to deal with spammers added to the feeling of urban blight that overtook the site, leaving derelict profiles “covered in spam, a form of digital graffiti… As MySpace failed to address these issues, spammers took over like street gangs.”

Subsequent media coverage of the “death of MySpace” was a direct result of this flight, says Boyd. For example, she cites a 2009 New York Times article that was entitled “Do You Know Anyone Still on MySpace?” despite the fact that at the time Facebook and MySpace has roughly equal numbers of users.

“The New York Times staff was on Facebook and assumed their readers were too,” concludes Boyd.

Intriguingly, the comments under that news item support Boyd’s thesis:

“My impression is that Myspace is for the riffraff and Facebook is for the landed gentry.”

“Compared to Facebook, MySpace just seems like the other side of the tracks – I’ll go there for fun, but I wouldn’t want to live there.”

We know that was a long read but we didn’t want to leave anything out. Clearly there’s some statistical research to back up this point. How many folks still use MySpace? If you’re a former MySpacer, why did you leave? Do you think Facebook is better? What about Facebook makes it better?

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A Lil’ Positivity: Facebook Loves Black People

I Love Being Black

Break out your black fist picks, kufis and incense, the Black Power Movement is back! Pop it to find out why over a million people are telling the world they love being Black.

Yes, yes y’all! Black people have united on Facebook to profess their love of the chocolate rainbow. Red bones, yellow bones, chocolate honies and pecan princes have joined forces and put away their differences to let the world know how much they love being black.

According to The Black Report, more than one million Facebook fans are causing a web-frenzy over a popular Facebook page. On Sunday, June 27, the fans hit the one million mark.

The ilovebeingblack fan page on Facebook has reignited the Black is Beautiful movement like a virtual firestorm, taking its message of empowerment to the web. The site is devoted to cultural awareness through fashion, capturing the hearts of 1,001,010 Facebook fans worldwide. With its I love being Black apparel line, the company brings a fresh meaning to James Brown’s I’m Black and I’m Proud anthem for a post-Civil Rights generation. The company’s positive motif is part of a larger movement to inspire and uplift the Black community.

“I Love Being Black apparel is a reminder to the community – and the world – that yeah, I DO love being Black,” said Founder/CEO Kumi Rauf. “I wanted to establish an outlet to combat self-hatred and negativity from inside and outside of our community, and to do it with style.” Rauf established the company in 2003 as an outgrowth of racial tension while he was a student at UC Santa Barbara and as a social media platform to encourage positive relations between Blacks. For greater accessibility, ilovebeingblack.com is also in the early development stages of creating mobile applications for Android, Blackberry and iPhone users. “With this page, and soon our mobile applications, I want to bring Black people together to start a dialogue on a variety of topics and to show our love for our culture.” ilovebeingblack.com products are sold online and at marketplaces, festivals, expos and trade shows. Celebrities such as Kimberly Elise, Malcolm Jamal-Warner, Too $hort, among others can be spotted in I love being Black apparel.

Become a fan at Facebook.com/lovebeingblackor log onto ilovebeingblack.com for more information.

And y’all said we don’t love Black people.

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