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Updated 05 Oct, 2014 12:00pm

Selfie explores online addiction, embarrassment

LOS ANGELES: Narcissism, isolation, control freakery: the deep impact of the internet and social networks on our modern lives is coming under the spotlight in a new TV show and an upcoming movie this month.

TV show Selfie, which launched on ABC this week and the film Men, Women and Children, which hits the big screen later this month, both reflect the ravages wreaked by being constantly online.

The ABC network’s show depicts Eliza Dooley, who works in marketing but who is a social networking “superstar” due to her 263,000 “followers” on the Instagram photo sharing service.

She shares with them her every move, and posts pictures of every meal and herself in every state of undress. She measures people based on their “friends “or “followers” on the internet.

But her life is upended when she finds herself a laughing stock online due to an unfortunate viral video.

“I’ve spent years laughing at stupid idiots on Instagram, and now the stupid idiot was me,” says Dooley, played by Karen Gillan of recent box office hit Guardians of the Galaxy fame.

To escape this online nightmare, she calls on marketing ace Henry, who tells her she has become pathetically dependent on “the instant gratification of unearned adoration of perfect strangers”.

“When Siri is the only one there for you, you realise being friended is not the same as having friends,” sums up Dooley’s plight.

The show has earned mixed reviews — the Hollywood Reporter said it “has potential despite cloying pilot” aired on last Tuesday.

People ‘more bold’ online

But it does broach some of the real problems of our ultra-connected society: the isolation of online life, the difficulty in real-life communication it highlights, the ubiquity of mobile devices at mealtimes or in the bedroom.

Men, women and Children, by Jason Reitman — who directed Juno (2007) and Up in the Air (2009) — depicts a well-known urban scene: a street packed with people, all with their heads down locked into their smartphone screens.

The movie, which comes out on Oct 17 in the United States, tells the story of a group of high school friends. One celebrity-seeking teenager finds herself exploited when naked photos of her leak online.

An anxious mother (Jennifer Garner) seeks to protect her daughter from sexual predators by going through every single of her texts, emails or Facebook posts. But it is an uphill task.

Technology is increasingly pervasive in the plots of any number of TV shows and films: think texting in House of Cards, geolocalisation in Earth to Echo and recent thriller November Man. Tom Nunan, a professor at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television, cites notably 1998’s You’ve Got Mail by Nora Ephron as prescient about the impact of email on our love lives.

“You’ve got Mail has only grown in affection and respect over the years, as people look back ... at the time, people didn’t think it came at the level of When Harry met Sally, but that movie has aged very well,” he said.

More recently, Netflix drama House of Cards, about a lawmaker climbing the political ladder by any means available, uses texting to “accelerate the plot very quickly,” said Nunan.

Smartphones we carry everywhere have become “our courage devices,” said the academic, adding that they allow people to “say things we would not have the courage to say face-to-face”.

“We’re much more bold,” he added.

Other aspects of online behaviour — cyber-bullying, for example, or so-called “revenge porn” — are ripe areas for film-makers. One only has to think of the recent leaking of naked celebrity photos.

The film is probably already being made somewhere, or at least planned.

The depiction of our increasingly online life seems likely only to grow in the coming months and years, on the small and big screen.

Published in Dawn, October 5th , 2014

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