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Even though Mark (main character) did not see how big Facebook would become I could see by watching the movie that somehow his obsessive behavior would result in a broken friendship reaching its peak. (so young yet so obsessive). In books, there is always a smart bastard that messes up the best relationships they have then reap the consequences. Which how many friends mark had left? (umm none) oh okay. I rest my case. J why must people go off on a tangent and create a character on social sites , knowing they have identity issues that are picking at their guts. I mean it's not a crime to not know what life has in store for you; it's okay to be geeky and indulge in Greek myths or love to sit by the lake and reminisce about life (idc that’s cool in my eyes). Can someone tell me where the non-virtual bastards are? Because I find it hard to differentiate between whom is real and who is fake.
I just felt very bad for mark; he created this wonderful yet dictated website due to him wanting to bash his ex-girlfriend that dumped him. CONSEQUENCE 101: he lost himself in the process. So basically he created a site in which people NEEDED to CONNECT. Why mark just why? Now people have become these online aliens that only can operate on the basis of a website. now I feel the need to conform. This is exactly why I can't go anywhere without my darn phone. sigh!!!!!! On that note: im on fb… bye J

Yeah i FELT BAD FOR MARK AS WELL
ReplyDeletethis is such a witty post, i love it. facebook is so addictive yet its crazy how it was made for an entirely different purpose.
ReplyDeletei definitely sympathized with mark as well. he really just wanted to find some way to connect--thus facebook. facebook is just so addictive!
ReplyDeleteBased on these comments and your ending, I'd say the writer/director did their jobs--they made Mark into a sympathetic or "redeemed" character at the end.
ReplyDeleteI'm more envious of Mark than sympathetic. He made a multibillion company afterall.
ReplyDelete