Face off on Facebook, anyone??
Have said it before, am saying it again.... I have very, very few friends - thank God!!!
Am  planning to watch 'The Social Network' all over again tonight.... just  to catch those rapid fire dazzling one liners I missed the first time.  The mood is somewhat low ( five out of six kids not in town).  Besides,  on the political front, I am seriously sick of the charade of 'nabbing'  the wrong culprits.... and letting the big fish get away .  Scamster  Raja needs an interpreter. Why can't these chaps just stick to their  mother tongue? I'd much rather read the ticker than strain to decipher  what they are struggling to say in their brand of English. Kapil Sibal  is an inspired choice - he is the new miracle guy on the block - the man  for all seasons and portfolios. Meanwhile, no Chinese torture for  Kalmadi in sight.....only patsies get caught in India. The others merely  'step down' and enjoy the spoils of their looting and cheating the  nation. We deserve them!
 
This appeared in Bombay Times ...
How many ‘Friends’ do you need….?
This  is a sheepish confession: I do have a naam ke vaastey ‘Facebook’  presence. It was created by my canny publishers a few years ago since  they believed it was important for their authors to have a presence on  social networking sites (“ It is the future…’’ I was assured by the  marketing team). I took their word for it and withdrew my protest. The  children were aghast and alarmed (I was seen as an intruder into their  space), till I assured them I had zero intention of being active on that  site . Relieved but not totally convinced, they went back to FB, hoping  and praying I’d stay out of their hair and turf. I did. But would my  publishers have any of it? I was told my  FB account would be managed by  someone responsible… and that was that. Or so I thought. Weeks later I  found myself in an elevator with people who were total strangers. One of  them extended his hand and greeted me familiarly, adding “ We are  Facebook friends! You accepted my friends’ request recently… thanks a  lot.” I gulped, recovered a little, smiled weakly and  hastily got off  on the wrong floor. This became a ridiculous routine till I asked for  help. “ Take me off the damn thing,” I pleaded with my minders. But  would they listen? I finally managed to access the home page only to  discover to my absolute horror that I now had over 5,000 new ‘friends’  and several ‘friends’ waiting for a green signal to go ahead. There were  hundreds of ‘common friends’ and God knows how many people in different  categories pushing products, ideas, paintings, poetry, themselves!!!  This was the world’s biggest flea market… and I was one of the fleas!
 Terrifying, right? Precisely . I was so traumatized by the discovery  of all these newly minted friends, I promptly went into denial and  refused to access my account after that. It’s a terrible admission,  because I know it is still there – active, alive and  kicking. I meet  people who tell me they’ve read my columns on Facebook… and I smile  vaguely. Obviously those marketing chaps are on the job, updating,  chopping, changing, responding, ignoring, ‘unfriending’, poking,  gifting… and generally indulging in whatever it is Facebook addicts are  hooked on to. I’m out of it…was never on it… and after watching the  absolutely brilliant film ( ‘The Social Network’) currently running at a  friendly neighbourhood multiplex, I am mighty glad I resisted the  temptation to lose my mind and steered clear of what has become a global  social disease that spares nobody. People my age coo and gurgle with  delight after tracing some long lost creep from their youth or  connecting with old school friends, decades later. “It’s amazing! I’ve  found soooo many long lost friends after years,” they declare proudly. I  don’t have the heart to say , “ If they’d meant anything to you , you  wouldn’t have lost contact in the first place.”
 And to think it was  one crazy genius from Harvard named Mark Zuckerberg ( a billionaire at  25 – top that!) who started it all. Culprit? Devil? Angel?
 ‘The  Social Network’ will do for Facebook what ‘Wall Street’ ( the original)  did for insider trading. Move over Oliver Stone. David Fincher is the  main man now. As for Jesse Eisenberg’s eerily authentic performance as  Zuckerberg – what can I say? Oscar??????
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