Post by account_disabled on Mar 5, 2024 20:24:44 GMT -8
Maisie Williams plays one of the most beloved characters in 'Game of Thrones': Arya Stark. At 19 years old, she has already had to face sexist headlines and comments on many occasions, one of the plagues that continue (unfortunately) to inhabit the Internet. Over the past few years she has already shown how great she is, with a great sense of humor and great empathy with the people who need it most. Williams attended a charity ball a few days ago, seeking to raise funds at the “Summer Masquerade Ball.” Instead of pointing out this important fact, the British newspaper Daily Mail preferred to dedicate a rather “alternative” and very questionable headline to her, focusing on the fact that she was not “wearing a bra” to the event. A headline that will surely generate many clicks, but that does not benefit humanity, much less the life of the actress. As we see at the top, the actress herself was in charge of answering them through her Twitter account, suggesting an alternative title: “Game of Thrones actress, Maisie Williams, helps raise thousands of dollars at the Summer Masquerade Ball.
Williams continues to show off her wisdom, responding politely and giving a wise lesson to a newspaper that should reconsider her actions. Personally, the part that America Mobile Number List feels worst to me is that the newspaper decided to “update” the headline after all the controversy, adding the detail that it was a charity ball, but without eliminating the “bra” part. Again, they show that their practices are very questionable and quite Jurassic. For Quijano, these studies do not prove a direct relationship between the use of networks and happiness, but they do denote behavioral changes. According to him, to understand them it is necessary to know what social networks are used for: “They are used for social interaction, search for information, entertainment, relaxation. They serve to find out and talk about things that are in the environment and, of course, learn about others, but the user is not only looking for that, they are also looking for a pleasant interaction. It must be understood that the world that is represented there is a non-existent one even if it is referred to reality. Depression comes when you realize that there is something you can't achieve,” he explains.
According to the study, the Facebook interactions that most affect users' emotions are the publication of photographs, the possibility of liking those images and the option to comment and give an opinion on them. All of these functions make up the reason for Instagram, for example. For Catalina , an academic at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, photographs, likes and comments are the aspects of the Facebook experience that most drive low self-esteem. This is how she expresses it in the article Selfie-Loathing (from the term self-loathing which means to hate or despise oneself) on the Slate website. According to Hanna , co-author of the aforementioned research “Envy on Facebook: A Hidden Threat to Users' Life Satisfaction,” a photograph can provoke immediate social comparison and trigger feelings of inferiority. "You get more explicit and implicit signals of happy, wealthy and successful people from a photo than from a status update," he says. There is another feeling that can arise and spread on social networks: anger. A study from University in China analyzed millions of posts and interactions on Weibo (a platform similar to Twitter in that country) and found that messages or interactions related to anger were much more common than any other emotion, especially joy.
Williams continues to show off her wisdom, responding politely and giving a wise lesson to a newspaper that should reconsider her actions. Personally, the part that America Mobile Number List feels worst to me is that the newspaper decided to “update” the headline after all the controversy, adding the detail that it was a charity ball, but without eliminating the “bra” part. Again, they show that their practices are very questionable and quite Jurassic. For Quijano, these studies do not prove a direct relationship between the use of networks and happiness, but they do denote behavioral changes. According to him, to understand them it is necessary to know what social networks are used for: “They are used for social interaction, search for information, entertainment, relaxation. They serve to find out and talk about things that are in the environment and, of course, learn about others, but the user is not only looking for that, they are also looking for a pleasant interaction. It must be understood that the world that is represented there is a non-existent one even if it is referred to reality. Depression comes when you realize that there is something you can't achieve,” he explains.
According to the study, the Facebook interactions that most affect users' emotions are the publication of photographs, the possibility of liking those images and the option to comment and give an opinion on them. All of these functions make up the reason for Instagram, for example. For Catalina , an academic at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, photographs, likes and comments are the aspects of the Facebook experience that most drive low self-esteem. This is how she expresses it in the article Selfie-Loathing (from the term self-loathing which means to hate or despise oneself) on the Slate website. According to Hanna , co-author of the aforementioned research “Envy on Facebook: A Hidden Threat to Users' Life Satisfaction,” a photograph can provoke immediate social comparison and trigger feelings of inferiority. "You get more explicit and implicit signals of happy, wealthy and successful people from a photo than from a status update," he says. There is another feeling that can arise and spread on social networks: anger. A study from University in China analyzed millions of posts and interactions on Weibo (a platform similar to Twitter in that country) and found that messages or interactions related to anger were much more common than any other emotion, especially joy.