Tuesday, February 03, 2009HEY, WE'RE RECESSION PROOF... AREN'T WE?Yes, the economy is tanking, but, hey, we're in the entertainment business! Escapism rules in downturn. People want to go out and forget the troubles, and the price of a movie ticket is just... Reality check: Nick Wingfield and Piu-Wing Tam argue in The Wall Street Journal that the economically distressed are not heading out to the movies -- they're staying home and surfing the 'net. From the piece: It's been decades since Americans had this much time on their hands and -- thanks to the Web -- never have there been so many opportunities to burn it. And further into the piece: The trend echoes the escape mechanisms that people turned to during the Great Depression in the 1930s. At the time, people paid a nickel to spend entire afternoons and evenings watching films featuring Charlie Chaplin and others, cartoons and newsreels, says Gary Handman, a director at the Media Resources Center at the University of California at Berkeley. Over at Crunchgear, Nicholas Deleon links to this piece but, in his closer, points out that those who free time on their hands can also look to the internet for things other than entertainment: Maybe the Internet isn’t so bad. Maybe people use it responsibly, play a few online games, watch an episode or two on Hulu, etc? Maybe the Internet, in this case, softens the blow of being unemployed, of being home all day and not getting interview call-backs? You know, maybe it serves a greater social purpose, like the cinema used to during past recessions and depressions? Rather than use the Internet to consume hate-filled garbage, maybe people are using Facebook to cope with being out of work, using Twitter to relay job openings back and forth? Thank you for being a friend, Internet! Comments (1) |
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