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Maybe I'm a repressed old fooker


But the whole social media ting and celebrities death is just another type of Virtue Signalling to me


Prince - i liked him, I have Purple Rain and Sign of the Times, his talent was immense, very sad but...


I felt the same about Bowie to be honest (who I am an enormous fan of)


People I actually knew personally and loved very much have died, these talented people dying, even when abstractly they've been part of my life, just doesn't emotionally cripple me in the way thousands of others seem to be effected? Anyone else concur or is it just me?


Paul Daniels however......

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???? Wrote:

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Anyone else concur or is it just me?


I totally agree. Whilst I admired Prince and enjoyed his music, I didn't know him personally. It's sad of course, but some of the reaction seems extreme to me. Post Diana it's seems to have become the norm to grieve celebrity deaths as though they were part of your family.

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I agree about the emotional side Quids. I've posted things on FB but find the emotional outpouring weird, especially after Bowie, that was getting towards Diana territory (can you even imagine what social media would have been like had it existed in 1997?). People holding vigils and stuff for people they never knew is just odd, but then again Christians do that stuff for Jesus every year, so perhaps it's not so odd.


The ones that I do find sad are when people die of overdoses and stuff. Some people judge those harshly, but I always think there is something sad about these people that "have it all", yet can't beat the drugs. Scott Weiland of Stone Temple Pilots / Velvet Revolver was a perfect example. He was a singer I really liked, and he was on / off the drugs for years before it caught up with him in December '15. Peaches Geldof also pretty tragic.

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Otta Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I agree about the emotional side Quids. I've

> posted things on FB but find the emotional

> outpouring weird, especially after Bowie, that was

> getting towards Diana territory (can you even

> imagine what social media would have been like had

> it existed in 1997?).


I thought Quids was one of the social media ringleaders on Bowie's death.

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I wonder if in part it has something to do with people being reminded of their own mortality. Superstars like Bowie and Prince are not "normal" people, so when they die in very normal ways at relatively young ages, it reminds us that we're all gonna die in the end.


I guess when it's someone your age that you've followed for years it's an unwanted reminder that death waits for no man (or woman).

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Mick Mac Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Otta Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > I agree about the emotional side Quids. I've

> > posted things on FB but find the emotional

> > outpouring weird, especially after Bowie, that

> was

> > getting towards Diana territory (can you even

> > imagine what social media would have been like

> had

> > it existed in 1997?).

>

> I thought Quids was one of the social media

> ringleaders on Bowie's death.



Nope, very wrong - one post only on Facebook with Wild is the Wind at 7am on the morning he died and no comment. Go and check.


I was a true fan of Bowie and started a thread on him here yeras back. But I don't do death on social media

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Otta Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> People holding vigils and

> stuff for people they never knew is just odd, but

> then again Christians do that stuff for Jesus

> every year, so perhaps it's not so odd.


That's an parallel with religion / religious dieties and death rituals.

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red devil Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I think people are mourning not so much their own

> mortality but the loss of a part of their past.

> People often associate music/songs etc with

> certain periods of their lives, so when a

> singer/musician dies it instantly triggers those

> memories of a time that has gone...forever


Very deep RD. Very deep.

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Grief comes out in all different ways. Seen on FB:

Listen life is short we're all aware of that today, so when I order a breakfast DO NOT SERVE THE BEANS IN A F*CKING RAMMIKIN on the same plate as everything else, I don't have life to waste pouring beans out of a pointless F*cking China thing. Just put the beans straight on the plate and charge me 3 quid less you b*st*rd guys!


Free hugs? xx

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It?s the desire to ?display? - a very basic human instinct - now technologically supercharged so that it functions in ways that weren?t possible until very recently.


Facebook (whilst being a trite load of shite on one level) - is totally fascinating in this respect. What people choose to broadcast; what they think it says about them; how it actually gets interpreted - whether it?s a conscious or subconscious decision on their part or not. It?s a people-watching goldmine.


You can scoff at those with their pithy-icky tributes to X Y and Z but the truth is that the decision ?not? to comment or ?show anything? can be just as much of a signal.

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