Reactions to the best 3 Vietnamese Restaurants by Nashville Scene

2020 was tough, which no one would disagree with. However, numerous restaurants in Nashville are trying their best to survive the pandemic with new dishes or the increase in food deliveries. According to the readers’ poll of Nashville Scene in 2020, Vui’s Kitchen stands out as the best Vietnamese restaurant, while Miss Saigon was voted as the runner-up, and VN Pho & Deli as the third place.

Now, let’s take a closer look at these restaurants, from a perspective with a Vietnamese living in her home country in more than 20 years, to justify the poll.

Vui’s kitchen – the American perspective of Vietnamese food

4 RED PINS ON THE MAP BELOW

Since 2017, Vui’s Kitchen was voted as the best Vietnamese restaurant at Nashville Scene. There are 4 branches of the Vui’s Kitchen in Nashville alone, with high ratings in great services and ideal outside dining area. People come to the restaurant to enjoy the food with nature, which is mostly the best option to hang out with friends during the COVID time. Although they offer online orders via Doordash and their website, they no longer accepted orders through phone calls.

In Vietnamese cuisine, every time we have a piece of egg roll with fish sauce or Bun Thit Nuong, there is an explosion in flavors – umami, salty, sweet, and sour, with the dynamic textures – crunchy on the outside and chewy, soft at the inside. However, here at the Vui’s kitchen, the flavor was not as we expected in authentic Vietnamese food. They were pretty pale, probably because some Americans don’t enjoy the strong bombing in flavors. The price, in general, is higher than that of other Vietnamese restaurants.

Miss Saigon with a long menu through time

1 PURPLE PIN ON THE MAP BELOW

Miss Saigon was opened since 1996, probably one of the oldest Vietnamese restaurants in Tennessee. It is probably in the go-to Vietnamese restaurants of those who plan for interstate road trips. Both American and Vietnamese enjoy the dishes here, which means that the food is not 100% authentic but delicious enough for those who miss Vietnamese cuisine. While Com Tam (broken rice dishes) is their Vietnamese customers’ favorite, people also come here for Pho, vermicelli, and corn milk.

You might be amazed by the number of items in their menu – around 70. They are highly active on multiple online delivery services such as Uber, Grub Hub, their website, and even phone calls. They currently offer a free dessert when customer leave comments on the Yelp profile of the restaurant. However, the big minus of the restaurant is the inconsistent quality of the service – sometimes, the food comes up right away while you might wait for your Banh Xeo for more than 30 minutes. Also, be aware of $15 credit card minimum.

VN Pho & Deli, a small, cozy restaurant

1 BLUE PIN ON THE MAP BELOW

On the same road Charlotte Pike, before turning to the corner to get to Miss Saigon, you can see VN Pho & Deli. Vietnamese customers agreed that they probably serve the best Pho in the state. It is the small restaurant with specials of Duck dishes on Friday and Sunday – Bun Mang Vit and Mi Vit Tiem. They serve unique Vietnamese dishes in the state with the reasonable prices. Hot news to boba-lovers: their taro smoothie is recommended.

When coming to VN Pho & Deli, remember that you need to pay with cash. They have the in-house ATM and the owner is flexible in receiving payment via Zelle as well. Bad news for lazy customers: you gotta come to the area to enjoy the food as they, so far, do not offer food delivery.

Food tells personality. You may experience the best Nashville Scene Vietnamese restaurants differently, but then you would know which one is worth the compliments.

The funny, plot-twisted “Mr. Queen” will make your day, promised.

<Ladies and Gentlemen: SPOILERS ALERT> 

COVID time brings me a whole lot of spare time and I decided to make a huge movement in killing the time – watching “Mr. Queen”. It’s been years since the last time I watched a K-drama – they were so good yet so lengthy for me to follow with my busy schedule of a college life. However, in my mind right now, there are only scenes from the now K-drama “Mr. Queen”. 

Mr. Queen is a time travel of a dead man’s soul (Jang Bong-Hwan) from the modern South Korea to the body of a future queen (Kim So-Yong) of the Joseon dynasty. The hilarious situation took place as Bong-Hwan was a womanizer, yet the queen was in a complicated relationship with the king (Cheoljong) – simply a political marriage. So-Yong’s family represented the Kim family who focused on maintaining its monopoly by controlling the King for years, instead of enriching the country. So-Young resented the fact of her family and realized that she didn’t want such a harsh meaning-less life being her family’s CCTV of the King. 

An independent, free person is the most attractive. 

The series was not done yet, but I enjoyed lessons from such a funny series. The fact that Bong-Hwan’s soul in So-Yong’s body and changing her identity in others’ minds helped me sum up the values of an attractive person. The old So-Yong hated her role as a CCTV so much that she pretended to be an evil queen who punished her servants hard – her emotion was pressed inside whether it was joy or love. 

On the other hand, Bong-Hwan expressed himself freely, even without respects towards the King. His alpha features as a man pushed him towards the heroic actions of telling the truths whenever the King doubt So-Yong’s actions. The new So-Yong took care of her servant, managed the Royal Kitchen and assisted the King whenever his plan was about to be destroyed. The activeness and bright characteristics in Bong-Hwan’s role was such a refreshing wind to the Palace. 

Plot twists yet tell the true-life stories. 

Bong-Hwan was a man who loves women only, but within the body of So-Yong, he had a feeling for the King. The mutual understanding plus the chemistry every of their moments builds up the relationship that is bloomed with respect, responsibility, and joy. Bong-Hwan in So-Yong’s body was walking on the pathway of such relationship with the King – love.  

In the past, I probably would say “eel” when hearing a straight guy loved another guy – it was abnormal and unacceptable to me. Now that I have experienced and observed the loving process, I realized that such love is so precious that lovers feel empathized and respected. Isn’t that the beauty of love already? 

The series is coming to an end – Bong-Hwan and the King are on the same boat. They are loving each other while on their pathways of finding their true selves despite the chaotic palace. I’m thrilled to watch the final two episodes, while promising to the angel of ethic: “I will devote 100% of myself to classes after this series ends.” 

P.S. The series is not available on Netflix, folks. 

The role of algorithms in the economy and society

“Algorithms” is such a broad term that it covers any guidelines that describe how to perform a task in a daily life. It can be an instruction in a textbook or a viral Thanksgiving recipe on the internet. However, to the aspect of technology and internet, the understanding of “algorithms” is confined to computer math:

Algorithms are mathematical procedures that are performed in a controlled fashion on data in order to be able to present an output in the shape of other forms of data.

Simon Lindgren

Algorithms are behind the scenes of the majority of internet operations. Any input onto the website, for example, a click on an item to purchase, another output in correspondence to the input would display on the screen, such as a number of items in the cart would increase by one. This is because a certain set of rules have been added to the program to obtain the expected output from the given input. It is the magic player of interactions on social media, marketing ads, or online stores.

Obviously, algorithms helps human organize things and interact efficiently. For example, Amazon is a giant online retailer with all of its items set up and decorated beautifully on the website. Imagine one day, Amazon became a rich old guy with a large number of employees, how can he and his employees meet their customers from all over the wold, with thousands of transactions a day? Algorithm is there to save the labor effort, time, and money for Amazon; therefore, various algorithms from simple to complex are set up as to serve multiple purposes else online marketing and selling.

Just in one click, with one word, and then the result is displayed on the screen as a list with all items related. Algorithms sort through the massive amount of information, which helps us navigate the most matching data that we are looking for. It is also behind social media, obviously. News are fed continuously in the reverse chronological order, stories of friends are listed in closed-friend priority, and hashtags are for people to search for the theme that they are interested in. Algorithms, with the support of AI, is the main element to keep us getting involved in the social media.

Society is changed by algorithms. Google has been a great part of human life in news updating and self-instructing. Also, people confirm info accuracy more often and easily. Via Google, online users access multiple links, yet in a personalized order of interest order. Algorithms are created and adjusted by the host so as to interact with people, via which algorithms could be set to collect data. A huge amount of information from users as in the possible instructions in algorithms can be a threat to personal security. Also, when we head towards personalized data search, we might not have chance to step out of the comfort zone and discover other sources, unless we specifically ask for them.

Hold on tight, algorithm is not limited to the internet. It is operated on multiple platforms that use technology: radar, machine operation, transportation, health service, and many more to come. It keeps growing up in human’s orders and interact or combine with each other to produce the result. The video below would clarify algorithm more in a thorough, scientific, and social perspective.

Mobile Phone – “An Agent of Social Change”

Have you ever seen anyone online 24/7?

Have you ever come to an area where people keep scrolling on their phone without talking to each other?

Have you ever texted multiple people at a time?

Most of responses are “Yes” to three questions above about mobile phone – one of the four crucial technology evolutions. A number of significant changes take place as a result of mobile communication. More social issues on mobile phones arise: privacy of mobile phone users, the operation of business, relationship of family members and friends, and the social status and power. Mobile phone is a useful tool that transform our society gradually yet from its core.

Back to the old day in 1990s, when mobile phone was spread for a wider consumer market, it was first preferred as accessories of celebrities and successful business people. However, in this modern world, it would be strange if one does not have a mobile phone – a standard means of communication regardless of one’s physical location.

Mobile phone is more than simply internet connection via portable device. It is an amazing tool in which people can multitask – texting, taking photos, noting a to-do list, or listening to music – any offline activities than can be done on computer or laptop but in a handy version. How cool! Obviously, such offline efficiency would not be enough for a mobile phone to be an agent of social change. People from the old days were afraid of using mobile phone to text others because the fee was high. Nowadays, any conversation can be done online, not only text but also images, recordings, or videos. Multiple apps were designed mainly for mobile use such as Snapchat or Instagram so that people can update and share their status almost anywhere anytime. With mobile phone, the barrier in physical location is not as important.

When it comes to the conditions of interaction, people can be in constant touch with each other, no matter where they happen to be located at a particular moment.

Simon Lindgren

Mobile phone is so handy that people can use it anywhere and anytime, putting the world into their pocket easily. Several people would still connect to their social network even when on bed. The hyperconnectivity reforms the way how one is connected to each other, to the world, and the huge library of constantly updated information. The existence of mobile phone seems to be quite natural to the users that the arrival of texts or calls might be an interruptions of the real conversations that take place at a time. When mobile phone is embedded on one’s life, it might disconnect one from the real world, which sometimes is considered impolite or disrespectful. Therefore, there are several policies in public area in terms of mobile phone usage. For example, in a conference, attendees are asked to keep their phones in silent mode.

In any conversation or problems, people can look up on the internet via mobile phone for answers or solutions. Obviously, it is such a quick, efficient search query. Ideas and decisions of the group can be gathered online. A lot of people work remotely and communicate via texts mainly. As researcher Rich and Birgitte Yttri has discussed the use of mobile phone – making everything run smoothly. A tiny update of late arrival, symbolic gift such as gif or gossip stories could be an efficient social bond.There is a survey, claiming that people prefer to text, share, or send images, videos rather than phoning. They feel that their friends are not as closed to phone but they can throw some ideas collected from the internet to show connectivity yet in silence. Mobile phone can be anyone’s favorite private space – a comfort zone in feelings, thoughts, and emotions.

In comparison to the old days when not everyone owns a mobile phone, communications need more effort to build and maintain. People need to meet to transform ideas efficiently since there are no supporting tools in communicating and sharing ideas from external sources. Therefore, people from the similar physical location and habit schedule are more likely to meet and get along with each other. People were not likely to be interrupted or distracted from the conversation unless others physically pulled one away.

In today’s world, people do not necessarily have to meet for communications but they are rarely alone. They get connected to the world via any kind of technology device, especially mobile phone. Mobile phone is a practically efficient tool but its effects in reality depend on human use and culture. It seems to be a door for teleport and distant interaction; however, it might loosen the connection of one from different generations if people break the manners or etiquette when using mobile phones.

Here is the video to vividly show how the use of mobile phone transforms our daily behavior and relationship.

Social Movements in the Digital Society: A Wise, Free Evolution

Social movement is a group action in reaction to a dominant power in the society. They can be large groups of people or organizations that focus on social issues, demanding a social change from the bottom. As in any organization of any time, communication is among important keys of social movement in exchanging information, orienting directions in operating, and nurturing the spirit. In the digital time, modern social movements are evolved from the energy of the crowd, thanks to technology development, they do work differently from those in the history.

In the history, there are several prominent social movements – workers’ rights movement, the environmental movement, peace movements, and women’s movements. In today’s world, a new wave of social movements arrived that has become more powerful than the previous ones. In the past, in order to spread the words and the fire, activists had to gather members in the social movement in a specific place and time, sometimes even in secrecy. Nowadays, via internet and social media, anyone can get involved in the ad-hoc network, in which individual devices communicating with each other directly. Communication becomes more flexible yet not as tight as the commitment in the past and reaches more people from all over the world.

Social movement in the digital world might not be as obviously influential as those in the history yet it smolders through daily online activities. Various networked social movements can take place at the same time in any digital personalized conversation, without officially launching campaigns. Participants can be anyone online, having common counteractions towards the dominant power – ignoring political parties, distrusting the mainstream media, and largely rejecting formal organization. On the internet, people have freedom to speak it out loud via various forms: political debate as written discussion or videos or entertainment as memes or gifs. They are transmitted via multimodal forms – the “global hypertext” content that includes networked text, images, videos and relationships.

Any social movement would eventually needs human direct interaction to boost the effectiveness and bring life to demanded changes. Before that, the public have the taste of the social movements when they threaded through online activities, sometimes without much notice about it. In contrary, with those in the past, they demand strict commitment, formal membership, and the practice of full ideologies that sometimes, people might be hesitant to jump right in. With connective actions in the digital world, personal action frames are used as a perspective of personal freedom and independence from formal organizations. Connective action is such an elastic bonding of individuals in which core dynamics of the action is carried throughout the digital groups. It is such a wise strategy in that participants are co-producers and co-distributors of ideas. There are neither leaders nor chains of responsibility in involvement. Therefore,

Such movements are highly empowered from the start, because they already live in the hearts and minds of the participants, who now also connect in large-scale networks.

Simon Lindgren

On the other hand, social movement in the digital society operates on the foundation of codes and protocols. Keywords and hashtags are used widely to spread ideas effortlessly to the crows that governments and businesses might have no difficulty in tracing the movements of activists, censoring, blocking, or even shutting down internet services. There came tactical media – a successful movement as to disturb the protocol, which is interesting to say that social movements rely on the internet and now to develop more, it had better have a trick on their supporters.

Would There Be Stereotypes in The Digital Society?

Since the arrival of Internet, human society was elevated into another level of equality. People access Internet’s massive amount of data for social networking, updating news, or even online learning. However, any human product is a self-reflection of the society, especially when Internet and social media is the user-interactive platform that adapt to the interest and personality of users.

When we think of shopping, the main target would be women, instead of men. When we think of politics, the representatives are usually men. Asian are assumed to be good at Maths while the West are known with wild, creative arts. When Internet is a huge, accessible library, we would want to learn and practice more on what we are interested in the real life. Men are known for gaming while women tend to browse for cooking recipes. There are definitely exceptions that people from different genders, and races exchange their habits and interests, especially when anyone can access the same amount of information.

However, social hierarchies tend to be reversed in the social media – the mainly entertaining platform that the majority of users enjoy in the digital society. Celebrities could have millions of views on the YouTube by simply sharing what outfits they have for a day or by reviewing technology devices. On the other hand, politics are not in the majorities’ interests even when the news are post on either online articles or YouTube short videos. Whoever know the orientation of their target audience and manage to satisfy those demands in entertainment, they would become popular and have power on the Internet. In the past few years, YouTube is not only for sharing videos with pure joy and interest, it is elevated to the point that people can combine labour and play. Jobs such as “content creators” or “influencers” attract a lot attention from viewers, motivating the ones being influenced to become influencers. What a passage of power that may not be done rapidly in the real life.

Obviously, steoreotype does exist in the digital society, which is named cybertype, even when people have less face-to-face communication. They are the results from our stereotypes in the real world and also the reinforcement of advanced technology. For example, AI collects data of users and reframes the interface to meet their personal orientations. Online users may share the same interest in shopping but would be framed more specifically into the types of products or news that meet their personalities more. Stereotypes in the real world may be degraded in the digital society and transformed into new kinds of cybertypes on the internet. That is how we process the awareness of the world and automatically group them for time-efficient perception.

To sum up, internet is definitely not the place where bias do not exist – there is an relationship between genders, races, power, and other aspects on the Internet. In the digital world. people have more freedom and become more friendly to each other but typing others is a part of how any of us perceive the world. Via internet, we have more chances to know more about differences from us and become either more generous or harsher with others.

Our Conception of the Public Sphere in the Digital Era

The public sphere is a social realm that channels civil society. The two criteria to describe the public sphere is the accessibility and participants’ ability to confer unrestrictedly.

Sociologist and critical theorist Jurgen Habermas (1989)

According to Habermas, there are two spheres: private and public. Along with the rise of capitalism, starting in England in the 1700s, there was a high demand in “rational-critical debate” – people came to salons and coffee-house to discuss news, culture transforms, and so on. Since then, almost everyone, however their social status is, has an opportunity to express their personal thought although not as freely as to be considered a public person. Habermas stated the emerging bourgeois public sphere as “an arena mixing the two sides of private and public”.

In the modern digital society, internet or, to be more specific, social media seems to be cybersalons – a playground for anyone to share their thoughts and have chances to bring social issues on the table for more public discussions. Then, a question comes up: do the internet and social media constitute a new public sphere?

As a functioning public sphere that contributes to the development of civilization, people in the inclusive areas must have the ability to think out loud, as a signal of democratic devotion. However, neither bourgeois public sphere back to the old days nor social media in the modern time really meets the requirement of an effective public sphere. Although social media blurs the boundaries between the public and the private, not every online users share their thoughts on the modern social platform. Some users just visit social media as to observe others’ daily activities, update news, or keep up with their relationships via personal conversations. They even do not care much to upload their avatar, let alone discussing social issues. Despite the fact that everyone has an equal right in raising their voices for social contribution, either in real life or social media, not every of us really use it effectively.

MoreoveMorr, even active online users do not really bring political issues to social media platform. In reality, according to the Christian Fuchs’s survey on Twitter, very little political discussion were found going on this popular cybersalon. Instead, social media is for sharing personalities and looking for the interaction from the audience that share the similarities. The platform is colonized by entertainment, media, and advertising to keep itself vigorously interesting and popular to the mass audience. He said social media might belong to the category that Habermas mentioned in 1989 “pseudo-public spheres”.

Pseudo-public sphere is a form of public sphere that is hollowed out and rendered powerless by mass media and culture consumption.

Habermas (1989:162)

Internet is highly accessible but would it be the digital society where every person in the world would become digital citizen? Definitely not or not yet– in 2016, the internet penetration rate was about 90 percent in North America and Western Europe while only 25 percent in Africa and South Asia. On the other hand, although social media is a more interactive platform than television or newspaper, the mass audience still prefer to consume contents rather than engagement and contribution.

More seriously, social media is potential to the destructive crowd effect or, in other words, cyber-bullying. The mass audience do not prefer to start to conversation but they may not hesitant to slightly interact with other’s online speech by leaving comments. They may feel safe when thinking that “Oh, my comment is just one among thousand or million. No one would really cares.” However, once a comment was paid proper attention to become the big storm of negative response, it may overkill the one who has freely or bravely raised their voice in the care of society.

In conclusion, is social media a public sphere? Maybe not yet. There is a need for equal accessibility and the track of speech freedom and public respect as rights of digital citizenship.

When Hatred Is Spread as Fast as Supreme Internet Connection!

Internet connection has been continuously improved to assist our life in any aspect: loading information, connecting with people, entertaining, and so on. It marked the remarkable shift in civil revolution, placing various useful “gadgets” into the society that quite a few people would say that they could not survive a day without the internet connection. However magical the internet has been to us, via the internet that the hatred is spread faster than ever before, pushing several internet surfers into stress, endangered life, and even suicide.

Sulli, a 25-year-old Korean idol, was found dead in her own house – suicide suspected. Before that, she has suffered from years of depression because of negative comments from other internet users on her social media accounts. She once said no matter what she had tried to achieve, she felt like the only feeling people could throw at her was hatred.

Zoe Quinn, the creator of the game DepressionQuest, was aggressively accused by her ex-boyfriend on the blog of having cheated on him for her own benefit. The hashtag #Gamergate was used throughout various social media platform, spreading the accusation further. Other female game creators and journalists were targeted as well – they were threatened to rape or even death.

Internet is the powerful third-party in any services that people do not have to reveal or confirm their identity to utilize. Of course, if the hacker or the government want to know who they are, they can be identified but normally, other internet users do not have time to do that unless it benefits themselves. Therefore, in the dark, without much attention from others, they have more freedom in expressing themselves, even their bad side in harsh, offensive words. Especially when a lot of third-parties are operated on the Internet such as News, YouTube, or Facebook, their profile information doesn’t have to be exact. Then, who would be willing to be responsible for their own comments?

Via social media, people do not need to communicate face-to-face. They do not catch the signal via others’ body language or facial expression as in physical meeting so messages and comments are sometimes misunderstood. Even a joke on the internet can be implied as a negative feedback that seriously has an impact on the mental health of feedback receivers. Social media is the platform where users can update any moment of life thanks to instant editing tool and sharing tool. It seems like people know more about others’ lives via social media so as to empathize with others’ feeling and thoughts but the more we know more about others, we judge others more and desire the similarity between ourselves and others. Social media is the playground where anyone can share their personalities but it can also be the battle of confronting characteristics. When we do not accept the difference, we have no difficulty in expressing the disapproval through “hate comments”, without thinking much of the consequence in the online world. Since we do not see the impact of our words on others, we think that it does not hurt at all until one day, such impact is like a cancer disease, killing others cruelly.

Everything on social media would possibly brought to the extreme point, especially with the existence of anonymous crowd. The crowd effect in the real life is so powerful that it can either elevate or destroy one – on social media, the speed and intensity of the crowd’s impact reaches the peak. Once the flame starts, no one can really tell when and how it will end.

A flame is not a flame until someone calls it a flame.

The communication researcher Philip Thompsen (1996:302)

In real life, even the mob can be traced and located nationally and more seriously as internationally but on the internet, people from another half of the globe can join in the conversation of any scale. There is no organization to keep track of the potentially cyber-bullying so the flames or virus would spread freely. When the flame just occurs in one’s personal life, however destructive it is, possibly no government or organization knows and takes action unless that person is willing to speak out loud, bravely go against it and ask for help.

Nowadays, also thanks to the spread of internet, people’s awareness of the impact of negative comments and cyber-bullying is raised efficiently, but definitely not thoroughly. Governmental website was founded to help prevent the social issue https://www.stopbullying.gov/. However,

Heavy is The Head That Wears The Crown

When we use social media, it is better for us to be taught how to deal with possible reactions and problems via the internet. When the flame bursts out, it’s not fare to solely blame on the anonymous hate comments – we need to ask ourselves what we have done and if the online hatred is worth worrying about. The more we risk expressing ourselves on social media, obviously the more unpredictable comments would come and the more flexible we need to become to face them. While we are waiting for others to stop bullying or the government to prosecute ones, online users had better stay tuned!

Video of Affinity – Among Vivid Connections of Human

Internet, or social media to be more specific, marks the extraordinary shift in our means of communication. Besides the demand in updating news via broadcast on TVs or radios, we do want to share our thoughts and to be listened, during which we feel respected. When Facebook stepped into our society, it became a popular social network where anyone can have an online profile and share their daily activities or thoughts. Attaching photos in HTML was such a breakthrough of the internet at that time, which is amazing for vividly updating one’s memorable moment of life. Now that technology is developed more than just images for sharing, videos of affinity becomes everyone’s favor in any social media platform.

Social media is the playground of personas. Because stories are shared in various ways (photos, status, blogs, and videos), their interests are shared in the hope for interaction and discovery their mix and match. Online communications obviously create the bonding among readers and creators, the feeling of which is called affinity.

A feeling of connection, as stated, is an openness to interacting with another person. Affinity is achieved through activities of social bonding in which people come to feel connected with one another, readying them for further communication.

Bonnie Nardi (2005:99)

Videos of affinity, by means of YouTube platform, are stories to be shared in unlimited categories (nationality, ethnicity, class, gender, and disability). They aim to maintain the connection with potential YouTube surfers who share the similarities in the content mentioned on videos. Videos of affinity functions like short stories – capturing the moment of presence yet implying lifestyle of the recorder. In that sense, the video is meant to record one’s continuous life, to maintain to connection with others, and to even create a group of like-mindedness.

Instead of broadcasting, videos of affinity is a narrow-casting that requires a loyal, developing group of people to maintain and nurture the channel. For the sake of efficiency in absorbing information or entertainment, videos of affinity might be more favorable than other platforms of sharing stories in life. Audiences can multitask while watching videos, such as eating or taking a bath. The inter-influence of creators and viewers on each other is also more remarkable on the basis of interaction via content, comments, and subscription. One can share any aspect of their lives via videos, even their ups and downs, or their random daily activities. Despite the lack of traditional form of content, video creators draw others’ attention with their interesting personality and uniqueness of lifestyle as well as content. Especially when YouTube is not simply a social media platform but also a business area where anyone can get paid for automatic ads and advertisements in contract, videos of affinity sometimes are not individual works but the project of a whole team. Again, this might go back to the issue of the anonymous or identified on Internet.

Simply to say, video of affinity is the online version of sharing stories to make friends and create the online network, via which the audience feel enclosed to. Those videos do not require experience in editing but basic tasks are necessary to keep the display clean so as to please viewers to some extent. The frequency and impact of interaction via videos of affinity is as high as others, especially when people can share their videos via Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat or even livestream tool in a lot of social media platform. Those could be vlog, memes, and so on:

Example 1: Kylie Jenner: A Day in the Life
Example 2: We Mixed Every Cake Mix Together
Example 3: Cant Take My Eyes Off Of You (ukulele cover) | Reneé Dominique

The Digitalized Blend of Society and Individuals

In 1492, Christopher Columbus, an Italian explorer, discovered a sailing route to the Americas, connecting the Old World and the New World since then.

In 1986, Vietnam launched a commercial renewal campaign, encouraging the establishment of private businesses and foreign investment, decentralizing the government to stay opened to the international connection.

In the summer of 2019, a video of Amazon on fire became viral and was shared rapidly on social media to call for awareness and action to protect the gradually destroyed environment.

Today, in one touch or one click, people can talk to each other or even know what they like in the past few days.

Obviously, civilization grows with the increase in human interaction and connection, either directly or via the third parties. Now that social network revolution is associated with the breakthrough in communication via technology and the internet, the connection has become more efficient than ever before. In the demand of freedom, industrialism, along with the explosion of information, the term “network society” was created to describe the computer-mediated society.

A network society is a society whose social structure is made of networks powered by microeclectronics-based information and communication technologies.

Castells 2004:3

Thanks to the emergence of the network society that the networked individualism blooms or even explodes. Besides daily physical interactions with others, internet is also the main means of information exchange and effective remote communication. Internet is not simply a giant library where people have to come and briefly read through all the books to find what they can actually take a good use of – instead, it is a smart system including search tool or social media for us to effectively access necessary data and connect with online friends. This way, the collection of information that we gain from the digital society is individualized to match our need, habit, or even personality.

In networked individualism, each person sits at the centre of her or his own set of networks. Rather than being members of external entities such as a church or political organisation, networked individuals command their own unique and egocentric networks.

Lee Rainie and Barry Wellman (2012)

The digital society is characterized with two phrases -“network” and “individualism”. The network society reflects the large scale of a society which is established on the “globally interdependent networks of production, consumption, business, politics, and so on”. As long as there is an internet connection, there would be the information exchange to the rest of the world. News are updated and profiles on social media are viewed as for human basic demand – absorbing new information. However, one cannot have buffets for 3 meals a day, 365 days a year – the same to a surfer who counters a diverse source of information. He would limit the source to those matching his interests.

Internet is the connection point where people can share their similarities and befriend rapidly. Nonetheless, in cases, people could be friends but may barely know a thing of their friends. On social media, we have more freedom in thoughts, options, and actions that the commitment to the digital society is not as intense as in the reality, thus boosting privacy. The network society is a broad term that emphasizes the efficient human relation but may not cover the emergence of personal concentration.

One of the mechanisms for human development is the growth of higher-level demand, which follows the satisfaction of basic demands. Technology is doing so well in flexibly meeting the needs of individuals that the group-centric society shifts gradually to the network-centric society. The value and goal of a group or community is not as evaluated as that of performing personality or uniqueness. This brings up concerns that even in the networked society, people do not have the ability to empathize and comprehend others or unite with others as a whole. Big tech companies may have benefits in updating automatic, multi-functional technology, which puts us in the joy of being in our own shelves, but they may spoil the society in general as being disconnected to some extents.