• Jilanico
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    793 months ago

    They are just commenting the same way they talk to their friends. People quote funny lines from movies right after watching or say stuff like, “Did you see that crazy stunt in the film?? He literally drove off a cliff!!” They get tons of upvotes too because people feel a connection by recounting and acknowledging what they collectively experienced. Thank you for coming to my TED talk.

    • @[email protected]
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      203 months ago

      So much of what’s wrong with online communication is that many people speak to a public audience like they’d speak to a friend in private

      • Jilanico
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        203 months ago

        You mean people getting offended because they misinterpret a friendly jab? Personally, I wish more people commented in a friendly manner. So many toxic comments out there 😬

        • @[email protected]
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          43 months ago

          Not the commentor but the context clues of their comments leads me to think it’s because people talk without a filter, like they would their close friends in a private conversation.

          • radix
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            03 months ago

            Is it so bad to talk without a filter in a place where online community is encouraged?

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      Accurate explanation, though it highlights the NPC / monkey brain level of these comments:

      1. Monke see comment

      2. Monke think same

      3. Dopamine released

      4. Click like button

      5. Monke happi

      Which of course happens similarly IRL, but it’s less cringe as it’s just a passing verbal comment, not captured and displayed on the web for all eternity.

      • No_
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        43 months ago

        That’s just empathy though? Putting yourself in someone else’s shoes and relating to what they thought at the time. You can infer a lot more than surface level description from someone repeating a specific line mentioned in a video.

  • @BakedGoods
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    283 months ago

    This is nothing. Wait until you hear high schoolers addressing “chat” irl while not connected to any kind of chat.

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      I saw people talking about that as being perhaps the first fourth-person pronoun. Pretty interesting idea.

    • u/lukmly013 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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      3 months ago

      But “chatting” also refers to talking, no?
      Unless I misunderstood your comment. I tend to do that.

      Edit:

      talk in a friendly and informal way.

      Very much so. Not sure why I needed to verify it, but I would probably verify it’s indeed 2024 if you told me that it’s actually 1786, just to make sure it’s not me thinking that.

      • @[email protected]
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        53 months ago

        Twitch streamers usually address their live chat as “chat”. The person you are replying to heard high schoolers addressing chat, talking like they were streaming, even when they clearly weren’t.

  • @[email protected]
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    153 months ago

    Go and look at the comments on a video of any pilot doing anything remotely interesting, and see how many comments mention the pilot’s balls.

    They’re not an original bunch.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    I think it’s a way to start a discussion thread on a specific section of a video.

    Would be better if they added some thoughts of their own in the original comment.

  • don
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    12 months ago

    A channer calling people in a video’s comments section NPCs. Peak irony, right there.