Context:

  • My partner is Brazilian
  • I’ve spent time in Brazil
  • There is a large Brazilian community where I live
  • I have multiple friends & colleagues that are from Brazil

Having said all of that, Brazil is massive so I still only have a small sample size to go off of.

The Question I was chatting with my partner about screen time the other day. They were saying that there time has gone down recently (it’s about 6.5 hours per day on average).

If we’re watching a TV show and we pause to get some refreshments, they’ll go straight to Instagram/TikTok while I’m up. It’s not even that I’m up for a long time — like 2 minutes

It got me think about the other Brazilians I know. The vast majority of them would be the same. I noticed this while in Brazil as well, basically everyone used Instagram for news and gossip (all the time).

Again, my sample size is pretty small compared to the population of Brazil but from my experience working and engaging socially with people from all over the world, Brazilians seem to be at the top of this “list” of always being online. Is all of this true (for the most part) across the population or is just skewed significantly for me?

personal context, I average 3.5-4.5 screen on time per day. I do use my phone for work as well, so occasionally it’s higher

  • Cl1nk
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    11
    ·
    1 year ago

    It’s almost as bad everywhere in the world. The only true way to avoid this is to do activities outside where using your phone is inconvenient.

    • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      1 year ago

      Another alternative is the “cellphone box”. I got a friend who does this all the time when he invites us to his home; you put the cell phone in a cardboard box as you enter his house, and forget about it until you pick it up as you leave. He does this because he wants people to actually chat and drink instead of staring their cell phones, it works great.

      …that makes me wonder if, due to the decreasing role of religion and the lack of other decent “third spaces”, the internet isn’t filling this role, not just in Brazil but across the globe. I mean… at least in my city the third spaces would be mostly bars and malls, that’s fine for some but not for most people.