Site icon Jason Falls

Who Are You, And How Did You Get On My Facebook Feed?

If you’re like me, you need to see a psychiatric professional. But if you share the same experience I do on Facebook, you see a lot of people in your stream posting items you don’t care about.  For me, if it’s not sports, digital marketing or Elizabeth Shue, I  wonder who you are and why we are friends? The noise makes Facebook seem impersonal and prompts me to do some culling. I perform this seek and destroy process about twice a year.

Yes, this is incredibly two-faced of me. I am an open-sharer, all out there, balls-to-the-wall kind of guy. Virtually everything I think or experience is open season on Facebook, except for close friends or family. I save that for Path, which is an intensely private social network. Over the years, I’ve assumed that if someone wants to be friends with me on Facebook, it’s okay and possibly beneficial. And because, well, I’m awesome.

But now that Facebook is so crowded, I’m not finding it to be that way, particularly since the site culls my feed for me and shows things it thinks I want to see. Facebook is seriously bad at this.

There is a lot to be gained by cutting down your friends list. A recent weeding proved to me that Facebook is purposefully suppressing the posts of certain people. Maybe its friends I seldom interact with or that it thinks I’m not close to, but after weeding out 350 or so connections, my feed suddenly became more relevant. Several friends from high school or college I’d forgotten I was connected to suddenly showed back up. The noisy marketing folk that drowned their content out was gone, making room for them.

Ahhhhh!

Sure, you can go to their page and change the setting for their profile to Close Friends so they’ll show up more often in your feed. And you can unsubscribe from those who are cluttering up your feed with useless sales pitches for shit you’re not ever going to buy.

But sometimes, you just need to do some gardening to that friend list. To offer some assistance for you, here’s my litmus test. See if you can tell which ones are real and which are, well, fun for you to consider:

The bottom line is that I treat Facebook like a landline telephone from 15-20 years ago. You should, too. Your Facebook is for you. You use it however you want – it’s not for the convenience of others. Just be advised — really, really advised — that if you unfriend your in-laws, they WILL take offense. They WILL bring it up on the holidays. And it won’t be pretty. People see unfriending as a slap in the face.

Of course, there are certain relatives we’ll all tolerate some holiday pettiness from in order to not have to deal with their issues throughout the year. You be the judge of who this is for you. I’ll enjoy this week having several of mine wonder if I’m talking about them.

Try this refresh on Facebook and see if it doesn’t help improve your experience. See what Facebook brings you in that home feed now, and if you’re getting more of what you want – and less of what you don’t. If you find you miss the douchebags, go add them back and blame it on a hacker. They’ll buy it, and then you can have all the ass-grabbing photos and self-blovating pats on the back you want in your feed.

And whatever your influence, persuasion or belief, I hope you enjoy this time of year with people you love and kick ass in 2015.

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