While whacking the StumbleUpon button today, I landed on this guardian.co.uk story.
A friend of Jeff and Danielle Smith was traveling across the Czech Republic when he spotted a billboard with those very familiar faces. Upon closer inspection he found they were indeed the Smiths and their children.
As it happens Danielle Smith is a blogger, and not surprisingly, blogged her own take on the story at extraordinarymommy.com. She picked a very sharp and damn near spot-on opening line: “So, this is the price we pay for indulging in social media, I guess.” The story goes on to mention she originally heard about this via a Facebook message.
Social media is only part of the equation here, I think. The guardian.co.uk article mentions that the shop owner “thought [the picture] was computer-generated.” So it’s really a mixture of several factors here: technological illiteracy, the world shrinking thanks in part to the Internet and social media, and (what I personally think is probably the most tragic of the three) a decline in manners caused in part by these but which was probably already in motion years prior to the Internet becoming a mainstream form of communication.
This decline in manners is made more evident by an edit Danielle makes to her post, adding:
…if you are part of the smaller percentage who are commenting only to say that a member of my family (or all of us) are ugly, I won’t be approving the comment. I won’t allow it on my site. I imagine you understand.
That’s right. People have been commenting on her blog, just to say her family is ugly. How tasteless. How shocking. How revolting. How stark a reminder of just how low we are sinking as a society. It’s tragic, when you think about it.
Shawn~
Thank you for your post – for recognizing the spirit in which I wrote my original post on this whole event… and the subsequent posts. I have found the 'social media' aspect of this story to be equally as interesting as the 'who-knew-this-could-happen" portion.
I apreciate your kindness!
Danielle
http://www.ExtraordinaryMommy.com
My pleasure. In fairness, you should probably thank StumbleUpon in turn as well, without which I may never have found the story.
And by the way, all of you look great in that picture.