Boston

Kiss and tweet: Is new ‘makeout’ Twitter trend a total overshare?

Twitter/TempleMakeouts.
phl_makeout
Courtesy of @TempleMakeouts

 

If every questionable decision you made in college was documented and permanently memorialized on the internet, would your life have taken a different path?

That’s a question many students are having to ponder less frequently, as it’s become reality. And a new trend in which dedicated Twitter accounts disseminate photos of college students lip locking at campus parties is adding more fuel to the arsenal of potentially compromising information available online.

“It’s more like a comedy thing,” said one of six male Temple University students who together run Twitter account Temple Makeouts. They got the idea from similar pages affiliated – unofficially – with colleges across the country.

“We saw schools with over 11,000 followers and thought, ‘Why not make one of our own pages and see what happens?’” the student said.

The Temple Makeouts administrators said they’re not concerned their association with the account – or the pictures it sends out – will jeopardize job prospects.

“This is something everyone does,” one student said. “If an employer’s going to judge you over a picture someone else took and put on the internet and if they’re hunting that hard, they’re going to find a lot worse.”

But Cheryl Hallman, associate director of the Rutgers University-Camden Career Center, offered some words of caution.

“There is a large amount of employers that will Google a potential candidate during the job search,” she said, citing a recent survey showing up to 90 percent use some form of social media during recruitment. “So can it affect them? I would imagine yes, it can.”

Hallman said in her understanding, information and images are difficult – if not impossible – to remove from the web once they’re posted.

Still, the Temple Makeouts crew isn’t thinking about permanence. “I think it’s going to be something that lasts five month to a year,” one administrator said. “It’s going to get old, but it’s just something funny right now.”

More on ‘Makeouts’

The Temple Makeouts crew said their site grew quickly after they put up their first post. They have in less than a month amassed nearly 1,000 followers and sent out 120 tweets, most of them photos.

“I think we got pictures almost immediately after that – two or three in the first day,” one administrator said. “The last two weekends have been good. We’ve been getting 20 pictures a weekend.”

They claim their intent is not to offend, but to stir up social interactions.

“Part of the fun of it is seeing people you know,” one student said. “What so far we’ve seen is a lot of people will retweet one of our tweets and tag a friend.”

Temple Makeouts has so far have received only one complaint and immediately removed the photo. “We definitely wouldn’t do nudity or anything,” the student continued. “We’re trying to keep it as classy as we can – for a makeout page.”

Despite their new found notoriety, the six students are adamant about remaining anonymous. “It’s fun because no one knows we’re running it,” the student said. “Having our own friends don’t know that we run it is very classic.”

Development delayed

Rutgers-Camden professor of psychology and childhood studies Daniel Hart said the meteoric rise in social media use may be seriously affecting young people’s development.

“People imagine adolescence as an opportunity to try on different roles, then after some experimentation, to be able to create your own story of yourself in some sense,” he said.

“There’s some speculation about whether social media gives you less control over your own life story. It’s harder to get away from the dumb things you’ve done because everything is documented.”

He said the loss of control makes it more difficult to make life stage transitions, a problem never experienced by past generations who lived under less online oversight.

“I think that is a little bit different, not being able to, say, go from high school to college and wash away some of the dumb things you did in high school and become a slightly different person in college,” he said. “It’s the same thing with the transition from college to adulthood.”

Quoted

“Teens used to experiment by keeping diaries, which were seen as extremely private accounts of what they were thinking and feeling with little locks and keys on them to keep your prying family members from finding out. And nowadays, it’s hard to keep that information private.”

– Hart

‘No official position’

The Temple Makeouts page includes a disclaimer that it’s in no way affiliated with the university itself. “We have a Gmail address there,” one student said. “If anyone needs to contact us, we’d be readily available to answer any questions.”

The students say they’ve received no disciplinary warnings from the college for their extracurricular activities.

Temple University assistant vice president of communications Ray Betzner hadn’t yet heard about the account on Friday, but was nonplussed. “It has no official association with Temple, so I guess we have no official position on it,” he said.


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
Entertainment

Kim Kardashian, Kanye West have daughter

Reality television star Kim Kardashian has given birth to a girl fathered by rapper Kanye West. People magazine said Kardashian, 32, gave birth on Saturday…

International

Mandela getting better but remains 'serious'

Nelson Mandela continues to recover in hospital from a lung infection but remains in a serious condition, South African President Jacob Zuma said this morning…

National

Second Alaska Peninsula volcano spurts ash, lava and…

Two volcanoes are erupting on the Alaska Peninsula in the southwestern part of the state's mainland but the sputtering emissions of ash and lava at…

International

Thousands gather around Istanbul square after police raid

Thousands of people took to the streets and began building barricades on a main avenue to Istanbul's Taksim Square on Saturday after police firing tear gas raided an adjoining park…

Entertainment

The Word: Kanye does not want to hear…

If you spotted Jesus Effing Christ strolling down Madison Ave in a hoodie, just minding his own business, rolling with his boys the Apostles, would you try to talk to…

Movies

Terrence Stamp, the original General Zod, talks 'Man…

The original General Zod tells Metro why he doesn't think the new Superman film can measure up to Richard Donner's.

Arts

Mia Grace Montross, a true avenger

“Between ‘The Super Hero Squad Show’ and the comics I read her, she’s just a comic freak,” says the father of 4-year-old Mia Grace Montross.

The Word

The Word: Is Amanda Bynes faking her meltdown?

Is Amanda Bynes acting crazy - or crazy like a fox?

MLB

Lackey's strong start leads Red Sox over Orioles

The Red Sox beat the Orioles 5-4 Saturday afternoon

MLB

Source: Red Sox first-round pick Trey Ball likely…

Red Sox first-round pick Trey Ball likely to sign contract this week

MLB

Red Sox bats silenced in 2-0 loss to…

Red Sox fall on second straight night to Orioles

NHL

Hadfield: Stanley Cup Final lacks fairytale storyline

Hadfield: Stanley Cup Final lacks fairytale storyline

National

Celebrate World Blood Donor Day... with Soleil Moon…

Needles aren’t usually people’s favorite part of their doctor visits, but who could resist donating blood if Punky Brewster asked you to? June 14 marks…

Lifestyle

Want a perfect night's Sleep? Check out these…

In our loud, technology-filled world getting the perfect nights sleep can nearly impossible. However, according to a recent Huffington Post article, there are 13 ways…

Education

Ten years of encouraging Hispanic students to stay…

Telemundo hopes to convince students to pursue education.

Education

Pencils down, the ACT is going digital

Taking tests on paper might soon be a thing of the past.

Comments

1

  1. I think that it is disgusting that, as a newspaper, you would think this is acceptable journalism. This is disgusting and I hope the people whose
    photo’s were published on the cover of today’s issue, without consent I might add, know their rights.