A two hour Gchat, nothing said.
A six-word challenge about your digital life from SMITH Magazine & PBS FRONTLINE/Digital Nation.
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A two hour Gchat, nothing said.
He avoided me and facebooked it.
Wish life had an undo button.
Reverting back to printed word; undigitalism.
Afraid my phone's smarter than me.
Facebook: Therapy for the insecure girl.
I answer spam with sexual fantasies.
My midlife crisis is entirely digital.
I poke you because it's there.
ten thousand friends, never met one
My final rest: burial under e-mails.
Found on craigslist.com: table, apartment, husband.
Many strangers have seen my breasts.
your mom is on my buddylist
Second life became my only life
No, I will not add you
Never marry a man from AOL.
Crawl to laptop to Skype Grandma.
Her inner writer's outed on twitter.
I won't fix your computer, Mom.
SMITH Magazine and PBS FRONTLINE/Digital Nation want to hear your stories about life in the digital age. In six words, tell us how the web and digital technology are changing how you think, work, live, or love. Has something you've posted online come back to haunt you? Would you "Friend" your kid on Facebook? Whether you've done things unimaginable just a few years ago ("I have even Twittered during sex") or are trying to make sense of how rapidly the world is changing ("Dull persona. Second Life ego enormous"), we want to hear who you are, in your digital life, in six well-chosen words. You could win a DVD collection of FRONTLINE films.
Digital Nation is a PBS-FRONTLINE documentary project about life in the digital age. We're exploring what it means to live in a wired world, and we're tackling conversations taking place everywhere, from schools, workplaces, military units, bedrooms, and dinner tables. Our goal: to discover how digital technology is changing what we know about ourselves. Unlike any previous FRONTLINE film, we're documenting and sharing our process as we go. We want viewers to participate: a centerpiece of the project is Your Digital Nation, where the public is invited to send in their own stories.
SMITH Magazine's Six-Word Memoir project is an international phenomenon. Our first two books, Not Quite What I Was Planning: Six-Word Memoirs by Writers Famous & Obscure and Six-Word Memoirs on Love & Heartbreak, are national bestsellers. The newest addition to the series is Six-Word Memoirs by Teens Famous & Obscure—and it's awesome. The books have been hailed in The New Yorker, Newsweek, Time, Vanity Fair, NPR and CBS, and are used as a learning tool in classrooms across the world.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY TO ENTER OR WIN. A PURCHASE DOES NOT INCREASE YOUR CHANCES OF WINNING. Submitting an entry constitutes your full and unconditional agreement to and acceptance of these Contest Rules and the decisions of the SMITH which shall be final and binding on all matters relating to this Contest.
By submitting an entry, you are granting SMITH and PBS-FRONTLINE the right to reprint or republish that entry, along with your name, online or in print. See SMITH's terms for complete details.
This contest begins September 15, 2009 and ends October 15, 2009 and is open to all legal residents of the United States age 18 and older. Prizes are not redeemable for cash and must be accepted as awarded. Winners are decided at the discretion of SMITH judges and all decisions are final. SMITH reserves the right to change the contest rules. Enter as often as you want. SMITH reserves the right to reprint or republish all entries.
SMITH & PBS-FRONTLINE will choose six winners based equally on creativity and writing skills. The first prize winner will receive a DVD of the FRONTLINE shows. All six winners will receive a copy of a Six-Word Memoir book from SMITH Magazine.