So what can Musk do to Make Twitter Great Again? So far he has made some vague statements about “ freedom of speech”, which most people are reading as “reactivating Donald Trump’s Twitter account” (to be fair, he is a world-class poster), and suggested he’s interested in an edit button, which functionally would be a disaster. The thing with social media platforms is that every one of them eventually dwindles down to something removed from the original bright kernel of the idea that made them – it is such a shame that David Fincher made such a cool film about the founding of Facebook, which is now just essentially a car boot sale that Candy Crush mums and dads “who remember proper bin men” get radicalised on – and Twitter is no different: the bizarre way the timeline never loads in sequential order that doomed experiment with “ fleets” the fact that every viral tweet eventually sours – the user who tweeted it choosing like clockwork to sell galaxy projectors in a sponsored follow-up post. I should just be living in a constant terror that he is going to explode the moon, like every good billionaire should always be threatening to do.Īnyway, now is as good a time as any to assess the state of Twitter: it is not dead but definitely dying, and not because Musk has bought it (though the fact that Twitter was willing to effectively sell Twitter is frankly a red flag).
I should not be able to so palpably see that a billionaire wants me to like him. I cannot in any realm understand why he has decided to buy the website I go to every day to embarrass myself on, but this is less about the deal and more about Musk himself: not uncool, exactly (although it is impossible to be cool and be a billionaire, and yes this does include Rihanna), but a man who creaks and vibrates with a desperate-to-be-liked-by-the-cool-kids energy that most of us shook off towards the end of secondary school. I could care less about anything else in this draft.W ell, it’s happening then: Elon Musk, one of history’s least inspiring Saturday Night Live hosts, has agreed to buy Twitter for approximately $44bn. The only thing I'm taking away from the NFL Draft is that there is a National Gay Flag Football League.
The personally introduced the National Gay Flag Football League at the #NFLDraft. Imagine you wait your whole life to get drafted and then the National Gay Flag Football League calls your name #NFLDraft #GayFlagFootballLeague /bO7N7tyPlR It came as a shock to some of the most dedicated football fans that this was the first they heard of such a league. The organization comprises 22 leagues in United States and Canada.Īs for Goodell’s introduction, it predictably drew plenty of reaction on Twitter. Last season, Raiders defensive end Carl Nassib became the first openly gay player to compete in the NFL. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell introduced members of the National Gay Flag Football League during Friday’s third round of the draft at Caesars Forum. A Twitter screen shot of NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell introducing members of the National Gay Flag Football League during Friday’s third round of the draft at Caesars Forum.