Fakebook (5 page)

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Authors: Dave Cicirelli

BOOK: Fakebook
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“Great! See you then, 10:00 a.m.! Oh, one more thing,” Kadisha said. “We need you to record a tape of you at home. Be sure to use all those Limp Bizkit posters as a backdrop!”

Uh oh…those posters didn't exist. They were just images I'd grabbed off eBay and photoshopped in.

“Hey, I just remembered. I have an exam tomorrow. Can we do it Thursday instead?”

“No problem. See you then!”

The next day I skipped class and crisscrossed the state, going from Spencer Gifts to Spencer Gifts, until I had bought up every Limp Bizkit poster in New Jersey. All the while I had my Discman playing through the car's cassette deck, blasting a newly purchased
Chocolate
Starfish
at top volume as I repeatedly yelled, “I LOVE LIMP BIZKIT. FRED DURST IS THE GREATEST POET OF OUR TIME.”

I stayed up all night and crammed—making probably the world's first Limp Bizkit flash cards. I hopped on every message board and every fan page I could find. I read through hundreds of pages of horrendous grammar until I started to absorb the conversation, until I began to believe those opinions were mine. Until I believed in Limp Bizkit.

The email to MTV had started as a goof, just like my email to the Amish webmaster a couple years earlier. All of a sudden the goof became a challenge. And I almost made it happen. I got all the way to the final round of casting before I lost out to some dude with a very new-looking Fred Durst tattoo.

Now Fakebook was a challenge just like those, and I didn't want to come up short again. But it was different than the close call with MTV. It was much bigger, much more complex, and it had the potential to be…well, I wasn't exactly sure what yet. I just knew that I was on to something. Something that might have been right and might have been wrong, but no matter what, it wasn't something small.

To do this right, I needed to understand it. I had to dive in and understand what exactly it was that I'd stumbled into. I looked at my personal messages, finally ready to confront them.

Matt Campbell was a Facebook friend. In other words, he wasn't really a friend at all.

Sure, we were classmates once upon a time. But years later? He was just another piece of my news feed—part of that abstract mass of real-time minutiae.

Facebook friends didn't count. That's what I kept telling myself. The people I cared about, I kept in touch with, right? So those I didn't keep in touch with didn't really mean anything. Which meant it didn't matter what I pretended to do. To them I wasn't even real anymore; I was just a particular arrangement of pixels on a screen. It was all entertainment, and I was providing it.

At least that's what I'd assumed when I started this—and it was an assumption that gave me permission to do Fakebook with a clear conscience. But now I was ready to have that assumption challenged. I logged on to Facebook and read Matt's message to me.

Matt Campbell
→
Dave Cicirelli

Subject: Godspeed, Friend.

I just suggested a bunch of friends that I know would love to follow your travels. Many of them are out around the country and may be valuable assets in your journey. I'm sure many of them will watch, and offer any help (tips or otherwise…lots of campers and outdoorsmen) or just support.

I must say, I really admire what you're doing. It is very “John Galt” and a huge life experience that some people never get to have. I am envious of your fortitude and newfound freedom…a word that many will never get to fully experience, so thank you.

Also, if Ohio comes across your path, my wife knows TONS of really good, down to earth people much like yourself that would love, if nothing else, to just sit down for a couple beers one night and hear the tales of your trip so far.

I will conclude with saying that it is a weird feeling to be almost emotionally attached to your venture. Like a “Truman Show” only with someone I knew while growing up (dating back to teasing Kelly in 7th grade). Your travels, in a small way, amount to my freedom as well.

Godspeed friend.

He was taking this so seriously. He seemed almost startled by how important my page was to him. To him, my Facebook page wasn't a frivolous thing, but an inspiring and powerful experience that he felt like he was a part of.

He was wrong. Facebook was stupid.

I switched windows to Photoshop and looked at Party Ben Franklin. The photos were funny, and I wanted to make people laugh, dammit. The absurdity of all this was why I wanted to do Fakebook in the first place. That's what had captured our imagination at the Dublin House over Labor Day weekend.

Posting the Ben Franklin images would be taking a stand—staying true to my belief that Facebook was just a silly diversion, something that deserved to be seen for how superficial it really was. I wasn't going to be pressured by Christine's criticism or Matt Campbell's support.

I switched back to Facebook to upload the first picture.

But in that split second I inadvertently reread the line about “teasing Kelly in the seventh grade.”

I used to have a crush on Kelly, who used to live next door to Matt. I'd almost forgotten all about that.

I sat back in a room illuminated only by backlit words of support from someone I barely knew, but knew well enough to spark a fifteen-year-old memory that had all but faded away. He'd written a sentence that only had meaning between him and me.

It suddenly occurred to me that Facebook isn't just a website. It's an experience, and a deeply strange, deeply personal one. It involves almost everyone you know and everyone you once knew.

Updates posted by ex-girlfriends living on the other side of the world, your own mother commenting on photos of last night's debauchery, a real-time review of a McDonald's McGriddle from your tenth-grade lab partner—it's laughable on the surface. But it's also hard to ignore the feelings stirred by an ex-girlfriend's update, how much this new transparency has changed your relationship with Mom, how that review keeps an old friend from fading out of memory. The relationships may not have evolved in years, but with Facebook, they haven't disappeared either. It's the cold storage unit of friendships, keeping them on hold, just one compelling post away from revival.

I'd decided to fake my profile because I was looking at Facebook as a whole, but that was a mistake. Everything looks smooth from a distance. But I was tapping into something much less frivolous and much more personal than I'd thought. It was morally complex but also irresistibly compelling. I didn't know what I was on to, exactly…but I knew I was on to something.

Christine was right. Bar crawling with Ben Franklin was too much. It could destroy the project before I even had a chance to understand it. And I wasn't quite willing to have Fakebook fall apart over something this silly, at least not yet.

So instead, my Facebook profile had a pleasant, uneventful few days in Philadelphia, enjoying the virtual hospitality of a friend and keeping Fakebook in a holding pattern.

Dave Cicirelli
Chillin In Philla—after finally having a night's sleep with a roof over my head. Thanks so much Jen.

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Jennifer Morton
Good to have you here Dave, you really do need to shower more often while on the road though.

less than a minute ago via mobile
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Dave Cicirelli
Thanks Christine for putting me in touch with your lovely mother Siobhan at the library. I'm going to spend the rest of the day reading about other journeys out west.

Here's a book on the Donner Party. That worked out, right?

—with
Siobhan O'Loughlin Reardon
.

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Christine Reardon
So glad you guys were able to meet up!

4 hours ago via mobile
· Like

Joe Moscone
I like that Christine's mom looks younger than her. (Burn!)

3 hours ago via mobile
· Like

Marc Flanagan
He's joking, Christine. You look at least 3 years younger than your mom.

3 hours ago
· Like

Christine Reardon
Uhh thanks, Marc?? Haha. You boys are just HILarious.

2 hours ago via mobile
· Like

Dave Cicirelli
What an awkward thing to read next to Siobhan.

less than a minute ago via mobile
· Like

Siobhan O'Loughlin Reardon
It was nice to have met you Dave. Come again.

less than a minute ago
· Like

Dave Cicirelli
It definitely was! Thanks so much.

just now via mobile
· Like

Dave Cicirelli
Leaving the city of brotherly love…Which I got none of from my actual brothers. The family is pissed…

Oh, and I was planning on staying longer, but then shit went down. See I was in west philadelphia, on the playground is where I spent most of my days. I was just, you know, chillin' out maxin' relaxin' all cool. Shootin some b-ball outside of the school. But then…

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Jennifer Davis
…a couple of guys they were up to no good started making trouble in your neighborhood. You got in one little fight and your mom got scared she said…

2 hours ago via mobile
· Like

Ralph Cicirelli
Dave, Your Mom said “COME HOME. You're being an idiot. I'll make you Lasagna.”

2 hours ago
· Like

Joe Moscone
You were better off avoiding that shithole of a city entirely; it's America's equivalent to Mogadishu.

2 hours ago via mobile
· Like

Kaedi Flanagan
Joe, I can always count on a good laugh from you on these Dave posts. Keep ‘em coming! Oh, and Dave, your updates are hilarious, too.

about an hour ago via mobile
· Like

Dave Cicirelli
No, Joe…That was Camden. That's the place I didn't hike through…I ran through it. Haha.

about an hour ago via mobile
· Like

Mark Cicirelli
Bro, you've got to earn this love. By the way, word of advice: don't steal Mike Tyson's tiger. It's just going to end badly. Trust me.

about an hour ago via mobile
· Like

Dave Cicirelli
And Mark, as always you give sound advice. I'm not doing this for your approval, but perhaps, when I return one day you'll be able to say a kind word to me without guarding it with sarcasm.

It's not easy being the artist of the family.

45 minutes ago via mobile
· Like

Joe Moscone
Oh for Christ's sake, Dave. Maybe you can take a waaambulance cross country?

32 minutes ago via mobile
· Like

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