Context:
- My partner is Brazilian
- I’ve spent time in Brazil
- There is a large Brazilian community where I live
- I have multiple friends & colleagues that are from Brazil
Having said all of that, Brazil is massive so I still only have a small sample size to go off of.
The Question I was chatting with my partner about screen time the other day. They were saying that there time has gone down recently (it’s about 6.5 hours per day on average).
If we’re watching a TV show and we pause to get some refreshments, they’ll go straight to Instagram/TikTok while I’m up. It’s not even that I’m up for a long time — like 2 minutes
It got me think about the other Brazilians I know. The vast majority of them would be the same. I noticed this while in Brazil as well, basically everyone used Instagram for news and gossip (all the time).
Again, my sample size is pretty small compared to the population of Brazil but from my experience working and engaging socially with people from all over the world, Brazilians seem to be at the top of this “list” of always being online. Is all of this true (for the most part) across the population or is just skewed significantly for me?
personal context, I average 3.5-4.5 screen on time per day. I do use my phone for work as well, so occasionally it’s higher
Here in the US, a huge population goes straight to their phone any time they have more than 20 unoccupied seconds. It’s just reflex for many, not sure it’s specific to any given country at this point.
Why? IMO, if someone can’t go 20 seconds without needing to doom scroll, that’s sad.
It’s almost as bad everywhere in the world. The only true way to avoid this is to do activities outside where using your phone is inconvenient.
Another alternative is the “cellphone box”. I got a friend who does this all the time when he invites us to his home; you put the cell phone in a cardboard box as you enter his house, and forget about it until you pick it up as you leave. He does this because he wants people to actually chat and drink instead of staring their cell phones, it works great.
…that makes me wonder if, due to the decreasing role of religion and the lack of other decent “third spaces”, the internet isn’t filling this role, not just in Brazil but across the globe. I mean… at least in my city the third spaces would be mostly bars and malls, that’s fine for some but not for most people.
From my experience most younger people have this problem. I do have a Brazilian friend that is abnormally chronically online though, and definitely uses the internet differently. He always finds the weirdest, most disturbing stuff from WhatsApp and Facebook.
Mostly true. It reaches the point of being anti-social behaviour disguised as socialisation - you can’t hold a decent conversation with some people any more, as they don’t stop staring their bloody cell phones. And if you don’t have IG/FB/TT (like I don’t) they look at you like you were an alien.
Why do you think this has anything to do with Brazil? And why is this necessarily a bad thing? You think people should just be staring at the wall while they wait for you?
I noticed it the most with my colleagues/friends who are Brazilian. It sparked my curiosity so I asked. I mentioned in my post that my sample size is small (in the grand scheme of things) and my data might be skewed.
No. I was curious and asked a question. My question was more related to how often these things happen and for how long.