After googling myself, it was sad to see that nothing came up about me. There were many links with “Mike Burch”, but none of them were actually I. I have done this experiment before and noticed I had to add “lacrosse” to find something. If I added lacrosse, I had some player profiles come up from high school and college. I found it interesting to find many Mike Burch’s with facebook and myspace pages that came up (still none that were actually me).
I would not like to be one of many “John Smiths” because I would not feel as unique. Although Michael is a common name, I have never met anyone with the same last name. More than half of my friends from high school were named Mike but we all had nicknames to help separate us. If someone called out “John Smith”, more than half the room would answer. I think diversity is important in finding out who you really are. Our culture magnifies our diversity and allows us to show people who we really are inside. Clothing and music are just two examples of how we can define ourselves to strangers. We can usually make pretty good judgments on people and their beliefs just by the way they dress.

2 comments:
I completely agree that it would be awful to be one of the many "John Smith"'s with the same name as gazillions of other people. I really liked your point on how a person dresses in playing a part in how people characterize them. It definitely impacts how the world sees an individual, and how they classify someone of that name.
I usually wave at cameras at fast food or when you walk in a store. I think it is nice that they constantly remind us we are on film, but I understand the use of cameras for security. Often times that is how and why they catch the criminals. It doesn't actually bother me that they have me on tape because I am not doing anything wrong.
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