I’ve been picked on my whole entire life, and I feel like I started the IAmMoreThan campaign on Instagram to try to find other people who have been bullied and totally overcame it and did something amazing with it.
I’m on Instagram more than any other social platform.
The truth is, in this age of Instagram and Facebook and Snapchat, we know way too much about athletes – and it’s their fault.
I hit Instagram and Twitter as soon as I wake up. And then I check my texts and emails. It’s funny that I check social media before I check my email.
It’s a tough world. One moment, you’re the hottest thing; there aren’t enough hours in the day – you can barely catch your breath. The next moment, it’s all about how many Instagram followers you have.
I’m only on Instagram, and it’s under a ridiculous name, and I’m friends with, like, five people, all of whom I’ve had dinner with.
Can I bond with people and live for 39 days without my Instagram account? Probably! But the real question for me is this: can I be happy doing that?
Every time I go to a march or a rally, and I post it on Instagram, people will go, ‘I’m going to unfollow you!’ And I’m like, ‘I used to play arenas. I’ve lost a lot of fans. I’m fine with that. I’ve had people unfollowing me for years. You’re way behind the times.’
When you’re dealing with the age of Snapchat, Facebook, and Instagram, then everything becomes very selfish and cynical.
If you really want to make a difference you don’t do it via Tweet, via Facebook, via Instagram – you get down, you understand what the facts are and then you offer a path forward.
It is cool to see that the fashion world has really taken to ‘Instagram,’ but, again, it is one of the many examples of many communities, whether you are a chef, a skateboarder, a surfer, a skier.
It’s hard to tell if fashion will hold on to its ‘exclusive’ attitude, or change completely. Only time and Instagram will tell.
There’s almost an element of selfies that is like photo therapy. People look upon themselves in a picture and then they critique themselves without knowing so, and that’s what’s happening on mass on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook.
As users flock to Vine, Snapchat and, previously, Instagram, the social platforms are challenged to continue to be the primary provider of these services to the growing army of smartphone users.
I’ve definitely had my fair share of guys being a little too much with me, and they think just because they follow me on Instagram, they know me.
I think I use writing as a catharsis. I feel sometimes that I’d like to share that with people, so Instagram becomes a vehicle.
There is absolutely a side of me that people don’t know. I’m not myself on Snapchat or Instagram. That’s totally not me.
I first heard about TikTok because all my friends were using it and I would always see popular TikToks come up on my Instagram feed. I finally decided to download it at the end of 2019 and ever since then I’ve been addicted.
I find Instagram interesting to the extent that new royal families are born and die there, such as The Kardashians of L.A.
I don’t like a girl on social media, when you have an open inbox, answering questions from dudes left and right every day. What’s the point? It’s like having your number all out. Everybody think they’re famous when they get 100,000 followers on Instagram and 5,000 on Twitter.
There are those who build careers and companies just out of being popular on Instagram, but there’s nothing behind them.
I get messages all the time on Twitter and Instagram from people back home telling me that they have bought a Wolves shirt. It’s amazing that it can happen.
I’m pretty much on all social media, but Instagram is the coolest, and I use it the most because I take a lot of pictures and I like to post them, but I link them all to each one.
Instagram has said plenty of times that I’m pregnant, Instagram has said a lot of things about me that are not true, so I don’t even know where that’s coming from.
I think it’s essential to engage with your followers. I always used to email bloggers, and no one ever replied, so I try to reply to every comment and question, and although sometimes I regret it when I’m sat on Instagram til 3 A.M., it’s worth it.
I’m just being me on Instagram, and that’s what I love about it. It’s definitely personal, and it’s, like, no one in my team would ever get my password for my Instagram. Like, that’s a no-no.
My brain has so many qualities that do not work with social media. I’m an overthinker, I’m overly private, and those two personality traits just do not work when it comes to Instagram.
Everyone has some secret and some source of pain or sadness and I just said mine first and then everybody went after me. I get it every day in my Instagram direct messages, people thanking me for talking about depression and telling me how it helped them.
I don’t look at negative comments because my parents and family don’t let me. My big sister controls my Instagram, and my big brother controls my Twitter. I also don’t really Google myself or anything like that.
The worst thing to do when I’m feeling insecure or a bit vulnerable is to scroll through Instagram. You only show when life is good on social media. Everyone looks happy all the time.
I don’t have Facebook, Twitter, Instagram or any of that stuff.
I have two daughters, and they grew up and wanted to get into Instagram, and I didn’t know anything about social media. I started it to learn about what they were starting to do and how they communicate with their friends. I opened an account. Very fast, in a few hours, I realized that I actually liked it.
People think I’m consuming all the time, based on my Instagram feed, but I know how to eat and how to pair. I might post the heaviest osso bucco of all time, but I’m not showing the carrots I’m having on the side rather than having a whole other big dish of something.
Through my Instagram, I’m always posting pictures of kitten fosters and if it inspires one person to go to his or her local shelter and adopt, it’s worth it.
I like Instagram – it’s a good way to keep up with my friends without having to text or call all the time, and I really like Snapchat.
Everybody around me had a Snapchat, and I said I would never get on it. I’m still on Instagram, you know? They convinced me to get Snapchat.
I follow 50 people on Instagram who are these humongous families, like five or six kids or whatever, and I just think it’s adorable and so cute.
I’m a believer in feeling good in your skin, so I put bikini pics on my Instagram.
You could have the thickest skin but Instagram and Twitter still affect you. It makes you envious, even if you’ve got everything you could ever want.
I want to know who my client is. I see her on Instagram, but it’s another thing to get to chat with her.
I’m so obsessed with Cardi B. I do nothing but sit and watch her Instagram videos.
Online, I would never friend a random cute guy on Facebook or start liking his pictures on Instagram – even if I had a crush on him. But with Tinder, it’s like following or friending each other at the same time. The risk of revealing your feelings is removed.
Facebook and Twitter and Instagram are excellent ways to keep in touch with the audience and maintain your image an actor.
I’ve always followed this page on Instagram called the Sausage Dog Hotel.
I mainly use Instagram and Twitter to be able to interact with fans and talk to them, and then Snapchat is the app I use to interact with my friends.
I’ve had a lot of trolling on Instagram, things I can’t even repeat on air. The biggest shock was when it was hand-delivered to the Hippodrome theatre before I went on air. Hand-written.
Every once in a while I need a break from Instagram; like six hours long.
Whenever I go on the red carpet and I’m a bit nervous, I just say to myself the mantra, ‘Come on Barbara, you gotta get those pictures posted on Instagram!’ That’s all I have in my mind, like, ‘Look serious now, maybe give a little smile, but a cheeky one,’ but in the end, it’s never how it looks.
Technology moves so fast and social media moves so fast because everyone wants the new thing, but also, everyone wants to be where their parents are not. Once the mom got a Facebook and a Twitter and an Instagram, I don’t want to be there anymore.
I still wear makeup, but I’m no longer hiding behind pot after pot of foundation or endless filters on Instagram.
I’ll probably at some point get involved in Instagram and things like that because I feel it’s reality, and it’s the way people communicate.
It’s really cool to see how many people try to imitate me or wear my stuff. I get a lot of Instagram videos of people doing my entrance. I think that’s so cool. To see the variety of people, little girls, guys, doing it. I never really thought that would happen. It’s amazing.
I love Instagram. I find it to be one of the truly positive social media things that exist.
I don’t follow other fashion blogs, but I do follow other fashionistas on Instagram. Many of them are my friends; it’s really cool: they can inspire me, and they’re also my friends. I also look for inspiration in the street; there are so many fashionable women walking around.
On every single picture on my Instagram page, you’ll find a negative comment. My supporters will normally stand up to that hateful person, and then it will become a big argument, and it’s just a lot. I try to tell myself not to listen to the haters, and I try not to read the comments because it’s not worth it.