I recently got a note from Twitter that I was now being followed by NateRiggs (hello, Nate!). I join the rarefied field of28,963 people whom Mister Riggs follows. Perhaps with his jedi powers, he’s actually able to monitor the feed that springs from 29,000 users, but I kinda doubt it. Instead, this seems to me to spring from the same place as SEO optimization, standardized test prep, and low calorie food: once a metric is designed to measure something of value, an unintended motivation is created to manipulate the metric rather than the reality that metric purports to measure. In this case, I presume Klout is the metric, and that number of followers plays a role in that metric.
My secret hope is that:
1. Lots of people continue to do what I presume Riggs does — follow lots of people and expect that they will follow in return.
2. Many of those same people don’t notice when individuals like me don’t return the favor of following.
3. Klout starts to measure not just by number of followers, but by number of one-way followers (i.e., people who follow you but whom you don’t follow).
More importantly, it seems like an excessive number of people being followed, in Mister Riggs’ case, nearly twenty-nine thousand, ruins any chance of actually using Twitter for the purpose of reading/following those people. Eventually, it just gets down to people who use the @ or the pm function, I suppose.
A Beautiful Blue Death (Charles Lenox Mysteries, #1)
Dashiell Hammett: A Daughter Remembers
In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler’s Berlin
Carnacki, The Ghost Finder


First, a Caveat: I have seen every episode in seasons one through four, and nearly all the rest. There are a few (about two or three per season) that I cannot watch via streaming on Netflix, so I’m working my way through them, but I haven’t finished yet. I will update this list if I see one that overwhelms the story.








