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Norwegian anti-Facebook film goes viral

A Norwegian short film about the miseries of life in the age of Facebook has struck such a chord that it has had nearly three million views on YouTube in less than a month.

Norwegian anti-Facebook film goes viral
A still from "What's on your mind?". Photo: Screen Grab from YouTube
Brother film-making trio Shaun, Andrew and Steven Higton, whacked the film, "What's on your mind?" up on YouTube after showing it at the Cannes film festival in May. But they never expected such viral success. 
 
"It's crazy,"  director Shaun Higton told The Local. "I've just been enjoying the ride and watching it go up." 
 
The film follows an everyman character whose life gradually falls apart while the number of 'likes' on his Facebook Page creeps steadily upwards. Eventually, he cracks and posts, "my life sucks", after which all of his 'friends' immediately block his feeds. 
 
"I was looking at my Facebook feed one day, and I was thinking, 'everyone looks so great all the time,'" he explains. "So this idea just popped into my head, 'wouldn't it be cool to follow this guy as his life is going in a downward spiral, and as he goes down, his Facebook 'likes' go up. That was the whole point." 
 
The three brothers, born to a Norwegian mother and an American father, were brought up in Oslo and already work as commercial filmmakers, with Shaun most recently directing an advert for Intersport in Norway.  
 
His younger brother Andrew Adam Higton worked as the film's producer, and his other brother Steven Higton, worked as a video effects artist. 

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NORWAY

Norway Uni pulls coronavirus message citing ‘poorly developed’ US health system

One of Norway's leading universities has been forced to change a message warning overseas students of the US's "poorly developed health services", after it was dragged into a storm of criticism on social media.

Norway Uni pulls coronavirus message citing 'poorly developed' US health system
Norwegian University of Science and Technology is one of Norway's leading universities. Photo: NTNU
Over the weekend, the Norwegian Institute of Science and Technology posted a message on its Facebook page for its students on international postings,  advising them to heed the latest advice from Norway's foreign ministry on the coronavirus pandemic, and return back to Norway. 
 
“This applies especially,” the message said, “if you are staying in a country with poorly developed health services and infrastructure and/or collective infrastructure, for example the USA.” 
 
But on Monday, after a storm of social media criticism, the message was changed, stripping out all mention of the US. 
 
Anne Dahl, communications advisor for the university's rector, told state broadcaster NRK that the university had decided to change the post because the furore was distracting people from the serious underlying message. 
 
“We do not want the expression of a single phrase to overshadow important information, so the specific wording about the US was removed,” she wrote in an email. 
 
The original wording was quickly picked up by Twitter commentators in the US. 
 

It then got viral news coverage, with both conservative outlets like Fox News, and left-of-centre newspapers like the UK's Independent picking up the story. 
 
Several people flocked to the original post to attack the university in the comments. 
 
 
 
 
The post was then changed on Monday to remove all reference to the US. 
 
 
 
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