Top 194 Myspace Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Myspace quotes.
Last updated on November 20, 2024.
I had 60,000 friends on MySpace.
MySpace is an addiction.
MySpace is like a bar, Facebook is like the BBQ you have in your back yard with friends and family, play games, share pictures. Facebook is much better for sharing than MySpace. LinkedIn is the office, how you stay up to date, solve professional problems.
I've never gone on Facebook or MySpace. — © Douglas Coupland
I've never gone on Facebook or MySpace.
I consider us to be one of the first Internet-based bands, especially because we basically started our entire band via the Internet. Before MySpace Music even existed, we had a band MySpace page. We were one of the first fifty bands on PureVolume(.com), and we really built everything from the Internet. That's how we started talking to record labels, that's how we booked our first tours. Without the Internet social networking, like Twitter, we definitely wouldn't be where we are today. It is a huge part of the band.
Safety' hysteria destroyed MySpace in the press. It got MySpace banned from schools, Apple stores, and by well-meaning parents who had been terrorized by what they were reading.
MySpace is my wife... Facebook is my mistress.
I have always had stuff on the internet, way back in the Myspace days, I had a lot of friends on Myspace. And it is just all about like networking - contacting people and showing people, like, your mind.
We want MySpace users to connect with celebrities in the same way that they do with musicians.
I've never had a MySpace or a Facebook page. I avoid that entirely.
I don't read blogs, I don't have MySpace, I don't have Facebook or Twitter - none of that.
I have always had stuff on the Internet. Way back in the Myspace days, I had a lot of friends on Myspace. And it is just all about, like, networking - contacting people and showing people, like, your mind.
Anything you do on the Internet, I want you to be able to do on MySpace. That's the goal and ambition.
I signed my first publishing deal when I was 14, and it was from two records I put on MySpace. — © MNEK
I signed my first publishing deal when I was 14, and it was from two records I put on MySpace.
Today Facebook went public, just as Myspace's last user went private.
In the beginning I remember when I would spend three hours a day on MySpace just trying to comment everyone back, and now, I spend a half hour a night on MySpace just putting up new stuff and answering people back and monitoring all the fan sites, and saying hi and thank you. I'm still way on top of it. I haven't grown out of it because it'll always be something that helped launch my career, and I'm going to keep maintaining it.
I go on Twitter and MySpace and I see all the love, and that's a big help.
The idea was that if it was a cool thing to do online, you should be able to do it on MySpace.
Bands are going to MySpace because it's free and they don't have to know how to do a Web site.
I truly believe that what we're seeing with online dating is very similar to what happened with the Myspace-Facebook era, where Myspace was once this place for online connecting for a very select group of young people. And then Facebook kind of hit at this moment where it was acceptable for everybody to do it.
I never even had a MySpace.
Online dating is cool but I think Myspace and Facebook is a little bit off key.
MySpace is such a weird world to me. I don't have a MySpace account. The stuff that's up there, I didn't set any of it up. Fans set it up.
The most annoying thing I found was all the people pretending to be me on MySpace and Facebook. I'm not a member of either, but apparently there is an 'official' Nikki Sanderson MySpace page, complete with rants about how terrible identity fraud is, which is ironic.
I was kind of a MySpace kid in high school, and people thought since I had so many MySpace friends that they didn't need to be nice to me in real life. They were like, 'You get enough attention online,' or they were jealous or something. I don't really know.
Honestly, I hate Facebook - it has nothing on Myspace. I loved how weird and crappy and wild and trashy it was. Then there was the whole culture of pimping out your Myspace page. I remember spending 10 hours one day learning how to make our Myspace page look more like a message board from the mid-90s.
That MySpace is the story of the year. Everyone but my mother is on it.
Yes, anyone can log onto your "anonymous" band's MySpace page and hear the music. So, in theory you have gotten your music in front of 5 billion people. The other thing is that something has to cause them to go to those bands MySpace page, and it's that reliance on taste makers or radio, that is still very much a part of how music is sold and marketed.
Users socialize to figure out what they're going to do on the weekend. They use MySpace to discover new music and post events. Musicians upload their music. People use it for entertainment purposes or to sell goods in the classified area. MySpace makes what they do in the offline world a) more efficient or b) more interesting.
The online thing has been really big for us: the YouTube videos, the MySpace.
I update my MySpace every day, I update my Facebook fan page, but that's about the extent of it. I don't want to get into extended conversations with people on MySpace, because there are friends I have extended conversations with every day. I'm on the phone every day. There's like five people I just call and yak with every single day. And that to me is my Internet. You can replace the Internet with five really smart friends.
I'm a MySpace person.
I mean, my mom knows Google, but she doesn't know MySpace.
MySpace is the site I wanted to be on.
MySpace is somehow more welcoming than Facebook. And Twittering, I just... Ugh. I like having radio silence. I think radio silence is an important part of any public figure's day. We haven't seen it yet, but there's going to be a generation that comes up where the new trend will be complete anonymity. It'll be cool to have never posted anything online, commented, opened a webpage or a MySpace. I think everyone in the future is going to be allowed to be obscure for 15 minutes. You'll have 15 minutes where no one is watching you, and then you'll be shoved back onto your reality show.
Facebook: What's on your mind? ..Twitter: What's happening? Myspace: Where did everybody go?
Facebook? I have no clue about it. MySpace, none of that. I'm the worst.
If you look at Myspace, Facebook was a better product. It's as simple as that.
Myspace was always a bit edgy. People identified it with edginess and music. — © Michael Birch
Myspace was always a bit edgy. People identified it with edginess and music.
When I started out, I was Avici with one i. But on MySpace, that name was taken.
I started a MySpace teen lit discussion group and invited people to join.
Facebook and Myspace are the U.S. audience, which is tried and true when it comes to being susceptible to ads.
Ultimately, our goal is to provide all artists with the opportunity to make a living on MySpace.
It's not that MySpace lost and Facebook won. It's that MySpace won first, and Facebook won next. They'll go down in the same order.
For most of our users, the vast majority of their MySpace friends are also offline friends. They're just connecting through a different medium when they're on MySpace.
I think we have replaced MTV. MySpace is more convenient. You can search for things, while MTV is just delivering things to you. On MySpace you can pick your own channel and go where you want.
Myspace hurts my eyes.
Almost all the things you can do online can be enhanced by the social structure of MySpace.
I never went online when I was single, aside from flirting with people on MySpace when that was relevant. — © Ben Feldman
I never went online when I was single, aside from flirting with people on MySpace when that was relevant.
And I always say sign up for MySpace and see what your kid is doing. Be his friend on MySpace. Know what your child is doing online because you're going to know more there than you'd ever know when he goes to school.
People aren't interested in music on Facebook in the way they are on MySpace, that's one of the big keys here.
Creative freedom and self-expression is what MySpace is all about.
I have a ton of videos on MySpace and YouTube.
Me and my bandmates grew up with the internet music scene. So we're well versed in how to interact with the online fan base. Obviously MySpace several years back was the main mode of transportation. I found out about so many great bands through the Myspace band of the week feature, it was my goal to be on there. But it's changed a lot. We have a couple social media people helping us out, but for the most part we always oversee our Twitter. We look at a lot of our Facebook stuff. We try and keep in touch with as many people as possible.
I did once have a MySpace site but it was like a badly tended grave.
During MySpace's run-up, journalists continually got their facts wrong about MySpace. They wrote story after story about how Facebook was bigger than MySpace when in truth Facebook wasn't even 1/10th the size of MySpace.
MySpace is so much more about culture and about creativity and expression. So in other words, you go on MySpace and you can find music, and you can find video, and things about politics, and things like that.
There are some things that you have to consider when using MySpace, and a lot of big labels don't do this.
MySpace was so punk.
I check out my MySpace. I'll go on sites to see what's funny on YouTube.
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