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Does Your Smartphone Go Next To The Salad Fork Or The Soup Spoon?

Nearly everyone has a smartphone or tablet these days, but what should you do when it comes time to sit down for dinner?
Sean Locke
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iStockphoto.com
Nearly everyone has a smartphone or tablet these days, but what should you do when it comes time to sit down for dinner?

As part of a new tech segment, we're starting a social media advice column in which we'll ask experts your questions about how to behave online. This week's experts are Baratunde Thurston, former digital director of The Onion and author of How to Be Black; and Deanna Zandt, author of Share This! How You Will Change The World With Social Networking.

You can send your questions to alltech@npr.org or put them in the comments below.

This week's question: Is it bad manners to have technology at the dinner table?

Baratunde Thurston is co-founder of the black political blog <a href="http://www.jackandjillpolitics.com/">Jack & Jill Politics</a> and a prolific <a href="https://twitter.com/#!/baratunde">tweeter</a>.
/ Courtesy of Baratunde Thurston
/
Courtesy of Baratunde Thurston
Baratunde Thurston is co-founder of the black political blog Jack & Jill Politics and a prolific tweeter.

Baratunde Thurston: "I'm generally not a fan of gadgets at the table, but it depends on the age of the people I'm hanging out with. These 20-somethings ... everybody just displays their devices. It becomes not a dinner, but a mobile gathering of black screens. But the tone of whoever's house you're in is probably a good rule to follow."

Deanna Zandt works as a social media consultant for media and advocacy organizations.
/ Copyright of Esty Stein
/
Copyright of Esty Stein
Deanna Zandt works as a social media consultant for media and advocacy organizations.

Deanna Zandt: "I also think that we just need to be clear about our needs and expectations. I had a boyfriend once who brought comic books with him when we went out to dinner."

Thurston: "So you said 'had a boyfriend,' so this is past tense?"

Zandt: "Yes, had — this is all past tense. But this was what his normal was. And so we ended up having an agreement where there were dinner nights where we took books with us, and then we would discuss what was going on in our comic books, and it ended up being a really nice thing. So you can facilitate what your needs are and what your normal is."

Thurston: "There's a friend of mine who has this movement called 'I am here.' And the point is, let's be present. So let's, for dinner, put that all away — unless you have a deal where we're going to talk about the tweets and text messages that we're getting."

Zandt: "Which could get really meta really fast."

Thurston: "It's the new normal."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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