The Cult of Celebrity - What Our Fascination With The Stars Reveals About Us
The Cult of Celebrity - What Our Fascination With The Stars Reveals About Us
The Cult of Celebrity - What Our Fascination With The Stars Reveals About Us
Praise
Title Page
Copyright Page
Foreword
Introduction
The Celebrity-hero
Issue Fatigue
In Conclusion
Index
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Advance Praise for The Cult of Celebrity
“We love having Cooper contribute to the magazine. She has the
rare ability to take what’s going on in the celebrity world and break
it down in real-life terms. This book explores in depth why
‘celebrity’ is so important to our culture and why we care, yet it’s
done with that same genuine, no-pretense style.”
—PETER GROSSMAN, US WEEKLY MAGAZINE
“Being with Cooper is like being with one of your closest friends—
one who happens to be a treasure trove of humor, wit, ease,
incredible sensibility, and a vivacious personality, all wrapped up
with intellect and experience.”
—ERIC NIES, MODEL/ACTOR, MTV’s REAL WORLD
AND FORMER HOST OF MTV’S THE GRIND
skirt® is an attitude . . .
spirited, independent, outspoken, serious, playful and irreverent,
sometimes controversial, always passionate.
Copyright © 2009 by Cooper Lawrence
ISBN: 978-1-59921-335-4
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
FOREWORD
When the hit TV show Scrubs was shooting its final season
with NBC, its star, Zach Braff, posted this on his blog: “The
show has been the most fun job I can ever imagine having;
going to work everyday and acting like a nerdy goofball with
all your friends is a pretty ideal gig for me. Plus now we have
an arcade with classic games like ‘Paperboy’ and
‘SpyHunter’ just in case the job wasn’t sweet enough.”
He left out the ridiculous amount of money the cast
members were paid to act like “nerdy goofballs” all day
together. (According to E! Online, Braff received as much as
$350,000 per episode.) No wonder a recent British survey
found that kids under ten years old believe the “very best
thing in the world” to become is a celebrity. For the 2,500
kids polled, “celebrity” beat out “God,” who ranked at only
number ten. Clearly He needs a better publicist.
Our fascination with all things celebrity has hit a historic
high. Britney Spears claims lead-story status on the AP wire;
Paris Hilton going to and from jail is considered breaking
news on CNN; and according to the Audit Bureau of
Circulations, People magazine sells better than Sports
Illustrated, Newsweek, and Playboy.
One of the great American scholars, Charles Eliot Norton,
once said, “Such things are never permanent in our country.
They burn brightly for a little while, and then burn out.” He
was referring to the likelihood of the longevity of the Atlantic,
but he may as well have been referring to celebrity culture.
He would have been wrong about both. The Atlantic,
founded in 1857, is still around today and I suspect now that
the genie is out of the bottle, celebrity culture and our
attraction to the intricacies of celebrity lives will also endure.
But what about more recent additions to our newsstands,
celebrity weeklies such as People, OK!, Us Weekly? So
fast is the turnover of celebrity news that we can barely
remember what was in those magazines a month ago—
does that mean they will “burn brightly for a little while” and
then go up in smoke?
Greta Garbo once said, “If only those who dream about
Hollywood knew how difficult it all is.” Renowned for living in
total seclusion, hidden from the photographers’ lenses, she
would no doubt be shocked by the media glare that stars
now endure 24/7 and by our ravenous appetite for details of
even the most intimate aspects of stars’ lives. The hounding
and sometimes near-total surveillance of celebrities makes
the attention stars such as Garbo received look tame.
There was a time not too long ago when gossip and
scandal brought the famous down to earth. It humbled them
and made them appear more like us, with faults and
eccentricities, their lives not so different from ours. That is no
longer the case. Today gossip and scandal are the currency
of Hollywood: A stint in rehab brings a cache of coolness, a
DUI charge translates to extraordinary publicity. Things that
were once kept secret—an eating disorder, a childhood of
neglect—are revealed on magazine covers and in tell-all
books. While this media coverage may give the illusion that
stars are just like us, ultimately our attempt to find similarities
can only be met with disappointment.
And that’s because celebrities hold a unique position in
our society. There are only a handful of them, singled out for
attention and adoration from their anonymous mass of fans.
Their influence is great, and millions of people look to them
as experts on everything from fashion to politics. We know
their names, every person they’ve dated, how they decorate
their homes, how much they earned last year, the medical
crises they’ve faced, how they lost their baby weight, who
they voted for, what toothpaste they use, and just about every
other conceivable detail of their lives. Of us, they know . . .
nothing.
Actors, singers, and performers struggling to find fame
and establish their place in society is not new—but the idea
that they are society’s elite certainly is. Not so many
decades ago, those who we now call celebrities were
sometimes even scorned, attacked, or isolated. In his
acceptance speech at the Screen Actors Guild (SAG)
awards in 2008, actor Javier Bardem said, “My
grandparents were actors at a time when actors were not
allowed to be buried on sacred land because they were
‘homosexuals’ and ‘prostitutes’ so it’s been a long way to
come here.”
In his book The Frenzy of Renown, cultural studies expert
Leo Braudy notes that it has always been part of the human
condition for us to desire fame, but that historically, fame
was achieved only by the elite—people such as kings and
queens. He suggests that competition arose between the
reigning monarchs and artists (such as actors, writers, and
painters) over who could best understand and utilize “the
new world of media.” In the fifteenth century that might have
been Gutenberg’s printing press, while today it might be the
ability to receive news the instant it happens on your cell
phone. No matter what the technological advances have
been, it seems that the performers and artists are the ones
who have been able to capitalize the best, take the crown,
and become the new elite.
How did we get to be so celebrity obsessed? More
important, what does this obsession mean for our society,
our culture, and our daily lives? These are the questions that
inspired me to write The Cult of Celebrity.
This book is an investigation of why we idolize stars,
where their fame comes from, and why we deem them
worthy of guiding us through everything from the makeup
aisle at Wal-Mart to which candidate or charity to get behind.
I spoke to celebrities themselves. I spoke to
entertainment-industry insiders—the media, the producers,
the promoters, and the publicists who work in the shadows
to help turn ordinary human beings into stars. And I delved
into the latest research. The result is a book that explores
what makes us so fascinated by celebrities and why we
worship them. It explores the narcissism that makes so
many people—especially young people—not only want to
become celebrities but think they deserve to become
celebrities. And it looks at how constant media exposure to
celebrities affects the way we live our lives today.
Social commentators have begun discussing our
fascination with celebrities, and it has influenced the
direction of social science research. Many of us find
ourselves wondering where the obsession with celebrity
came from and what the implications are. These questions
need to be answered, as this is about more than idle interest
—it’s about issues that impact lives. Take one example: The
journal Developmental Psychology published findings in
2002 that 75 percent of adolescents had a strong attraction
to a celebrity and 59 percent were heavily influenced by their
favorite star. Great news if their idol is Amy Grant, maybe
not so great if it’s Amy Winehouse. The Cult of Celebrity
looks at the facts in order to answer parents’ fears that their
kids are learning bad habits from their hard-partying starlet
idols.
There are some positive lessons we can take from
celebrities—as long as we are aware of celebrity culture’s
negative impacts. To that end you’ll find plenty of advice
from experts so you can take control of the way you and your
family consume the celebrity stories you’re flooded with
every day, and keep them in perspective.
History will remember some of today’s stars as great
talents who led inspiring lives to be emulated and admired.
Others will be reduced to mere Trivial Pursuit questions, if
they’re lucky. Either way, why do celebrities capture
worldwide attention, and what can celebrity culture teach us
about ourselves?
Part One
Made into heroes and divine beings, stars are not simply objects
to be admired; they are objects of worship. Around them the
beginnings of a religion are born . . .
EDGAR MORIN, THE STARS
When the latest blockbuster movie comes out you know you
want to see it if George, Tom, or Brad is in it. When you hear
that Britney is at it again, there is no reason to think of
anyone other than Britney Spears. Ditto Paris and Lindsay.
And you’re not going to confuse Beyonce or Oprah with
some other Beyonce or Oprah, are you? Those at the very
peak of fame need only one name. That’s all it takes to
identify them from the other six and a half billion or so people
on the planet.
Though it may seem like a recent phenomenon, this one-
name thing is far from new. It is as old as . . . well, religion.
People known by only their first names are just as ubiquitous
in the Bible as they are on Entertainment Tonight. Moses,
Luke, Mary, for starters. I don’t need to say “Jesus of
Nazareth”—a simple “Jesus” will suffice. “God,” too—no
explanation necessary.
Okay, so Paris, Britney, and Lindsay might not quite be up
there with the Holy Trinity—but that doesn’t seem to stop us
from worshipping them and a multitude of other stars.
People and Us
Weekly sell millions of copies each week. The airwaves are
flooded with shows such as Extra! and Access Hollywood
that keep us up-to-date with the minutest details of stars’
lives. And who among us has never rushed to tell a friend
some juicy celebrity news morsel? Few can resist the
attraction of our glamorous twenty-first-century celebrity
gods and goddesses.
It has even been shown that the less strict you are about
following a religion, the greater the chances are that you will
worship celebrities. For decades John Maltby, a renowned
psychologist at the University of Leicester in the UK, has
been studying the connection between how religious a
person is and the degree to which they worship celebrities.
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam forbid the worship of all else
other than God. But Maltby and his colleagues have found
that among religious folk, only the most puritan—those who
have a very strong and literal belief in Church authority and
divine law—heed this commandment when it comes to
celebrity worship. The rest don’t see a link between the
commandment “Thou shalt worship no other gods” and the
time they spend following their favorite celebrities. Or they
see the link and simply can’t resist the pull of celebrity. Either
way, they worship not in the house of the Lord, but at the
altar of In Touch Weekly. For many of us, celebrity is, in fact,
our Church.
One-named Gods and Goddesses
They can’t let go for the same reasons that we can’t let go. We’re
engaged in a mutually destructive relationship with the world’s
unstable citizens.
HEATHER HAVRILESKY, TV CRITIC, SALON.COM
Above her, beneath her, and around her, the Machine hummed
eternally; she did not notice the noise, for she had been born with
it in her ears.
E. M. FORSTER, THE MACHINE STOPS
If you come to fame not understanding who you are, it will define
who you are.
OPRAH WINFREY
This girl is not alone. There are kids in their teens and
early twenties who feel they deserve to be “found” and that
they don’t need to do anything to make it happen. And why
not live that way? Their parents aren’t kicking them out
anytime soon. Over the past thirty years there has been a
steadily increasing trend for people in the eighteen to thirty
age group to live with their parents. The most recent
research shows that over eighteen million emerging adults—
or 40 percent of single people in that age range—have
moved back home. Higher housing costs and lower wages
for entry-level jobs have contributed to this trend, but several
experts cite something else. For example, Twenge, whose
latest book is The Narcissism Epidemic, argues that it is
because emerging adults will not settle for second best. She
writes: “You feel entitled to get the best in life: the best
clothes, the best house, the best car. You’re special; you
deserve special things.”
On my radio show one night a twenty-five-year-old caller
agreed. He said, “Why should I have a not-so-nice car and a
crummy apartment, when I can live in my parents’ beautiful
house with good food and clean towels? It wouldn’t be as
nice if I lived on my own. Why should I spend my hard-earned
money on bills and rent when I can just move home?”
Stars Don’t Have to Grow Up
Celebrity should be the result, not the goal. It’s time for
emerging adults to focus on developing skills and useful
personal traits instead of just chasing the fame ideal.
McCain advises, “There’s a certain amount of trial by fire,
and while I welcome all comers, the incinerator is 220
degrees and they’ll get burned up. Only the ones who are
Teflon coated will survive.”
Strengthen your core. I’m not talking abs. I mean that
we all need to focus on the personal qualities that really
matter, that really endure, such as competency,
compassion, empathy, social skills, and solid self-
esteem. These things, much more than the fleeting joys
of fame, are what are important. Once the sparkle has
faded, what really matters is a strong sense of self and
your place in your family and community.
CHAPTER FIVE
I think young girls look up to people who are older than they are,
because you’re always looking ahead.
AMANDA BYNES, QUOTED IN USA TODAY, AUGUST 15, 2005
My point is, the way her generation, and even our parents’
generation, process information is different from the way we
do. And yep, that means the ability of the current crop of
children and teens to process information—editing and
weeding out what is not relevant—is evolving at a faster rate
than we perhaps give them credit for. These are the babies
of the information technology age; an endless stream of
media images of celebrities is what they were born into, and
we need to recognize that they, too, just as other
generations have done before them, are constantly adapting
and learning how to process all this information and
imagery. Just as you have no trouble leaving an answering
machine message for someone, your kids are probably
doing a better job of editing down the flood of celebrity
information than you realize.
Children are becoming comfortable with technology at
younger and younger ages. When I was doing my practicum
at Nickelodeon for grad school, I worked on a study that
found that kids as young as two and three years old were
able to turn on a computer and click on their icon on the
desktop. Maybe they couldn’t read yet, but they knew how to
work the computer and what their icon looked like. This
speaks to not just the ease with which technology makes its
way into each generation, but how young people learn to
adapt. Part of being able to adapt is making technology fit
into your life and not the other way around. But when children
at any age participate in normal social developmental stuff
such as e-mailing, watching entertainment TV, and reading
celebrity blogs, it seems to parents as if it’s just everywhere
and that kids must be absorbing more than they can handle.
The fact that celebrities are all pervasive doesn’t
necessarily mean that they are all-powerful, though. Sure,
kids today may be exposed to the most extreme volume of
images of celebrities that anyone up to this point in human
history has been, but is this endless stream of celebrity
images turning them all into drunk drivers? Cocaine
addicts? Pole dancers? Happily, no.
Parent vs. Celebrity Death Match
When I take my dog, whose name is Mr. Dog (don’t ask), for
a walk, he likes to sniff everything thoroughly, even though
yesterday he sniffed the same tree, the same newspaper
kiosk, the same trash can. My husband and I have decided
that’s how he catches up on his neighborhood news—it’s his
daily celebrity jones. We don’t know exactly what reports he
is getting or how his gathering of doggie data helps him
make decisions—in fact, what goes on inside his head is a
mystery to us. He’s smart and loving, yet he’ll think nothing of
cleaning himself in front of guests; he has a great sense of
smell, yet he sometimes growls at his own reflection. Why?
Because he has no self-awareness.
Not like you. As a human, you have a clear idea of who
you are. You have the ability to make conscious decisions
about what to do with your life, where to live, what to eat,
what to wear, what to buy . . . don’t you?
Before you start to feel too superior to Mr. Dog, consider
this: Scientists still can’t agree on where human
consciousness and self-awareness even come from. The
truth is, just as my dog relies on the aroma of a lamppost to
decide which way he wants to walk each morning, you rely
on a whole range of influences—your culture, society, family,
peers, the media—to help form your consciousness. It’s as if
your parents went away for the weekend: No adult is in
charge, anything goes, and from one moment to the next
your choices can be influenced by the many varied
messages you receive from the world around you. (If you
could just sniff a lamppost to get your cues as to how you
should behave, imagine how much simpler life would be!)
While this vulnerability may be news to you, it is something
that advertisers and marketers know only too well and have
been taking advantage of for many years in advertising, as
well as in product placement in TV shows and movies. One
of the key weapons in their arsenal is the celebrity
endorsement. If we worship celebrities and aspire to their
lifestyle, who better to influence our decisions; who better to
tell us what we need to buy, who we need to be, which
products and services we need to surround ourselves with?
When a star makes a judgment from up high on their
celebrity pedestal—I prefer this brand of cola, mascara,
credit card, car insurance—it enters our consciousness,
even though we may not be aware it’s happening.
I don’t think Mr. Dog was ever too concerned about what
Eddie, the dog from Frasier, ate, and I don’t think he’s
desperate to have the new cute outfit Jessica Simpson just
put her dog, Daisy, in. But advertisers are banking on the
fact that because Simpson is a celebrity, I will want to wear
whatever she’s wearing and buy whatever products she’s
endorsing. We are heavily influenced by celebrity culture, so
it’s no wonder that everywhere we turn there’s a celebrity
telling us what to buy.
Celebrity-endorsed Childhood
If I had any doubts about whether spending habits are
affected by celebrities, they vanished one night during
my radio show when I had listeners call in to talk about
the expensive things they’d bought their children. A
divorced mom called to say that she purchased a $300
cell phone for her six-year-old daughter. The little girl
had seen Hannah Montana star Miley Cyrus carrying
one and begged her for it until she succumbed to guilt
and bought it.
According to Teenage Research Unlimited, $53.8
billion is spent each year by families with children
between three and twelve years old. The stakes get
even higher when kids reach their teenage years. In
2006 alone, teenagers spent $189.7 billion, says a
report by the market research company Packaged
Facts, and it is predicted that figure will rise to $208.7
billion by 2011. And what are children and teens
consuming? Anything a celebrity tells them to. A study
published by the Journal of Marketing in 2006 found
that one of the key assets advertisers have when they
market to your children is . . . the celebrity endorsement.
The fastest-growing consumer group for celebrity-
endorsed goods is indeed teenagers.
The Human Brand
Sometimes it’s not the overt sell, the “Look who we’ve got
our Hanes on now,” as much as the influence celebrities
have when they are spotted carrying a certain handbag or
wearing UGG boots. Stars can set off a consumer craze
simply by being snapped with a product when they’re out
strolling with their baby or shopping with a girlfriend.
Paparazzi shots of celebrities such as Madonna and
Oprah wearing Juicy Couture helped the company turn cute
velour track pants into a multi-million-dollar business. There
was no doubt stars loved hanging out in Beverly Hills in the
comfy yet stylish gear, and Juicy Couture was able to
capitalize on that. The design pair, Pam Skaist-Levy and
Gela Taylor, didn’t just hand out gift bags at awards
ceremonies. Instead they might spend as much as $100,000
to take a suite in a five-star Hollywood hotel for a day,
inviting celebrities and the all-important media to drop in and
pick up samples of their latest line. Skaist-Levy and Taylor
are smart ladies, because every time female stars such as
Hilary Duff, Reese Witherspoon, Jessica Alba, Mischa
Barton, or my Tori is snapped on the streets of LA or New
York wearing Juicy, it’s like free advertising for the label.
According to the Media Awareness Network, we are
exposed to, on average, 3,000 ads per day. Advertising is
becoming just white noise all around us and, especially
since the advent of TiVo, it’s becoming harder for
advertisers to make us sit up and take notice of their
products. So over the last decade or so, they have been
using all sorts of new tricks—guerilla marketing, viral
marketing, and product placement.
Starbucks has been said to indulge in this kind of
marketing, but has it gone too far? In almost every celebrity
weekly featuring Ben Affleck, Jennifer Garner, and their
family, one of them, if not all, were seen carrying a venti
Mocha Skim Latte Whatever. These pictures appeared so
often that rumors began to fly that Starbucks had a seven-
digit contract with the couple to be seen in public with their
product, something the company and the actors’ reps
vehemently denied.
Before that it was the Olsen twins, who seemed to have
Starbucks cups surgically attached to their lips at one point,
and then it was Renée Zellweger. Those of you who get your
caffeine fix from the popular chain are probably familiar with
having your name scrawled on the side of the cup on a busy
day, but do you walk down the street presenting your cup as
if it were a nametag? I remember seeing one shot of
Zellweger holding her Starbucks cup and in big black letters
directly facing the camera, there was “Renée.” Okay, it could
have been a coincidence—but my point is, would you really
blame a company for exploiting this not-so-subliminal effect?
Stars Behaving Badly
But less than a year later, she had even more contracts
than before, and her income was estimated to be twice what
it was before the cocaine scandal. She had joined Audrey
Hepburn and Jackie Kennedy in Vanity Fair’s Best Dressed
Hall of Fame and was promoting Versace, Calvin Klein,
Bulgari, Stella McCartney, UK cell phone company Virgin
Mobile, and Nikon. She remained the face of Rimmel . . .
and Burberry renewed her contract. Clearly these
companies saw her not so much as a drug-addled mom
potentially endangering her young daughter but more as
someone whose dangerously chic image was just right for
their brands. As Vanity Fair’s Amy Fine Collins said in
August 2006, “Even a mantle of depravity can be worn with
panache.”
The lesson here? While companies are often quick to
express their outrage and disappointment over a celebrity’s
indiscretions, morals are a relative thing in the world of
commerce. It seems that a celebrity’s misbehavior is only
considered bad when consumers threaten to stop buying the
product he or she endorses.
What Halle Berry Knows About Makeup
How much easier life must have been for celebrities during
the golden age of Hollywood, when a star just had to be a
star. No one expected Gloria Swanson to roll up the sleeves
of her mink coat and hand out aid to orphans in Africa. Cary
Grant could drink martinis all night long if he felt like it. He
never had to show up for a UN meeting the next morning or
hop a red-eye to go lobby Congress. When Marilyn Monroe
crashed and burned, she left behind a legend, not a handful
of charitable trusts and foundations. And all that was fine
with us.
Stars played heroes in Hollywood movies, but we
expected real people to take on the job of heroes—great
wartime leaders such as Franklin Delano Roosevelt and
Winston Churchill, civil rights campaigners such as Martin
Luther King Jr. and Rosa Parks. We looked to religious
leaders and elders in our own communities for inspiration
and social guidance. It wasn’t the job of a celebrity to save
the world or show us how to be the best we can be. The job
of a celebrity was to entertain us and be glamorous.
Now a growing group of A-list stars seem to spend just as
much time performing as they do campaigning for social
justice, finding cures for diseases, ending world debt, and
saving the environment. In turn the C- and D-listers feel that if
they don’t align themselves with a charity or commit to a
world-saving cause, well . . . they’re never going to be
famous. And it’s not only the bleeding-heart liberal lefties, it’s
all celebrities, no matter which way they lean or whom they
support politically. They are no one without a charitable
affiliation. Being a good performer or great beauty is no
longer enough; a star has to be a humanitarian.
Advocacy has also become the way to get back into the
good graces of the American people, especially if you’ve
screwed up publicly. Even Paris Hilton made a humanitarian
effort, or at least aimed a promise in that direction, after her
twenty-three-day jail stay in 2007. She was going to save
orphans, or somebody in Rwanda, she wasn’t sure. (Maybe
she had been advised that they were wearing last year’s
look, or she found out they didn’t have Starbucks there.) The
trip never happened, but when even the Paris Hiltons of the
world recognize the value of being—or at least being seen
as—a humanitarian, you know something big is happening.
The Celebrity-hero
International Adoption
Although the media often portray a celebrity
international adoption as a simple, spontaneous act, in
fact it is a complex process that can involve many legal
and bureaucratic steps. The State Department cautions
that an international adoption is considered a private
matter between the adopting parents and the foreign
court, operating under the specific laws and policies of
that country. Authorities in the United States cannot
intervene on behalf of prospective parents in their
dealings with foreign courts, but the State Department
does provide extensive information about the process
of international adoption.
A tiny proportion of Americans adopt children. With
all of the children in this world who need homes and
families, we should all think twice before judging Mia
Farrow, Madonna, or Brad and Angelina because they
put their strollers where their mouths are.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Celebritocracy
Vote or Die!
SEAN “P. DIDDY” COMBS
It’s not just that celebrities are being used to bolster political
campaigns—in an increasingly celebrity-driven world,
politicians must cross the line and become entertainers, too.
If I say, “Clinton plays the saxophone,” I bet you immediately
think of Bill Clinton, who famously jammed the tenor sax at
one of his inaugural balls. (If you think of George Clinton of
the P-Funk All Stars, an actual musician, then you rock.) This
blurring of the line between politics and entertainment is a
very unique and modern phenomenon. Can you picture
George Washington blowing sax? At least John Quincy
Adams actually played the flute, but I’m guessing after
helping to create the Monroe Doctrine he did not wow his
constituents with a wicked flute solo.
During the 2008 presidential primaries, Barack Obama
couldn’t just get by on his health care platform, he had to be
seen doing that clumsy little dance with Ellen DeGeneres on
her show. In the same campaign cycle, the Clintons, Obama,
and John McCain appeared (separately) on Saturday Night
Live. Candidates Mike Huckabee, McCain, and Dennis
Kucinich also appeared on The Daily Show and The
Colbert Report—Kucinich even did a whole skit with
Colbert.
Apparently it’s no longer enough that politicians know how
to govern—they also need to know how to entertain and be
as appealing as celebrities. Along with that Ivy League
education and years of public service, you’re gonna need
media training, a personal trainer, a publicist, and image
consultants.
This politicians-as-entertainers trend began in 1960 with
the Kennedy-Nixon debates—the first ever to be televised.
Nixon, naive about TV, arrived at the studio with a five
o’clock shadow, wearing an ill-fitting shirt, and twenty
pounds overweight. He refused to wear makeup and as a
result looked sallow, sweaty, and tired on camera. Kennedy,
who was on steroids for Crohn’s Disease at the time, looked
tan, thin, young, vibrant, handsome, and all made-up like a
cover model using the cameras the way an actor would.
Intellectually the two may have been on par, but physically
they definitely were not, and it shaped how voters saw them.
Voters who listened to the debate on the radio believed
Nixon had won it, while TV viewers thought Kennedy was the
winner by a large margin.
It’s even more intense nowadays. A political insider who
asked to remain anonymous told me, “There is definitely a
hyper-vigilance now as to how our candidates should look
on camera and in photographs. But just imagine Abraham
Lincoln, arguably our greatest president, in HD. He might not
have been elected—Stephen Douglas was definitely the
better looking of the two.”
If there’s one thing I know about myself it’s that I have never and
will never drop the ball when the chips are down. I pride myself on
that. The higher the stakes, the happier I am, the better I will be.
ROBERT DOWNEY JR.
I’ve always had really low self-esteem, and I still do. What’s weird
about that is being onstage, and the love that you get, and the
adoration that you feel from your real fans. It’s hard for a partner to
compete . . .
MARIAH CAREY
The future of our society can look quite grim when you view it
through the prism of celebrity relationship disasters. It may
appear that no one respects marriage or committed
relationships anymore. But don’t despair. While the state of
celebrity relationships in some ways mirrors changes in
society as a whole, we must not forget that celebrity couples
have some unique characteristics that add to their risk of
relationship failure.
Recent research into celebrity narcissism reveals
something profound that explains not only their relationship
challenges but some of their diva-like behavior as well.
On ABC’s 20/20, Dr. Robert Millman of Cornell’s Weill
Medical College, explained a psychological syndrome he
was the first to identify, called “acquired situational
narcissism.” Narcissism—a personality disorder
characterized by having little empathy for others and a
grandiose sense of importance—was traditionally thought to
begin only in childhood. That was until Millman began seeing
patients who had acquired it later in life, after they had
become enormously successful.
Acquired situational narcissism affects not only famous
entertainers but also politicians, billionaires, renowned
authors—anyone who has gained a degree of success,
fame, or notoriety. When a person reaches the status of a
celebrity, according to Millman, it can lead to narcissism and
behavior that borders on unspeakable, antisocial, and
sometimes angry. On 20/20, ABC used the example of Alec
Baldwin’s abusive cell phone tirade to his young daughter in
2007. Millman told ABC that a narcissistic celebrity’s
outrageous sense of entitlement can be accompanied by
anger: “It’s this huge rage that you’re not as great as you
could be, or you’re not being perceived as great as you
could be.”
If you think you are better than everyone else (including
your partner), regularly take advantage of others, need to be
admired at all times, and lack empathy, how can you expect
to have good relationships? Clearly if celebrities succumb to
acquired situational narcissism, they will struggle to have
successful and healthy relationships.
And it’s not only acquired narcissism that afflicts
celebrities and dooms many of their relationships. Dr. Drew
Pinsky and his colleague Mark Young have also noted that a
career in the public eye attracts those who were already
higher in the trait of narcissism.
A career in the spotlight is also often chosen by those with
personalities high in impulsivity, which accounts for their
ability to drop everything and fly to a location half way around
the world at a moment’s notice. Impulsivity can be beneficial
for stars’ careers—for their relationships, not so much.
Addicted to Love
There is something else that can contribute to
celebrities making relationship mistakes. And it’s
something we can all relate to: a passion for what they
do, a love of their craft.
The passion of falling in love and the passion of
taking on a new film role trigger the brain in the same
way. (And so too, interestingly enough, does substance
abuse and other addictive behaviors.) So, Robert
Palmer wasn’t too far off when he sang “Addicted to
Love.”
It works like this: When the human brain experiences
this kind of pleasure, the levels of the hormones
dopamine, adrenaline, and serotonin increase. When
those hormones kick in, you can’t think logically. That’s
why you are better off waiting until that first flush has
waned to assess your partner in a realistic way rather
than in an impulsive way.
When those chemicals are raging and you get
dumped, you feel incredibly devastated. It’s like being
addicted to drugs and then suddenly being forced to go
cold turkey. But a celebrity doesn’t have to stay off her
drug for too long: She just needs to show up at the
Beverly Wilshire Hotel and I’m sure some young
Hollywood hunk licking his wounds will be there.
If not, she can call her publicist and arrange an
introduction . . . done! Stars also have the opportunity to
be cast in a new film or involved in a new project—
something new to get those passion triggers in their
brains flowing again. While the rest of us have only Ben
and Jerry to comfort us.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
I was on the Tyra Banks Show. Maybe you saw it. I was
there to tell Tyra and her audience how to “Decode Their
Man.” Decoding men is a pastime of mine; I started young.
When I was in the fifth grade, I knew Mark Dexter liked me
when he poured juice on the floor and told everyone that I
peed. It wasn’t until that summer when I hit him across the
face with a hockey stick that I abruptly ended our budding
romance. He asked me out again in high school, so I knew I
was right on target.
But decoding men isn’t all that hard if you think about it—
what’s there to decode? Men are simple creatures, and I
didn’t need all of the research that I brought with me to the
Tyra show to prove my point. I just wanted to share what the
science had to say with an audience who, as it turned out,
was looking for uncomplicated answers. Men are indeed
uncomplicated, so they weren’t far off. I reminded them of
things they already knew and then shed some light on a few
mysteries. Tyra never did a follow-up, a part two—“How to
Decode Your Woman”—because nobody has ever been
able to. Women are hard to decode, and celebrity women
are virtually impossible.
Famous men, however, are just as straightforward as
regular men, so their image makers don’t face the same
challenges as those of female stars. Male celebrities don’t
make sex tapes, or if they do, we just don’t care. That’s
because men having sex isn’t scandalous. Scantily clad men
are not provocative—not to straight women, anyway. Even
David Beckham’s oversize (some say doctored) package in
that Armani underwear ad only enhanced his image. He
didn’t seem slutty, sad, pathetic, or objectified. In fact
perhaps the main reason the Beckham ads were so
noticeable was simply the rarity of seeing a male celebrity in
such an overtly sexual pose. If it had been a sexy female
celebrity reclining in her underwear—maybe with, gasp,
padding to highlight her cleavage—the ads would have
created barely a ripple.
This may be why people went nuts when the
unconventional Maggie Gyllenhaal posed in teddies and
garters for Agent Provocateur. It wasn’t because she was so
provocative, but because she wasn’t. She was criticized for
being unsexy, too old, and an acquired taste, as opposed to
previous models for the lingerie line such as Kate Moss and
burlesque star Dita von Teese, who were universally
accepted as sexy, young, or voluptuous. Gyllenhaal is
nonthreatening like a regular woman and doesn’t look like a
supermodel or a Hollywood starlet; she looked the way a
plain Jane would look in handcuffs and a garter.
The ads were designed to appeal to the thirtysomething
married woman, not sixteen-year-olds who are searching for
a sexual identity. Most teen girls have no idea who
Gyllenhaal is, unlike, say, Jessica Simpson or Fergie, two
celebrities who also appear in highly sexualized ads. I for
one was glad to see Gyllenhaal breaking the stereotype of
the lingerie model and representing ordinary women’s
sexuality, because sexy ads featuring young girls’ celebrity
idols drive me bonkers. My good friend’s thirteen-year-old
daughter Caitlin has them plastered all over her bedroom
wall. I don’t get it, and it does concern me that she could be
so heavily influenced by ads for products suitable not for
young teens but for adults.
Hypersex Is the New Cybersex
Just look at any epic film made over the last ten years.
Chances are, anywhere from five to eight of the lead
characters are male, whereas only one or two are female.
The Oceans Eleven series is a great example. (Not that I’m
implying George Clooney, Brad Pitt, or Matt Damon are gay,
although even if they were, I would drool over any one of
them still.) Need more proof of the gender inequality in
Hollywood? In 2007, Reese Witherspoon was crowned the
highest-paid actress in Hollywood, garnering $15 million to
$20 million per film. Which sounds great, until you learn that
Mel Gibson and Tom Cruise were usually making about $30
million a film . . . oh, plus a share of the movie’s box office
profits, according to Michelle Grabicki of the Hollywood
Reporter. Johnny Depp earned $92 million in one year,
mostly thanks to the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise.
You’re probably saying, “What about Oprah? Her salary has
been reported at $260 million a year.” But remember, we
are talking about actors who rely solely on their acting for
their income. Not folks who have their own network and
magazines.
Bump Watch America
Aaliyah
Abercrombie and Fitch
Abrams Artists Agency
activism
disease awareness
early examples of
global efforts
HIV-AIDS
overseas adoption
political
actors. See also celebrities; specific names love scenes
and relationships
number of roles and salaries of
politics of
Adams, John Quincy
Adidas, and Run-DMC
adolescents
attitude of parents
celebrities as role models
celebrity advertising and money spent
and celebrity politics
and Kurt Cobain’s suicide
and eating disorders
impact of television on
narcissism and desire for fame
and sexualized images
strategies for
transition to adulthood
adoptions
adults
baby boomers
and children’s self-esteem
communication with children
defining success
handling failure
handling pressure
overachieving
percentage unmarried
relationship standards
as role models
self-esteem of
advertising
ads seen per day
celebrities as brands and entrepreneurs
and celebrities’ behavior
and designers
early celebrity endorsements
sexualized images in
advocacy. See activism
Affleck, Ben
Agent Provocateur
agents
Aguilera, Christina
Alba, Jessica
Alexander, Jason
Ali, Muhammad
All My Children
American Idol
American Marketing Association
American Psychological Associations (APA)
American Psychologist
American Quarterly
America’s Sweethearts
Anderson, Pamela
Aniston, Jennifer
anorexia. See eating disorders
The Apprentice
Archives of General Psychiatry
Armstrong, Lance
Arnett, Jeffrey Jensen
Ashe, Diane
athletes, images of
The Atlantic
Attermann, Robert
B
Cacioppo, John
Cannon, Nick
Carey, Mariah
Carter, Clifton
Cases Studies in Health Communication (Beck)
Casey, Mary
casting directors
Catwoman
Caughey, J. L.
causes. See activism
Cavuto, Neil
celebrities. See also entertainment industry; specific
celebrity names
activism of
advertising and endorsements
behavior of
charisma of
illusion of intimacy with
perks for
and politics
relationships between
“religious” feelings about
sexualized images of
Celebrity Worshippers: Inside the Minds of Stargazers
(Houran)
Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and
Engagement (CIRCLE)
Chanel
Chaotic
Chaplin
charisma
Cheadle, Don
chefs
Cheney, Mary
children. See also adolescents
advertising and money spent
impact of sexualized images
influence of celebrities on
and technology
true role models for
with unmarried parents
Chrysler Corp.
Churchill, Winston
Clapton, Eric
Clash
Clinton, Bill
Clinton, George
Clooney, George
activism of
and relationships
clothes and clothing labels sexuality and advertising
Cobain, Kurt
The Colbert Report
Collins, Amy Fine
Collins, Stephen
Combs, Sean clothing line
Commander in Chief
Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
Confessions of a Teen Idol
Connelly, Jennifer
Connery, Sean
Connolly, Billy
Corneau, Allison
Cosby, Bill
Cosby, Rita
couples. See relationships
Couric, Katie
Cox, Courtney
Crane, Stephen
Criss, Peter
Crow, Sheryl
Crowe, Russell
Cruise, Tom
Cruz, Penelope
CSI
C-SPAN
Culkin, Macaulay
Cult of Perfection (Lawrence)
Cyrus, Miley
D
Daily Show
Damon, Matt
Danes, Claire
Danza, Tony
Darfur, crises in
Davis, Geena
Dawson, Rosario
Dawson’s Creek
Day-Lewis, Daniel
DeGeneres, Ellen
de Givenchy, Hubert
Deluxe: How Luxury Lost Its Luster (Thomas)
De Niro, Robert
Depp, Johnny
designers, clothes’
Destiny’s Child
Developmental Psychology
Deveny, Kathleen
Dexter, Mark
Diana, Princess of Wales
DiCaprio, Leonardo
Die Another Day
DiFranco, Ani
Dion, Celine
directors
diseases, awareness of
breast cancer
eating disorders
HIV-AIDS
public’s reaction to
Dixie Chicks
Downey, Robert, Jr.
Dre, Dr.
Drescher, Fran
Duff, Hilary
Duran Duran
Duvall, Robert
Dweck, Carol
Dylan, Bob
E
Falco, Edie
fame. See also success human desire for
and money
and narcissism
Family Jewels, Gene Simmons. See Gene Simmons
Family Jewels
fans. See public
Farrell, Colin
Farrell, Mike
Farrow, Mia
Federline, Kevin
interview with
Fergie
Ferrera, America
Flay, Bobby
Fleetwood Mac
Fletcher, Jeannine Hill
Fonda, Henry
Fonda, Jane
Forbes
Ford, Harrison
Forster, E. M.
Fortensky, Larry
Fox, Michael J.
Franklin, Aretha
Frehley, Ace
Frei, David
The Frenzy of Renown (Braudy)
Friedan, Betty
Friends
G
Hackman, Gene
Hanes
Hanks, Tom
Hannah, Daryl
Harden, Marcia Gay
Harrelson, Woody
Harris, Olivia
Haskell, Colleen
Hasselbeck, Elizabeth
Hatcher, Teri
Havrilesky, Heather
Hawn, Goldie
Hearst, Rick
He Had It Coming: How to Outsmart Your Husband and
Win Your Divorce (Schneider)
Heigl, Katherine
Hepburn, Audrey
heroes, definition of. See also activism
Hervey, Jason
Heston, Charlton
Hewitt, Jennifer Love
Hewlett-Packard Corp.
The Hills
Hilton, Paris
ads by
conviction of
influence on girls
HIV-AIDS. See also diseases
H&M
Homosexuality: A History (Spencer)
homosexuality, attitudes toward
Hope, Bob
Horton, Donald
Hotel Rwanda
Houran, James
House
Houseman, John
Houston, Whitney
Huckabee, Mike
Hudson, Kate
Hudson, Rock
humanitarianism. See activism
Hurley, Elizabeth
Huston, Ted
I
I Dream of Jeannie
Iovine, Jimmy
J
Jackson, Janet
Jackson, Michael
Jagger, Mick
Jay-Z
Jefferson Airplane
Jenkins, Henry
Johansson, Scarlett
John, Elton
Johnson, Ervin “Magic”
Jolie, Angelina
activism of
overseas adoption
and Brad Pitt
on women
Jones, Quincy
Jones, Star
Jordan, Michael
Journal of Black Psychology
Journal of Communication
Journal of Divorce and Remarriage
Journal of Health Communication
Journal of Marketing
Journal of the Academy of Marketing Science
Journal of the National Cancer Institute
Journal of Vocational Behavior
Journey
Juicy Couture
Just World Theory
K
Kamins, Michael
Katzenberg, Jeffrey
Kaye, Danny
Kelly, Gene
Kennedy, Jackie
Kennedy, John F.
Kerry, John
Keys, Alicia
Kidman, Nicole
Kid ’n Play
Kid Rock
King, Martin Luther, Jr.
KISS
Klein, Calvin
Knightley, Keira
Knowles, Beyoncé
Kohls
Kol, Kimberly Lawrence
Koo, Lisa
Kozinets, Robert
Kucinich, Dennis
Kuriansky, Judy
Kutcher, Ashton
L
L. L. Cool J.
Lachey, Nick
Lagasse, Emeril
Lagerfeld, Karl
Law & Order
Leadership Academy
Lee, Tommy
Leibovitz, Annie
lesbians. See homosexuality
Letterman, David
Levine, David
Little House on the Prairie
Little Richard
Live Aid
Living with Fran
Lohan, Lindsay
influence on girls
Longoria, Eva
Lopez, Frederick
Lopez, Jennifer
as brand
L’Oreal
Love, Courtney
Love Hewitt, Jennifer
Lovett, Lyle
Lowes Home Improvement
Loyola, St. Ignatius
M
narcissism
acquired situational narcissism
and desire for fame
Narcissism Epidemic (Twenge)
Navarro, Dave
Neeson, Liam
Nelly
neuroticism
Newlyweds
Newman, Paul
Newsweek
Newton-John, Olivia
Nichols, Mike
Nicholson, Jack
Nike
Nikon
Nixon, Richard
North American Journal of Psychology
Norton, Charles Eliot
Notting Hill
Novak, Alan R.
Nuccio, Jenn
O
Obama, Barack
O.C.
Oceans Eleven
O’Donnell, Rosie
Off the Wall
Olsen, Ashley
Olsen, Mary-Kate
Only You
Orman, Suze
Oscars
gift bags
“Oscar curse”
overachievers. See also success
P
Packaged Facts
Palmer, Robert
Paltrow, Gwyneth
parents. See adolescents; adults
Parker, Ray
Parker, Sarah Jessica
Parks, Rosa
Patric, Jason
People
Pepsi, ad campaigns
Perdis, Napoleon
Perez Family
Perry, Linda
Perry, Matthew
Peterson, Scott
Petty, Richard
Phan, Dat
Phillips, David
Pink
Pinsky, Drew
Pitt, Brad and Jennifer Aniston
Plaks, Jason
poli ti cs. See also activism early celebrity influence
politicians as celebrities
public’s civic responsibility
young voters
Pompeo, Ellen
Portman, Natalie
pregnancy, attitudes towards
Premier Talent
Pretenders
Prince
Proactiv
producers politics of
Psychological Record
public. See also adults attitude toward homosexuality
awareness of health issues
and celebrity failures
civic responsibility of
encountering celebrities
fascination with celebrities
illusion of intimacy with stars
perception of motherhood
publicists
publicity. See publicists; entertainment industry
Q
Queenan Joe
Queer Eye for the Straight Guy
Quinto, Zachary
R
Salomon, Rick
Salt-N-Pepa
Sarandon, Susan
Saturday Night Live
Scales, Peter
Schilling, Curt
Schneider, Stacy
Schwarzenegger, Arnold
Schwarzkopf, Norman
Screen Actors Guild (SAG)
Seinfeld
self-esteem
and body image
and narcissism
and race
7th Heaven
sexuality, and entertainment industry
homosexuality
influence on girls
pregnancy
Shakira
Shepherd, Cybill
Sigel, Beanie
Simmons, Gene
Simmons, Kimora Lee
Simmons, Russell
Simon, Neil
Simpson, Jessica
Simpson, O. J.
Sinatra, Frank
Six Feet Under
Skaist-Levy, Pam
skin care
acne medication
makeup
Skull and Bones Society
Skydel, Barbara
Smith, Anna Nicole
Smith, Harry
Smith, Kate
Smith, Richard
Smith, Will
Snoop Dogg
Social Identity Theory
Social Learning Theory
Socrates
Somers, Suzanne
songwriters
Sorvino, Marisa
Spears, Britney
economic impact of
influence on girls
marriages of
Pepsi ads
Spears, Jamie Lynn
Spelling, Tori
Spencer, Colin
spender, dale
Spielberg, Steven
Springsteen, Bruce
Starbucks
stars. See celebrities; specific individuals
Star Trek
State Property Wear
Stefani, Gwen
Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act
Stern, Howard K.
Stewart, Jon
Stewart, Martha
Steyer, James
Stiers, David Ogden
Sting
Stone, Sharon
Streisand, Barbra
success
and career choice
comebacks
and money
and overachievers
and personal world view
and self-esteem
Supremes
Sutherland, Kiefer
Sutter, Ryan
Sutter, Trista
Swanson, Gloria
Swedlick, Michael
T
Tajfel, Henri
talent, importance of
talent agents. See agents
Tales of the Gold Monkey
Target Corporation
Taylor, Elizabeth
Taylor, Gela
Teenage Research Unlimited
television. See also entertainment industry
celebrity “news” shows
feelings for long-running characters
impact on adolescents and children
number of channels
reality shows
sexual images on
Textual Poachers: Television Fans and Participatory
Culture (Jenkins)
The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air
Theron, Charlize
Thomas, Dana
Thompson, Fred
Thornton, Billy Bob
Timberlake, Justin
Today Show
Tomei, Marisa
Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers
Tony Danza Show
Trump, Donald
Turner, John C.
Turner, Lana
Turner, Mark
Tweed, Shannon
Twenge, Jean 24
Tyra Banks Show
U
Van Halen
Vanity Fair
Versace
Vetrini, Ereka
Virgin Mobile
von Teese, Dita
W
Ward. Monique
Warhol, Andy
Waters, Roger
Waterston, Sam
Weber, Max
Weiselman, Jarett
on celebrity couples
on comebacks
meaning of celebrity
Welch, Raquel
West, Kanye
West Wing
Who
Wilbanks, Jennifer
Will and Grace
Williams, Robbie
Williams, Serena
Williams, Vanessa
Winehouse, Amy
Winfrey, Oprah
earnings of
on fame
health issues of
and Obama
philanthropy of
Witherspoon, Reese
Wohl, R. Richard
women, overachieving. See also adults
Wonder, Stevie
Woods, Tiger
Y
Yale University
Young, Mark
Z
Zagorsky, Jay
Zellweger, Renée
Acknowledgments