Tuesday December 28, In the year of our Lord 2010
Home for Christmas, Saskatchewan
Thinking thoughts, 1:03PM
Weather = Cold, Windy, and White
I feel sorry for celebrities. I would never want to be one. This might be an absurd thing for some people to hear. There are masses of people who absolutely adore their chosen celebrity(ies) and worship the ground they walk on. A discarded used tissue paper may become the centerpiece in a cult-like shrine to a celebrity. There has even been a new word created to accommodate this sort of hyper-fan. 'Groupies' travel with their celebrity and serve them hand and foot offering everything from making coffee to expensive gifts to giving up their
virginity. There are so many people who wish that they could be the celebrity who they worship, or at least be just like them.

I will never ever ever EVAR want to be a celebrity and my heart goes out to them. Our culture selects a person. Maybe she looked really pretty. Maybe he had a good voice. Whatever the reason a pop-culture industry *spit on floor* finds someone who they deem profitable to turn into an icon / idol for young people and curse them with complete popularity and wealth. The pop-culture section being addressed fawns over this individual like a god and puts him / her in concerts, commercials, movies, reality TV shows *spit on floor* etc. When I was in middle school we had the Spice Girls, when I was in High School we had Britney Spears and her slightly less popular doppleganger Christina Aguilera. Today's pop sensation is Justin Bieber, the youngest soul to have this unfortunate thing happen to him.
Why would I not want this? Why would I feel sorry for anyone who had this? Because it seriously messes you up, especially if they get you when you're young. Let me explain.
DISCLAIMER! I am not a sociologist or psychologist. These ideas are strictly my own that come out of my head. I have not done research in this area so it is completely possible that I have no idea what I'm talking about. My appeal is to common sense and history.
It starts off great! The new born celebrity is an authentic person, a personality, with sincere goals, a loving family to look after them, and a heart to change the world. (or something to that effect) Despite getting more money than they know what to do with and achieving godlike status they maintain that it will not change them, that they will always be true to themselves. (or something to that effect)
I suspect that the first compromises are due to their life being broadcast for the entire world to see and the pressure of expectations. After all, once on the top you want to stay on the top. Maybe letting my contractors hire song writers for me to sing isn't the end of the world. This is greatly emphasized if their are contractual obligations to uphold. Ok, so the songs that I sing aren't completely my own, I still get to change the lyrics if I want to and I'm still an authentic person. Everyone cheers them on. So much positive reinforcement! The crowds, cheering, chanting my name. They want me, they love me, I want to make them happy!
I think at this point the authentic person part is still in tact, but it has been melded with the pop-image designed and commercialized by the industry. There is a process that takes place where authentic personality and icon designed by industry inter-mesh and the new celebrity slowly becomes more like the icon designed for them. And why not? Staying popular, meeting all your childhood icons as equals, the money, the fame, the limo rides, the pride of your family, none of these things are bad in and of themselves and they are all very comfortable nice things.
But alas, the reality is that popularity is short lived and a very fickle (nigh pointl
ess) thing that will leave even Justin Bieber in a long list of abandoned pop-culture figures that stretches to the beginning of time to be forgotten about. To the celebrity who has successfully kept their identity in tact they can count their blessings and go on to live a normal life. To those who let their identity become the icon designed for them they can not move on and choose to make sacrifices in order to keep what they have and stay popular.

Now their is nothing more popular than something scandalous. What happens when good girl turns bad and we see the new side of celebrity x. (enter my rant against tabloids *spit on floor*) Sex appeal is a tried and true method of getting attention and making money. Even if it's only provocative and not porn (if there is a difference in your mind) a decision has been made, and it's only a matter of time before that skirt is cut a little lower or the thong underwear makes an outrageous appearance which cause the ratings to rise. This is what happened to Britney Spears, Charlotte Church, and Christina Aguilera to name only three.
Side Note: The hideous thing about this is that pop stars will still maintain that their songs are about abstinence and respect for yourself (or something to that effect) and they actually believe that they are a support for that cause. Meanwhile they wave their scantily covered reproductive organs about and allow the camera crew to draw undue attention to their breasts (which have been highlighted by their costume) and can't figure out why anyone would doubt their intentions. After all, the person behind the icon is all for abstinence and a healthy life style. Well, all the guys see is breasts and their brain stops there. Every time they hear the song they equate it to the sex icon as shown in the music video. (I speak in absolutes, but I'm sure that their are exceptions to my generalizations) I can not speak for the girls, but I doubt this sort of crossed messaging has lessened the female self-esteem issues which lead to unhealthy lifestyle. You see, when you take something intimate about yourself and make it public for everyone to see it's kinda like dragging something precious and sacred through the mud and tossing it out a window into the street for people to look at and misinterpret. You can not continuously do this to something sacred and then go on to explain how it is very important it is to you. However, I saw a Reality TV Show *spit on floor* in which the consensus was that there is nothing wrong with dressing like a slut because that would be judging someone which isn't right. I might make a post someday where I explain why this sort of relativism is stupid.
Anyway, back on track now. Once a celebrity starts to sacrifice themselves for the icon they've melded with there are a host of problems. Attitude, psychological growth, self esteem, physical well being and materialism are a few.
Attitude. I would find it hard not to get spoiled and accustomed to getting copious amounts of attention and stuff that I wanted if I had the same diet of celebrityism. A bad attitude leads to poor choices and a stubborn "I'm right no matter what / it could never happen to me" syndrome.

Psychological Growth. One of the things I fear for these celebrities is that they become addicted to the hype they generate. To live for the crowd, to live for the moment of being in the spotlight. It can seriously mess someone up. I think of Britney's acting like a little child instead of a mom and needing psychologist help. This is an unfortunate thing to go through.
Self Esteem. Once someone takes on the identity of the icon at the expense of themselves then they're identity as a person rises and falls with the icon, which is destined to fall. Popular people are often the ones with the lowest self esteem because they can not help but allow the opinions of others define who they are. Think of the constant fear you would have if this was the case for you! What a pointless and miserable existence if someone got stuck here.
Physical Well Being. It's not uncommon to hear about pop stars getting into drugs and other lifestyle choices that accompany it. This is to say nothing of their emotional and spiritual wellbeing of being a whole person.
Materialism. The whole thing has a distinctly materialist taste to it, and material things can't actually bring you peace or happiness but pretends like it can. If all you see are the material things, then you will look to those things to fill your basic needs, but you can't fill a spiritual or emotional need with a material thing. Materialism seeps in, puts a hook in your nose, and leads you into addiction to one thing or another.
So I pity celebrities. The pressure to conform to the culture they define must be immense. I wouldn't want the stress or the attention. The money might be nice, but then I would not feel like I earned it. A life of excess is unhealthy and unhappy and all that money and popularity would be hard to turn down. I would like to think that the unfortunate celebrity crashes are an exception and that most people have a solid head on their shoulders. I would like to think that the pop industry is run by human beings who care for the people they raise up. But with the pop industry investing in younger and younger teenagers to bear the mantle of pop star I just kinda shake my head at them. Not helping guys... you're really not. So pray for celebrities, especially young ones in the pop industry. They live in a world with very real risks and dangers.
Greg W