ladyofastolat: (Default)
ladyofastolat ([personal profile] ladyofastolat) wrote2007-01-19 04:37 pm
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Being famous

A few years ago, apparently, when you asked children what they wanted to do when they grew up, you would get a range of answers: spaceman, train driver, ballet dancer, teacher, doctor etc. Now the most common answer is simply, "to be famous."

But why? Why? Why would anyone want to be a celebrity? I think it looks like an awful life. You just get no privacy at all. Venture outside looking less than perfect, and you'll be all over the celebrity magazines with your "bad hair day", or else they'll start speculating that you're on drugs/drunk/pregnant/got an eating disorder. Yes, you get lots of money, but you get torn to pieces if you don't spend it. Wear the same dress twice, and the celebrity magazines will mock you mercilessly. And, of course, people who seek fame for fame's sake must be permanently terrified that they're going to lose it all.

By the way, if I had been asked this question when young, I would have come up with a range of answers:
At 5: A circus ring-master
At 8: I wanted to write and illustrate my own children's books
At 10: A concert pianist
At 11: A meteorologist
At 13: An astronomer
At 14: I briefly toyed with the idea of being a librarian…
At 15: An archaeologist. But then I went on a dig, and it was rather boring, and I got sunburnt.

[identity profile] ladyofastolat.livejournal.com 2007-01-20 10:16 am (UTC)(link)
I think there has always been a fascination with celebrity, but now there are just so many more ways for us to hear about these people. It's not just an occasional newsreel in the cinemas, showing people glimpses of the current big-name actors, or famous socialites; it's 24 hour TV, internet, text message updates etc. It's got ridiculously out of proportion. And people can be foul-mouthed, stupid, rude, bigoted and thoroughly nasty... and still become celebrities. In the past, celebrities could fall from grace if they behaved badly. Now the bad behaviour is being rewarded with fame, so impressionable teenagers copy this sort of behaviour.

Though I don't have problems with people who watch Big Brother. I admit to watching quite a lot of the first series myself. Back then, it was more or less normal people, and it was interesting to see how people interacted in the circumstances.

[identity profile] the-marquis.livejournal.com 2007-01-20 11:19 am (UTC)(link)
But I was talking not of the viewers (who are students of anthropolgy/psychology, gossips, just plain intrigued by the concept, voyeurs and theose looking for some escape as stated above) but of the people who want to go on it. The celebs get asked and are offered money, or money to a charity, but apart from the 'winner' what do the ordinary bods get? Some time on TV looking like a wally, or being ordered to act like a wally, or being verbally bullied, before being 'voted off' by people who don't even know them - all of which is arranged by a tv company, and we know how manipluative they are.

[identity profile] ladyofastolat.livejournal.com 2007-01-20 01:49 pm (UTC)(link)
The partner of someone at work has applied four times, and once very nearly got on. My colleague really can't understand why he wants to do it, though.

Back at the time of the first series, before it became huge, I can see why the idea might have been attractive. It could be quite an interesting experience (for an extrovert person) to be thrown in with strangers, and see what happened. Nowadays, though, when everyone in the house always seems to be become a hate figure outside it, and most people get booed when leaving it, I don't understand why people would want to do it. I suppose that, to those people, the allure of fame is so great that it outweighs any humiliation.