The online meeting place for Dr. Ron Bishop's classes on the cultural history and significance of fame.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Mini Project #5- Mandy Dollar

I believe that fame is much more than entertaining people and making lots of money. Sure, that’s wonderful, and while it does happen, I believe that there is an element that is sometimes overlooked: immortality. There are images that will be forever ingrained into people’s minds. Think about Marlon Brando in “Cat On A Hot Tin Roof” (“Stella!”), Elvis Presley, John Lennon, Frank Sinatra, and Marilyn Monroe. All of these actors have passed on, however, their images continue to shine now and even when we are long gone.

I think that people’s reasoning for seeking out fame for this reason makes sense. Nobody wants to imagine a life without them in it. Nobody wants to feel that the world will keep spinning without them. We, as human beings, live within our own worlds and when our world ends, we expect everyone else’s to end as well.

In Hollywood, a place where image is everything, I believe that there is a desire to be famous so that a person’s ever-so-important image is preserved forever. The entertainment industry is all about defining oneself through one’s looks. No wonder, then, that actresses and actors depend on these films and television shows to provide them with the comfort that they will always be known as young and beautiful. Fame serves as the fountain of youth in Hollywood, which is appealing to everyone and anyone.

Also, speaking from an only-child’s point of view (my deep dark secret, by the way.) there is a pressure when you are the last one left to keep “it” alive, whatever “it” may be: traditions, a family name, etc. For example, I am the last “Dollar”, ever. My Uncle doesn’t have children, and I am a girl, which means that my name won’t carry on when I get married. I have had so many people tell me not to give my name up- to keep it alive. We, as a society, work hard on maintaining an image that will last forever. Just look at pictures. We spoke about photos and people who are obsessed with taking pictures of every event that happens in their lives. Part of the reasoning behind this is to capture a memory, but to also preserve a moment in time when a person can show a granddaughter or grandson how they were “when they were young”.

I also believe that society has a tendency to rush through life. We take pictures today to show our family years down the line. We save money in trust funds so that we can have it years from now. We are constantly looking ahead and trying to preserve today for tomorrow. No wonder movies, television, and music are so popular- they act as time capsules. They enable people to transport to another time and place in the time it takes to put the TV on. It’s an attractive offer and a key reason why people want to leave a legacy.

In the end, I believe that people want to maintain a legacy because of fear. They are afraid to be forgotten. They are afraid that they won’t matter to anyone once everyone they knew is gone. People want to feel as though they mattered and that they made a difference in this life. By preserving these legacies, it provides a way for people to cheat death even when they are dead and gone.

The Politics of Celebrity

Check out this article from alternet.org, a progressive news organization. I was wondering why we're so much about the 08 Election in May 2007....

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Mini-project #4

Gina Carrano
Mini-project #4

When asked to determine who, out of all the people I know, I think should be famous, I didn't have to consider the question for very long before arriving at an immediate answer. My boyfriend, Jeff, is an accomplished musician who has been playing various instruments practically since he was old enough to talk, and has a very diverse set of musical skills. He can do anything from playing a brass instrument in a jazz or reggae band to shredding heavy metal riffs on the guitar to using studio programs to lay down hip-hop beats, and he's also an excellent songwriter. I had only known him for a few weeks when I first determined that he should be famous, and shortly after we started dating I told him only half-jokingly that I expected to be a rock star's wife within a few years (His preferred style of music to play is metal.)

Although I have told him in passing before that he should be famous, for the purposes of this mini-project, we sat down and had a longer conversation about his hypothetical career as a rock star.

I started it off by asking Jeff point-blank if he'd like to be famous. Because he is a fairly reality-based person and doesn't often imagine the world in hypotheticals, his initial response was to look at me and say, only half-jokingly, "Why? Are you offering me a record deal?" After that initial hurdle, though, I learned that for Jeff, becoming famous might be a happy accident in certain circumstances, but it isn't a conscious goal of his. His sole musical aspiration is to be able to make a comfortable living from his talents, not to become famous for them. He wouldn't turn down fame if it were offered to him on a silver platter, he said, but he'd much prefer to become a career studio guitarist whose name was not known outside the immediate music industry. That way, he said, he could spend the rest of his life doing what he loves and is good at--playing guitar--but he wouldn't have to deal with the negative aspects of fame.

To Jeff, the negative aspects of fame outweigh the positive ones. First of all, he is a pretty private person, and being famous would compromise the anonymity that he craves. Also, he fears that the modern-day "big business" ethics of music might force him to compromise his musical integrity, which is something he takes very seriously. There are a couple of different types of music that he feels require no talent whatsoever to play on the guitar, and he wouldn't want to be known nationally, or even regionally, as someone who plays the same type of music that he and I often mock mercilessly in the privacy of our own home.

Basically, Jeff says the only reason he would want to become famous is for the money. Recognition and admiration are not factors for him; in fact, he'd prefer not to receive those things from anyone besides other musicians, and he said it would bother him if people admired him for playing a type of music that he himself doesn't even respect.

He does admit, though, that "money is a major issue" (to borrow a line from Miami-based reggaeton artist Pitbull.) Although he would prefer to make his money as a studio musician, as mentioned above, when I asked him if he would be willing to become famous in exchange for a large amount of money--even if he had to be famous for playing a type of music he didn't like-- he said yes. However, his one stipulation was that he would do what the Sex Pistols did in the '70's: sign a huge record deal, record an album, tour enough to make himself and the label some money, and then retire from music while laughing all the way to the bank. He also said that while he would voluntarily become rich and famous as the guitarist of a metal band, he wouldn't actually try to do so--get famous, that is--but that he would probably go with it if it happened. In conclusion, Jeff doesn't have much regard for the admiration and recognition that come with fame. At the risk of sounding trite, to him it is all about the music--and, of course, the money.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Mini #4 Melinda Glass

I’ve often thought my best friend Amanda should be famous. She’s one of those people who can drive a hilarious conversation in any social setting. She’s quick-witted, bright, and attractive, which makes her well liked by anyone she meets. We participated in theater when we were in high school, and she’s always loved being in the limelight. I can still picture her in the lobby of our alma mater’s auditorium, graciously accepting flowers and compliments after a show. She would be a great famous person.

I presented her with this idea earlier today. I told her I’ve always thought she should be famous, and gave her all the above reasons to justify my opinion. She responded modestly, “Me? No.” I asked her, “Don’t you want to be famous? Think of all the perks.” She thought about it for a second and said simply, “Nah.”

She told me the perks would be great. I mean, who wouldn’t want a great car, expensive jewelry, and a couple million-dollar houses? And she wasn’t turned off by the idea of screaming fans, red carpets, and guest spots on Conan O’Brian, either. The reasons she gave me for not wanting to be famous dealt with the idea of forever being in the public’s eye. She told me she wouldn’t be able to stand constantly looking her best. As she so eloquently put it, “Cameron Diaz can’t go a day without showering, and if she does, it’ll be in some tabloid a day later. That would suck.” She said normal daily activities like grocery shopping, or going to the gym would turn into nothing more than photo opportunities, and she couldn’t handle that.

It’s funny how people automatically equate the idea of fame with things like paparazzi, tabloids, and embarrassing pictures. Even more interesting are the people like you and me who endorse the intrusiveness of fame. While we flip through US Weekly to see who has an eating disorder this month, or click through perezhilton.com to get updates on Britney Spears, do we stop to think that the celebrities we’re scrutinizing are humans too? Why do we feel the need to pry into the personal lives of those who are famous? There was a time when an autograph, or a picture of a celebrity was enough to satisfy the average fan. Like Amanda said, being famous today would really “suck.”

Friday, May 25, 2007

Mini Four, Andrew Damiter

It takes a lot of work to make a name for yourself in any field, which makes it all the more difficult to watch someone falter as they near the later stages. My half brother, Brian, experienced such a stutter. It wasn't that he fell at the finish line, it was that he was denied access to the final qualifying heat. An unfortunate series of circumstances, some under his control and most not, led him down a road he was not prepared for. I don't think anyone expected him to go from potential sports star to Reiki master.


Brian was sports. Basketball, baseball, football and what have you. He was an all-around athlete. Though I was very young when he was in high school, and can still remember all the fervor surrounding his trip to Philadelphia to play in a championship basketball game in the early '90s. He planned to play baseball in college and had scholarship offers from a number of schools. Unfortunately, none of these schools were up to the standards set by his father. If he wanted to pursue his own dreams, he'd be doing it with his own money.


His father was and still is quite wealthy but was always extremely stingy, which has led to the formation of all sorts of malicious nicknames amongst my mother's side of the family. He insisted that Brian go to Seton Hall, and eventually Brian complied. He hated it. He spent most of his time just trying to survive mentally. After a year he had had enough and transferred to Penn State, where most of his high school friends were, through loans. By this time most of his sporting ambitions had been put aside long enough to no longer be of much importance to him. In short, his spirit had been crushed.


Add to this the constant on-and-off relationship he had with his high school sweetheart, who spent most of her life in and out of hospitals with kidney problems. He endured it for good reason, as they eventually married. They moved to Michigan for his job, she took up Reiki and began teaching. Perhaps if one event had ended differently he would have ended up playing ball with one club or another, but he never got the chance. He certainly had the natural talent to become famous in that regard.


I had the opportunity to speak with him briefly over the phone, and he told me quite plainly that he never gave it a second thought. "It's not something I think about," he said. "I never got the chance to take it very far and after that first year [of college] I pretty much lost interest." Asked if he thought he could have ended up famous he said, "That never really occurred to me. I just liked to compete." With three kids and ventures in business, fighting fires and exploring spirituality, he certainly has managed to maintain that competitive drive. Is he using it the way he thought he would? No, but then again, who does?


Thursday, May 24, 2007

Mini #4 -Francesca Galarus

The only person that I can really think of that I wish that was famous (besides you, Ron, as a drummer) is Quamir. I met Quamir when I volunteered at the Salvation Army After-School Program. He was four, and quite possibly the best basketball player that I have ever seen. All he ever wanted to do was play, so I did my best to keep up with him.

During the first couple of weeks, I used to tell him all the time that I thought he should play in the NBA. I would tell him to remember me and give me money for being one of the basketball coaches that shaped his performance. I began to realize that other people must have been telling him the same kind of things because his reaction was usually a matter-of-fact, “I know, I am going to play for the NBA.”

After I noticed that there were all these people blowing smoke up this poor little four-year-old’s ass, I started to tell Quamir that he should go to college and finish even if he got recruited. I switched roles because I didn’t want to fill his head with false hope. For some reason I took it upon myself to be his voice of reason and give him practical advice.

But, it seemed, it was almost too late. Quamir knew he was good. When he played, he always kicked my ass. But not only that, he would cheer for himself, imitate crowd noises and talk as if there were commentators watching him play. When he made a basket, which was often, he would pose and congratulate himself. He would even talk a little shit when other kids wanted to play with us.

I decided after meeting Quamir, to not fill people’s heads with false hope, especially the younger set. It has become easier to “make it,” but not for the things that people really want to be famous for. Sure, you can scale a building in a penguin suit for your fifteen minutes, when you think about it, how many kids really make it to play professional basketball? But if he does, which he might, I wonder if he’ll remember me?

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Mandy Dollar- Mini Project #4

It took me a while to write this project. I thought and thought, and racked my brain to come up with someone in my life who should be famous but isn’t. I guess I found it so difficult, because for most of my life, I have been that person to everyone else. For years I have had everyone from family members to friends to strangers bombard me with questions as to why I wasn’t pursuing “American Idol” or some other fame-seeking venture. I guess that’s why this issue is so difficult for me- because I am the person who people see as someone who should be famous.

I guess I should start by saying that I have always been in front of an audience in one way or another. I started acting when I was 3 at my mother’s request (so that I wouldn’t develop stage fright). Little did my mother know where it would lead.

I acted throughout high school (I was even named class thespian), landing all of the leads in every musical and children’s theatre performance. My auditions for theatre landed me a spot training with a voice coach which further allowed me to study opera for all 4 years of high school. Even then, I never really let it be known that I could sing. Sure, my friends and family knew, as well as anyone who went to see the performances, but all in all, it was a secret to much of the student body and I liked it that way.

During my senior year I was caught in a conundrum. Everyone wanted me to go to school for voice and performance, but I still wasn’t sure that I was ready to pursue that path. I decided to split my applications: half of them were to performing arts schools and the other half where to state schools. I got into some of the best performing arts schools in the country and knew that I had a tough decision to make. I decided that I wasn’t 150% sure that I wanted to perform, so I ended up going to the University of Connecticut- a school I knew nothing about and that was anything but the “Berklee”s and the “Eastman”s that had previously been shoved down my throat. My voice coach was devastated. So much so that he stopped speaking to me. While my parents were always 200% supportive, I had other family members who were shocked that I wasn’t “living up to my potential”. “God had given me a gift”, they would say. I just couldn’t see myself being locked in practice rooms for hours at a time practicing scales and learning arias that bored me to no end. I knew I needed a break, and more importantly, I knew I wouldn’t be happy.

I ended up going into UConn, entering as a business major- the ultimate rebellion. That lasted all of two weeks once I saw how much math was involved in the curriculum. I eventually found myself in the School of Fine Arts once again, but this time on my own terms. I was in the Theatre Studies program, with a focus in acting, but eventually moved away from performance and into the marketing and PR end of the theatre, which is something I have always wanted to do. Even in college, I found myself performing and built a pretty substantial fan base. I enjoyed expressing myself, but only up to a point. It was never anything that I really wanted to pursue full time. Of course, I found myself in the same situation I was in during my high school years. My friends never really understood why I wasn’t pursuing an acting/ music career, which is an argument we find ourselves in even to this day.

As far as my reactions go, I have realized that when I was in character or prepared for people to question me (say after a show or performance), I was more comfortable talking about my abilities because it was the proper environment. However, when I am out of that environment, say at a bar or at work, and someone brings up the fact that I used to sing, I find myself extremely uncomfortable. I turn bright red and want to change the subject as soon as possible. Most of this, I realized, is because of frustration. It is hard to make someone understand why you chose the path that you chose, so I simply avoid putting myself in that situation to begin with. You become two people when you are a performer- there is the stage “you” and the real “you”. Sometimes you just have to figure out which one is more important, no matter what people say.

Mini Project #4 - Niki Ververelli

So this afternoon, I watched an unhealthy amount of Entourage OnDemand. Christina then joined me for a few episodes and I dutifully exclaimed that she immediately become famous (like Vince Chase) and I could be her PR manager (similar to Eric Murphy or E). She laughed and still, I was very very serious. (Side note: I have a strange obsession with living in California and will do anything possible to eventually get there)

I honestly believe that Christina could and should be a model. She is beautiful and statuesque, much like the models of our time. Meanwhile, she’s also realistic, smart, funny, and she eats like anyone else (I say this because I think models should eat a cracker every once in a while, so Christina would make a very good role model). She is not vain and she is willing to try new things. There we have all of the ingredients for a famous model. I just kind of want to be her manager and get to hang out with her in California and New York and Cannes and everywhere else that seems fun for a model and her cool friends to be.

Every time that I make such a statement, she glares at me and says that I am crazy or tells me to shut up. I think she is beautiful and absolutely model material and then some. I believe that her reaction to not take me seriously is typical when one person tells another how capable they really are of achieving a dream. We almost don’t want to believe that it is possible, even though it very well may be. Who knows what could happen someday…?

Mini Project #4 by: Alex Schultheis

I told my friend Christine that she should be famous because she has such an excellent voice. Christine has been singing in various choirs since she was little; however, she has never pursued a career with it. She went to Drexel for music industry but did do this in the hope of becoming discovered for her vocal talents but rather to be involved with those that are famous for their musical talents. Christine loves the lime light, she loves being in the center of attention and will do anything and everything to grab your attention; this is why I always thought it was odd that she never wanted to pursue a career that was all about attention. When I told her that I thought that she should be famous she automatically smiled, laughed and said, “Yes, I know” but as soon as I told her I thought she should be famous for her voice she let out a nervous laugh and changed the subject. I decided to probe into her a little bit and asked her why she would not want to be famous for her incredible voice and she said that she did not think she was that good. It then occurred to me that this seemingly over confident and attention grabber friend of mine lacked confidence in the one thing that would truly make her the center of attention. It was so interesting to me, as well as shocking, that she did not want to be famous for her voice. Her response led me to the belief that people do want attention, and thus do want to be famous, for things they do not feel good about. Christine does not feel good about her voice, thus leading her to now want to be famous for it.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Mini Project #5 - Adam Crystal

I think that some of the factors that contribute to so many people desperately wanting to leave a "legacy" once their no longer with us is the fact that we are a very throw-away type of culture. In that, I mean that we're always looking to the next bigger, better, more beautiful, more talented, or whatever person in the future. When an actor does something great, or a singer records a great album, of a politician passes some great piece of legislation people give them their due and admiration for a little while but unless they do something to follow it up rather quickly these people are often forgotten. And if someone follows up something great with something perceived to be poor then that person can be seen as a "one-hit wonder" or not seen to have the talent they once were viewed s having. As a society, we are a very "what have you done for me lately" type. People often times forget about what someone has done in the past unless it is something truly amazing or extraordinary. As a society and culture we are always trying to find that next big thing. That is why I think people are always trying to do so much to leave a positive and "legendary" legacy behind. Today, people don't rest of their laurels. People like Bill Clinton, Reagan when he was alive, and many others are always trying to do as much as they can and get their names associated with so many things that people can look back and see all the wonderful and memorable things they have done. Very few individuals nowadays are famous for one particular thing they have done, as it is always a lot of different things that makes someone stick in our memories. This is the reason why I believe that people are always trying to leave behind their "legacy". I also think it has to do with simply trying to be remembered for something positive. Life is so short and so many people I think feel like they are just part of the background that I believe people would like to be remembered, if only by one person. They want to have the belief that they impacted somebody's life, for better (Mother Teresa) or worse (serial killers). As a society I think that this obsession with leaving a "legacy" comes back to the idea that we are supposed to be famous and known. No one wants to look and think of themselves as ordinary and having nothing to be remembered by. People want to believe their time on Earth has meant something and I think this is why leaving a "legacy" has gained such prominence in our society today. Part of this I think has to do with the fact that in the media they are always portraying idols and those that people always remember like Marilyn Monroe or Babe Ruth. There's always that story of someone coming from humble beginnings only to hit their break and make it big and now those people are remembered for all times. I think as a society we want that to be us. We want to be remembered because in that way we can be immortal and live for all times.

Mini-Project #4: Someone Who Should Be Famous - Alissa Harris

In high school, I hung around with the people who would be classified as "theater nerds": the ones who walked through the halls singing show tunes, who practiced monologues months before auditions, and who viewed cast parties as the social events of the year. Although I never auditioned for any of my high school's productions (or anything else theatrical for that matter, I'm more of a behind-the-scenes gal) my friends always seemed to make up the bulk of the cast in all of the school shows. However, a lot of them went away to college and found new interests and although many of them still do the occasional show, only one of my friends is still actively involved in theater. Therefore, I thought that she's the most likely person I know to reach any level of fame (sadly, I don't know any aspiring musicians or people with weird talents) and I thought I would break this news to her.

A few weeks ago, I went to see my friend Emily in a production of 'The Robber Bridegroom' at her school, Villanova University. She's a theater major and I knew that she had been preparing for her role as Raven for a long time, putting her heart and soul into the role, even though it's not one of the meaty main roles of the show. As soon as she took the stage, you could tell that this role meant a lot to her: she transformed into her character wholeheartedly (which is kind of scary when you think about it, as she was portraying a big black bird) and gave her all to this fairly miniscule role. A lot of the actors who had bigger roles weren't nearly as dedicated as she was (some even forgot their lines!) and could be seen joking around with one another during intermission, whereas Emily was practicing her few lines by herself backstage.

She received a wild round of applause from the audience at curtain call as she happily flapped her faux-feathered wings in delight. Judging from her expression at that moment, I could tell that she adored the audience's reaction and that theater was her true calling and her passion in life. After the show, my friends and I waited around the exit for the cast to leave and we grabbed Emily and told her what we thought about the show, gushing over her performance and telling her how great her costume was, how she mastered her lines, and other heapings of praise. She was in a rush to get going, as it was the last night of the show's run and she had to get to the cast party, but I said I would call her the next day to talk about the show.

During our call, after chatting about the show and some mutual friends, I mentioned to Emily that I thought she should be famous. I told her how she seemed much more professional than a lot of the cast, that she nailed all of her lines, and how sometimes I couldn't even believe that it was her on stage, that's how convincing she was in her performance. Emily let out a girlish giggle and said that she thought I was joking, that surely her performance wasn't THAT good, especially because she only had a minor role. I responded by telling her that she could have a serious future in theater - or maybe even movies? - if she kept the same level of dedication and genuine interest toward acting. She knew that I was obviously flattering her at this point, but I had to explain to her how serious I was, how much I thought she would be the one person I knew to really hit the big time if she truly persued her dreams.

Emily laughed off the topic, saying that she was only a minor role in a school's amateur performance, and quickly started talking about some show we both watched on TV the night before. No matter how hard I tried, I couldn't swerve the conversation back to Emily's impending fame, so I guess I'll never fully convince her that I think she'll be famous, unless she keeps getting bigger and bigger roles (what she views as 'fame').

Friday, May 18, 2007

Mini-project #4 - Erin Carney

From the moment when I first read the description of this mini-project, I knew exactly who I would choose for my subject. For the past seven years, I’ve thought to myself ‘this kid is going to be famous one day,’ but I’ve never actually said it out loud. The reason for keeping this thought hushed for so many years is because it’s rather hard to convince people that a ten year old should be famous for playing the guitar. My younger brother, Kevin, is seventeen years old. He got his first guitar as a Christmas present from my parents at the age of ten. Each Christmas, my brother and I always have the “it” present. The “it” present is the gift that we mark with stars on our Christmas lists. It’s the present that we’ve talked about all year long. My brother’s “it” present that year was a guitar. Sure enough, when he opened up the guitar-shaped box under the Christmas tree, he was ecstatic. I thought it was kind of a silly thing for him to ask for because this is a child who has the attention span of a gnat and he has been known to tire of things very quickly, but I let him continue to get all excited about his guitar, knowing that it wouldn’t be long before that guitar was shoved into the back of his closet.

In the weeks following, my parents enrolled this little twerp in guitar lessons so that he would learn how to play, however, after about the fourth lesson little Kevin said, “these lessons are stupid, I don’t want to go anymore.” That was that. My brother never again attended another guitar lesson. As sad as that may sound, my story is not over.

After my brother “retired” from his lessons, he continued to strum his guitar. He did not know how to read music, nor did he know what notes he was playing. He would listen to songs in his room and then take what he heard and simply replicate it. Within that first year, my brother had taught himself how to play bits and pieces of several songs just by ear. As the years went by, little Kevin was playing entire songs – and he was playing them well. At the age of seventeen, my brother can play any song as long as he listens to it first.

This talent that Kevin has is the reason that I always thought he could be famous one day. Very few people can learn to play music that way, so when I told him that he was going to be famous for it, the response I got was mind boggling. He almost laughed in my face when I told him. He shrugged it off by saying, “it’s no big deal, anyone can do it,” and went on to explain that he would never become famous for the way he plays. Most (and I use that term loosely) famous people are famous because they are able to do something that other people cannot do, and they can do it phenomenally. If “anyone” could do it, then nobody would ever be famous for it.

After I was unsuccessful at convincing my brother that he should be famous for his talent, he told me that he doesn’t want to be famous for playing the guitar. He likes to play for fun and that if he were to become famous one day, he would rather it be for something more important. If someone were told that they had the talent to become famous, you would think that they would run right out and do so. The reaction that I received from Kevin was much of an unexpected one, but I’m kind of proud of what he said.

Mini Project #4 - Adam Crystal

When trying to decide who I know that I believe should be famous, I realized that there are a lot of different people in my life that came to mind. Eventually, I decided on my best friend Eric. Basically, he's about 5'8'', pale, loud, and somehow everyone listens to him. I don't think that it's really a respect thing or anything like that but I just think it's just that he won't shut up until he gets his way people just give in to him so he'll stop whining. When I told him I thought that he should be famous I didn't include all of the reasons that I mentioned previously, as I didn't think he'd take too kindly to this description of himself. I told him that I though that he should be famous because he is entertaining, funny, can think quicklu on his feet, charasmtatic, and generally people wind up liking him when they first meet him no matter ow poorly or awkward meeting him for the first time may start off. When I told him this, he apparently thought the same thing. His response was, "Yeah, I think so too". I guess I forgot to mention his humility as a reason why he should be famous. He then mentioned that he thought he would be good hosting his own late-night talk show like Letterman. Apparently he's thought about this before and not only about being famous but also what he'd be famous for. He believes that his "antics" (whatever this means) are hilarious and that a mass teelvision audience would find these "antics" equally hilarious.
I just thought it was very interesting that when I mentioned to him that he should be famous that his response was almost as if I was asking him what he was doing this weekend. He responded so naturally like he had been thinking about this only moments before. His response wasn't really all that gracious or surprising or flattered or whatever else someone might expect after telling someone that you think they should be famous. Beginning to think about this more, I believe that there might be and probably are others like Eric who believe that they should be famous. In Eric's defense, he has never tried to pursue fame on any level nor would he ever but if somehow things worked out where someone saw him and wanted to put him on TV I don't think he'd act all that surprised (like Brody in "Mallrats"). It just made me wonder how others would react when confronted with a similar situaiton. I think there would be those like Eric who would embrace it and agree with this assessment of themselves. As I call it the, "Yeah, I think so too," response would be quite popular I believe. Of course there are those others who I believe would be embarrassed and very thankful and flattered that someone would even think that they should be famous. I think that today, much more so than in the past, people have all thought or daydreamed about what it would be like to famous or have thought about being famous themselves. Because of this, I believe, when someone else approaches an individual and tells them that they should be famous that person may not be as surprised or flattered because they themselves have already thought about this. I don't know, I could be completely wrong but just the way my friend reacted to my comment made me think about this topic and I can't really blame him for his response. I believe that there would be many others with a similar reaction. I don't think these people pursue fame or have any fantasies that they are just waiting for their "big break." However, I do believe that it is something that a majority of people have thought of it someone mentioned that this other person should be famous I think the reaction would/could be similar to my humble friend's.

Sex, Drugs, and Updating Your Blog

How apropos is this article from the May 13 New York Times Magazine? What about a performer's privacy - aren't they entitled to protect it? Is it possible that the "control" in these parasocial relationships is shifting to us, the fans?

May 13, 2007

Sex, Drugs and Updating Your Blog

By CLIVE THOMPSON

Jonathan Coulton sat in Gorilla Coffee in Brooklyn, his Apple PowerBook open before him, and began slogging through the day’s e-mail. Coulton is 36 and shaggily handsome. In September 2005, he quit his job as a computer programmer and, with his wife’s guarded blessing, became a full-time singer and songwriter. He set a quixotic goal for himself: for the next year, he would write and record a song each week, posting each one to his blog. “It was a sort of forced-march approach to creativity,” he admitted to me over the sound of the cafe’s cappuccino frothers. He’d always wanted to be a full-time musician, and he figured the only way to prove to himself he could do it was with a drastic challenge. “I learned that it is possible to squeeze a song out of just about anything,” he said. “But it’s not always an easy or pleasant process.” Given the self-imposed time constraints, the “Thing a Week” songs are remarkably good. Coulton tends toward geeky, witty pop tunes: one song, “Tom Cruise Crazy,” is a sympathetic ode to the fame-addled star, while “Code Monkey” is a rocking anthem about dead-end programming jobs. By the middle of last year, his project had attracted a sizable audience. More than 3,000 people, on average, were visiting his site every day, and his most popular songs were being downloaded as many as 500,000 times; he was making what he described as “a reasonable middle-class living” — between $3,000 and $5,000 a month — by selling CDs and digital downloads of his work on iTunes and on his own site.

Along the way, he discovered a fact that many small-scale recording artists are coming to terms with these days: his fans do not want merely to buy his music. They want to be his friend. And that means they want to interact with him all day long online. They pore over his blog entries, commenting with sympathy and support every time he recounts the difficulty of writing a song. They send e-mail messages, dozens a day, ranging from simple mash notes of the “you rock!” variety to starkly emotional letters, including one by a man who described singing one of Coulton’s love songs to his 6-month-old infant during her heart surgery. Coulton responds to every letter, though as the e-mail volume has grown to as many as 100 messages a day, his replies have grown more and more terse, to the point where he’s now feeling guilty about being rude.

Coulton welcomes his fans’ avid attention; indeed, he relies on his fans in an almost symbiotic way. When he couldn’t perform a guitar solo for “Shop Vac,” a glittery pop tune he had written about suburban angst — on his blog, he cursed his “useless sausage fingers” — Coulton asked listeners to record their own attempts, then held an online vote and pasted the winning riff into his tune. Other followers have volunteered hours of their time to help further his career: a professional graphic artist in Cleveland has drawn an illustration for each of the weekly songs, free. Another fan recently reformatted Coulton’s tunes so they’d be usable on karaoke machines. On his online discussion board last June, when Coulton asked for advice on how to make more money with his music, dozens of people chimed in with tips on touring and managing the media and even opinions about what kind of songs he ought to write.

Coulton’s fans are also his promotion department, an army of thousands who proselytize for his work worldwide. More than 50 fans have created music videos using his music and posted them on YouTube; at a recent gig, half of the audience members I spoke to had originally come across his music via one of these fan-made videos. When he performs, he upends the traditional logic of touring. Normally, a new Brooklyn-based artist like him would trek around the Northeast in grim circles, visiting and revisiting cities like Boston and New York and Chicago in order to slowly build an audience — playing for 3 people the first time, then 10, then (if he got lucky) 50. But Coulton realized he could simply poll his existing online audience members, find out where they lived and stage a tactical strike on any town with more than 100 fans, the point at which he’d be likely to make $1,000 for a concert. It is a flash-mob approach to touring: he parachutes into out-of-the-way towns like Ardmore, Pa., where he recently played to a sold-out club of 140.
His fans need him; he needs them. Which is why, every day, Coulton wakes up, gets coffee, cracks open his PowerBook and hunkers down for up to six hours of nonstop and frequently exhausting communion with his virtual crowd. The day I met him, he was examining a music video that a woman who identified herself as a “blithering fan” had made for his song “Someone Is Crazy.” It was a collection of scenes from anime cartoons, expertly spliced together and offered on YouTube.

“She spent hours working on this,” Coulton marveled. “And now her friends are watching that video, and fans of that anime cartoon are watching this video. And that’s how people are finding me. It’s a crucial part of the picture. And so I have to watch this video; I have to respond to her.” He bashed out a hasty thank-you note and then forwarded the link to another supporter — this one in Britain — who runs “The Jonathan Coulton Project,” a Web site that exists specifically to archive his fan-made music videos.

He sipped his coffee. “People always think that when you’re a musician you’re sitting around strumming your guitar, and that’s your job,” he said. “But this” — he clicked his keyboard theatrically — “this is my job.”

In the past — way back in the mid-’90s, say — artists had only occasional contact with their fans. If a musician was feeling friendly, he might greet a few audience members at the bar after a show. Then the Internet swept in. Now fans think nothing of sending an e-mail message to their favorite singer — and they actually expect a personal reply. This is not merely an illusion of intimacy. Performing artists these days, particularly new or struggling musicians, are increasingly eager, even desperate, to master the new social rules of Internet fame. They know many young fans aren’t hearing about bands from MTV or magazines anymore; fame can come instead through viral word-of-mouth, when a friend forwards a Web-site address, swaps an MP3, e-mails a link to a fan blog or posts a cellphone concert video on YouTube.

So musicians dive into the fray — posting confessional notes on their blogs, reading their fans’ comments and carefully replying. They check their personal pages on MySpace, that virtual metropolis where unknown bands and comedians and writers can achieve global renown in a matter of days, if not hours, carried along by rolling cascades of popularity. Band members often post a daily MySpace “bulletin” — a memo to their audience explaining what they’re doing right at that moment — and then spend hours more approving “friend requests” from teenagers who want to be put on the artist’s sprawling list of online colleagues. (Indeed, the arms race for “friends” is so intense that some artists illicitly employ software robots that generate hundreds of fake online comrades, artificially boosting their numbers.) The pop group Barenaked Ladies held a video contest, asking fans to play air guitar along to the song “Wind It Up”; the best ones were spliced together as the song’s official music video. Even artists who haven’t got a clue about the Internet are swept along: Arctic Monkeys, a British band, didn’t know what MySpace was, but when fans created a page for them in 2005 — which currently boasts over 65,000 “friends” — it propelled their first single, “I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor,” to No. 1 on the British charts.

This trend isn’t limited to musicians; virtually every genre of artistic endeavor is slowly becoming affected, too. Filmmakers like Kevin Smith (“Clerks”) and Rian Johnson (“Brick”) post dispatches about the movies they’re shooting and politely listen to fans’ suggestions; the comedian Dane Cook cultivated such a huge fan base through his Web site that his 2005 CD “Retaliation” became the first comedy album to reach the Billboard Top 5 since 1978. But musicians are at the vanguard of the change. Their product, the three-minute song, was the first piece of pop culture to be fully revolutionized by the Internet. And their second revenue source — touring — makes them highly motivated to connect with far-flung fans.

This confluence of forces has produced a curious inflection point: for rock musicians, being a bit of a nerd now helps you become successful. When I spoke with Damian Kulash, the lead singer for the band OK Go, he discoursed like a professor on the six-degrees-of-separation theory, talking at one point about “rhizomatic networks.” (You can Google it.) Kulash has put his networking expertise to good use: last year, OK Go displayed a canny understanding of online dynamics when it posted on YouTube a low-budget homemade video that showed the band members dancing on treadmills to their song “Here It Goes Again.” The video quickly became one of the site’s all-time biggest hits. It led to the band’s live treadmill performance at the MTV Video Music Awards, which in turn led to a Grammy Award for best video.

This is not a trend that affects A-list stars. The most famous corporate acts — Justin Timberlake, Fergie, Beyoncé — are still creatures of mass marketing, carpet-bombed into popularity by expensive ad campaigns and radio airplay. They do not need the online world to find listeners, and indeed, their audiences are too vast for any artist to even pretend intimacy with. No, this is a trend that is catalyzing the B-list, the new, under-the-radar acts that have always built their success fan by fan. Across the country, the CD business is in a spectacular free fall; sales are down 20 percent this year alone. People are increasingly getting their music online (whether or not they’re paying for it), and it seems likely that the artists who forge direct access to their fans have the best chance of figuring out what the new economics of the music business will be.

The universe of musicians making their way online includes many bands that function in a traditional way — signing up with a label — while using the Internet primarily as a means of promotion, the way OK Go has done. Two-thirds of OK Go’s album sales are still in the physical world: actual CDs sold through traditional CD stores. But the B-list increasingly includes a newer and more curious life-form: performers like Coulton, who construct their entire business model online. Without the Internet, their musical careers might not exist at all. Coulton has forgone a record-label contract; instead, he uses a growing array of online tools to sell music directly to fans. He contracts with a virtual fulfillment house called CD Baby, which warehouses his CDs, processes the credit-card payment for each sale and ships it out, while pocketing only $4 of the album’s price, a much smaller cut than a traditional label would take. CD Baby also places his music on the major digital-music stores like iTunes, Rhapsody and Napster. Most lucratively, Coulton sells MP3s from his own personal Web sites, where there’s no middleman at all.
In total, 41 percent of Coulton’s income is from digital-music sales, three-quarters of which are sold directly off his own Web site. Another 29 percent of his income is from CD sales; 18 percent is from ticket sales for his live shows. The final 11 percent comes from T-shirts, often bought online.

Indeed, running a Web store has allowed Coulton and other artists to experiment with intriguing innovations in flexible pricing. Remarkably, Coulton offers most of his music free on his site; when fans buy his songs, it is because they want to give him money. The Canadian folk-pop singer Jane Siberry has an even more clever system: she has a “pay what you can” policy with her downloadable songs, so fans can download them free — but her site also shows the average price her customers have paid for each track. This subtly creates a community standard, a generalized awareness of how much people think each track is really worth. The result? The average price is as much as $1.30 a track, more than her fans would pay at iTunes.
Yet this phenomenon isn’t merely about money and business models. In many ways, the Internet’s biggest impact on artists is emotional. When you have thousands of fans interacting with you electronically, it can feel as if you’re on stage 24 hours a day.

“I vacillate so much on this,” Tad Kubler told me one evening in March. “I’m like, I want to keep some privacy, some sense of mystery. But I also want to have this intimacy with our fans. And I’m not sure you can have both.” Kubler is the guitarist for the Brooklyn-based rock band the Hold Steady, and I met up with him at a Japanese bar in Pittsburgh, where the band was performing on its latest national tour. An exuberant but thoughtful blond-surfer type, Kubler drank a Sapporo beer and explained how radically the Internet had changed his life on the road. His previous band existed before the Web became ubiquitous, and each town it visited was a mystery: Would 20 people come out? Would two? When the Hold Steady formed four years ago, Kubler immediately signed up for a MySpace page, later adding a discussion board, and curious fans were drawn in like iron filings to a magnet. Now the band’s board teems with fans asking technical questions about Kubler’s guitars, swapping bootlegged MP3 recordings of live gigs with each other, organizing carpool drives to see the band. Some send e-mail messages to Kubler from cities where the band will be performing in a couple of weeks, offering to design, print and distribute concert posters free. As the band’s appointed geek, Kubler handles the majority of its online audience relations; fans at gigs chant his online screen-name, “Koob.”

“It’s like night and day, man,” Kubler said, comparing his current situation with his pre-Internet musical career. “It’s awesome now.”

Kubler regards fan interaction as an obligation that is cultural, almost ethical. He remembers what it was like to be a young fan himself, enraptured by the members of Led Zeppelin. “That’s all I wanted when I was a fan, right?” he said. “To have some small contact with these guys you really dug. I think I’m still that way. I’ll be, like, devastated if I never meet Jimmy Page before I die.” Indeed, for a guitarist whose arms are bedecked in tattoos and who maintains an aggressive schedule of drinking, Kubler seems genuinely touched by the shy queries he gets from teenagers.

“If some kid is going to take 10 minutes out of his day to figure out what he wants to say in an e-mail, and then write it and send it, for me to not take the 5 minutes to say, dude, thanks so much — for me to ignore that?” He shrugged. “I can’t.”

Yet Kubler sometimes has second thoughts about the intimacy. Part of the allure of rock, when he was a kid, was the shadowy glamour that surrounded his favorite stars. He’d parse their lyrics to try to figure out what they were like in person. Now he wonders: Are today’s online artists ruining their own aura by blogging? Can you still idolize someone when you know what they had for breakfast this morning? “It takes a little bit of the mystery out of rock ’n’ roll,” he said.

So Kubler has cultivated a skill that is unique to the age of Internet fandom, and perhaps increasingly necessary to it, as well: a nuanced ability to seem authentic and confessional without spilling over into a Britney Spears level of information overload. He doesn’t post about his home life, doesn’t mention anything about his daughter or girlfriend — and he certainly doesn’t describe any of the ill-fated come-ons he deflects from addled female fans who don’t realize he’s in a long-term relationship. (Another useful rule he imparts to me: Post in the morning, when you’re no longer drunk.)

There’s something particularly weird, the band members have also found, about living with fans who can now trade information — and misinformation — about them. All celebrities are accustomed to dealing with reporters; but fans represent a new, wild-card form of journalism. Franz Nicolay, the Hold Steady’s nattily-dressed keyboardist, told me that he now becomes slightly paranoid while drinking with fans after a show, because he’s never sure if what he says will wind up on someone’s blog. After a recent gig in Britain, Nicolay idly mentioned to a fan that he had heard that Bruce Springsteen liked the Hold Steady. Whoops: the next day, that factoid was published on a fan blog, “and it had, like, 25 comments!” Nicolay said. So now he carefully polices what he says in casual conversation, which he thinks is a weird thing for a rock star to do. “You can’t be the drunken guy who just got offstage anymore,” he said with a sigh. “You start acting like a pro athlete, saying all these banal things after you get off the field.” For Nicolay, the intimacy of the Internet has made postshow interactions less intimate and more guarded.
The Hold Steady’s online audience has grown so huge that Kubler, like Jonathan Coulton, is struggling to bear the load. It is the central paradox of online networking: if you’re really good at it, your audience quickly grows so big that you can no longer network with them. The Internet makes fame more quickly achievable — and more quickly unmanageable. In the early days of the Hold Steady, Kubler fielded only a few e-mail messages a day, and a couple of “friend” requests on MySpace. But by this spring, he was receiving more than 100 communications from fans each day, and he was losing as much as two or three hours a day dealing with them. “People will say to me, ‘Hey, dude, how come you haven’t posted a bulletin lately?’ ” Kubler told me. “And I’m like, ‘I haven’t done one because every time I do we get 300 messages and I spend a day going through them!’ ”

To cope with the flood, the Hold Steady has programmed a software robot to automatically approve the 100-plus “friend” requests it receives on MySpace every day. Other artists I spoke to were testing out similar tricks, including automatic e-mail macros that generate instant “thank you very much” replies to fan messages. Virtually everyone bemoaned the relentless and often boring slog of keyboarding. It is, of course, precisely the sort of administrative toil that people join rock bands to avoid.

Even the most upbeat artist eventually crashes and burns. Indeed, fan interactions seem to surf along a sine curve, as an artist’s energy for managing the emotional demands waxes and wanes. As I roamed through online discussion boards and blogs, the tone was nearly always pleasant, even exuberant — fans politely chatting with their favorite artists or gushing praise. But inevitably, out of the blue, the artist would be overburdened, or a fan would feel slighted, and some minor grievance would flare up. At the end of March, a few weeks after I talked with Kubler in Pittsburgh, I logged on to the Hold Steady’s discussion board to discover that he had posted an angry notice about fans who sent him nasty e-mail messages complaining that the band wasn’t visiting their cities. “I honestly cannot believe some of the e-mails, hate mail and otherwise total [expletive] I’ve been hearing,” he wrote. “We’re coming to rock. Please be ready.”

Another evening I visited the message board for the New York post-punk band Nada Surf, where a fan posted a diatribe attacking the bass player for refusing to sign an autograph at a recent show, prompting an extended fan discussion of whether the bass player was a jerk or not. A friend of mine pointed me to the remarkable plight of Poppy Z. Brite, a novelist who in 2005 accused fans on a discussion board of being small-minded about children — at which point her fans banned her from the board.

When Jonathan Coulton first began writing his weekly songs, he carefully tracked how many people listened to each one on his Web site. His listenership rose steadily, from around 1,000 a week at first to 50,000 by the end of his yearlong song-a-week experiment. But there were exceptions to this gradual rise: five songs that became breakout “hits,” receiving almost 10 times as many listeners as the songs that preceded and followed them. The first hit was an improbable cover song: Coulton’s deadpan version of the 1992 Sir Mix-a-Lot rap song “Baby Got Back,” performed like a hippie folk ballad. Another was “Code Monkey,” his pop song about a disaffected cubicle worker.

Obviously, Coulton was thrilled when his numbers popped, not least because the surge of traffic produced thousands more dollars in sales. But the successes also tortured him: he would rack his brains trying to figure out why people loved those particular songs so much. What had he done right? Could he repeat the same trick?

“Every time I had a hit, it would sort of ruin me for a few weeks,” he told me. “I would feel myself being a little bit repressed in my creativity, and ideas would not come to me as easily. Or else I would censor myself a little bit more.” His fans, he realized, were most smitten by his geekier songs, the ones that referenced science fiction, mathematics or video games. Whenever he branches out and records more traditional pop fare, he worries it will alienate his audience.
For many of these ultraconnected artists, it seems the nature of creativity itself is changing. It is no longer a solitary act: their audiences are peering over their shoulders as they work, offering pointed comments and suggestions. When OK Go released its treadmill-dancing video on YouTube, it quickly amassed 15 million views, a number so big that it is, as Kulash, the singer, told me, slightly surreal. “Fifteen million people is more than you can see,” he said. “It’s like this big mass of ants, and you’re sitting at home in your underpants to see how many times you’ve been downloaded, and you can sort of feel the ebb and flow of mass attention.” Fans pestered him to know what the band’s next video would be; some even suggested the band try dancing on escalators. Kulash was conflicted. He didn’t want to be known just for making goofy videos; he also wanted people to pay attention to OK Go’s music. In the end, the band decided not to do another dance video, because, as Kulash concluded, “How do you follow up 15 million hits?” All the artists I spoke to made a point of saying they would never simply pander to their fans’ desires. But many of them also said that staying artistically “pure” now requires the mental discipline of a ninja.

These days, Coulton is wondering whether an Internet-built fan base inevitably hits a plateau. Many potential Coulton fans are fanatical users of MySpace and YouTube, of course; but many more aren’t, and the only way for him to reach them is via traditional advertising, which he can’t afford, or courting media attention, a wearying and decidedly old-school task. Coulton’s single biggest spike in traffic to his Web site took place last December, when he appeared on NPR’s “Weekend Edition Sunday,” a fact that, he notes, proves how powerful old-fashioned media still are. (And “Weekend Edition” is orders of magnitude smaller than major entertainment shows like MTV’s “Total Request Live,” which can make a new artist in an afternoon.) Perhaps there’s no way to use the Internet to vault from the B-list to the A-list and the only bands that sell millions of copies will always do it via a well-financed major-label promotion campaign. “Maybe this is what my career will be,” Coulton said: slowly building new fans online, playing live occasionally, making a solid living but never a crazy-rich one. He’s considered signing on with a label or a cable network to try to chase a higher circle of fame, but that would mean giving up control. And, he says, “I think I’m addicted to running my own show now.”

Will the Internet change the type of person who becomes a musician or writer? It’s possible to see these online trends as Darwinian pressures that will inevitably produce a new breed — call it an Artist 2.0 — and mark the end of the artist as a sensitive, bohemian soul who shuns the spotlight. In “The Catcher in the Rye,” J. D. Salinger wrote about how reading a good book makes you want to call up the author and chat with him, which neatly predicted the modern online urge; but Salinger, a committed recluse, wouldn’t last a minute in this confessional new world. Neither would, say, Margo Timmins of the Cowboy Junkies, a singer who was initially so intimidated by a crowd that she would sit facing the back of the stage. What happens to art when people like that are chased away?

It is also possible, though, that this is simply a natural transition point and that the next generation of musicians and artists — even the avowedly “sensitive” ones — will find the constant presence of their fans unremarkable. The psychological landscape has arguably already tilted that way for anyone under 20. There are plenty of teenagers today who regard themselves as “private” individuals, yet who post openly about their everyday activities on Facebook or LiveJournal, complete with camera-phone pictures. For that generation, the line between public and private is so blurry as to become almost nonexistent. Any teenager with a MySpace page is already fluent in managing a constant stream of dozens of semianonymous people clamoring to befriend them; if those numbers rise to hundreds or even thousands, maybe, for them, it won’t be a big deal. It’s also true that many recluses in real life flower on the Internet, which can famously be a place of self-expression and self-reinvention.

While researching this article, I occasionally scanned the list of top-rated bands on MySpace — the ones with the most “friends.” One of the biggest was a duo called the Scene Aesthetic, whose MySpace presence had sat atop several charts (folk, pop, rock) for a few months. I called Andrew de Torres, a 21-year-old Seattle resident and a co-founder of the group, to find out his story. De Torres, who played in a few emo bands as a teenager, had the idea for the Scene Aesthetic in January 2005, when he wrote a song that required two dueling male voices. He called his friend Eric Bowley, and they recorded the song — an aching ballad called “Beauty in the Breakdown” — in a single afternoon in Bowley’s basement. They posted it to MySpace, figuring it might get a couple of listens. But the song clearly struck a chord with the teen-heavy MySpace audience, and within days it had racked up thousands of plays. Requests to be the duo’s “friend” came surging in, along with messages demanding more songs. De Torres and Bowley quickly banged out three more; when those went online, their growing fan base urged them to produce a full album and to go on tour.

“It just sort of accidentally turned into this huge thing,” de Torres told me when I called him up. “We thought this was a little side project. We thought we wouldn’t do much with it. We just threw it up online.” Now their album is due out this summer, and they have roughly 22,000 people a day listening to their songs on MySpace, plus more than 180,000 “friends.” A cross-country tour that ended last December netted them “a pretty good amount of money,” de Torres added.

This sort of career arc was never previously possible. If you were a singer with only one good song, there was no way to release it independently on a global scale — and thus no way of knowing if there was a market for your talent. But the online fan world has different gravitational physics: on the basis of a single tune, the Scene Aesthetic kick-started an entire musical career.

Which is perhaps the end result of the new online fan world: it allows a fresh route to creative success, assuming the artist has the correct emotional tools. De Torres, a decade or more younger than Coulton and the Hold Steady, is a natural Artist 2.0: he happily spends two hours a day or more parsing notes from teenagers who tell him “your work totally got me through some rough times.” He knows that to lure in listeners, he needs to post some of his work on MySpace, but since he wants people to eventually buy his album, he doesn’t want to give away all his goods. He has thus developed an ear for what he calls “the perfect MySpace song” — a tune that is immediately catchy, yet not necessarily the strongest from his forthcoming album. For him, being a musician is rather like being a business manager, memoirist and group therapist rolled into one, with a politician’s thick hide to boot.

Clive Thompson, a contributing writer, writes frequently about technology for the magazine.

Miniproject Description and Schedule

What follows are descriptions of the miniprojects that we'll be working on during the term. For each one, you will write a 1-2 page paper (between 500 and 750 words).

Submit the miniprojects ONLY by posting them to the blog (www.drexelfameclass.blogspot.com). You are all now "invited guests," so posting should be pretty straightforward.

Do not hand in a hard copy to me in class. Postings must appear by Friday at 5 p.m.

For now, we'll just go with these five, but I may add more as we go.

Please post comments on the work submitted by your friends and colleagues.

Here goes:

1. Are we all just itching to appear on a reality show? Conduct short interviews with three or four people in the hopes of coming up with an answer to this question. What do your subjects think about the folks who do appear on these shows?

2. Locate your favorite fame-related memento. Maybe it's an autograph or a guitar pick thrown to you during a concert. Write about how you obtained it and how the meaning of the item has changed for you over time. Then, bring the memento with you to class during Week 2.

3. Keep a log of how often you talked about celebrities and their fame this weekend. Once the log is completed, go back and review what you've written down. Write about the experience of reviewing your own involvement with fame and celebrity. Did anything surprise you?

4. Find someone who you believe should be famous, but isn't. Tell them why you think they should be famous, and write about that person's reactions.

5. What are the factors, in your view, that contribute to so many people desperately wanting to leave a "legacy" once they're no longer with us? What does this say about society? About us?

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Fame In Film: The Aviator - Kristofer Dorsey

The movie starts Leonardo DiCaprio as eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes as he starts his life as a director and movie producer to the most innovate person in the world of aviation. The story also follows his life in the lime light as he dated some of Hollywood’s leading ladies. Also, how he made headlines as he became one of the forefather’s in aviation. It also takes a look at how he became a recluse and later shied away from being a star in the public’s eye.
Fame for the Howard Hughes character is a roller coaster for him. While he is striving to make the move, Hell’s Angels, and prove all his critics wrong, he also starts to gain more interest in him from the media. The movie takes more than two years to make and this gets the media to start talking about the 22-year-old director that is directing the “most expensive movie of all time.” As the movie premiers, he make sure that the event is huge with airplanes flying over and that all the media is there. He also brings along the beautiful Jean Harlow to accompany him. The media eats this up. This is the night to see if his huge movie flops and also see what is going on with his love life.
Hell’s Angel becomes a hit. As the movie goes on, he shifts his attention from directing and producing to aviation. At the time he was doing this, aviation was just making way in to the world. This was the time of Charles Lindbergh and the competition of being the best at flying. Hughes gained more fame after breaking Charles Lindbergh record of flying the fastest plane and garnered more fame for himself. After also crashing a plane in a cornfield, it gained him more fame because he always pushed things to the age. The most famous of his crashes is when he crashed in to a Beverly Hills neighborhood causing damage to surrounding houses and almost killing himself. This allowed his legend to grow even larger. His fame would never eclipse the time he took on Juan Trippe, owner of Pan American Airlines, and Senator Owen Brewster, who worried over the possibility that Hughes, might beat them in the quest for commercial expansion. During this time, Trippe and Sen. Brewster slung his name in the mud after Hughes was not able to provide his monumental plane, the Hercules, in time of the war. They said that he was taking money away from the public and that he was a disgrace for his nation. During this time, due to his Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, Hughes became a recluse. The media wondered if these statements were true since he didn’t go public and nobody knew where he was. Shying away from the public is the worst thing a person that was of his magnitude could do. The reason I say this is because it gains more interest in him from the media. The mudslinging did not stop until he went in front of Congress and spoke his mind. This got the public back on his side and he was no longer since as a nemesis to the United States. He later created a pseudo-event of his aircraft, the Hercules, and took reporters from the press on its first and only flight. His life through the crazy world of aviation does not compare to his love life. He was the equivalent of a male version of Angelina Jolie and Jennifer Lopez. The women he was involved with were some of the biggest stars at the time and always gave him a headline in Hollywood.
In the movie, his first big love interest was Katharine Hepburn. Although both were stars in Hollywood, they basically shied away from the public as much as they could. They still was able to meet the headlines as it shown in the movie that Hepburn was mad and tired of seeing Hughes in the paper with a different Hollywood starlet. This led to the end of their relationship and to Hepburn leaving Hughes for Spencer Tracey. During this time, Spencer Tracey was married when he his affair with Hepburn. The paparazzi followed them on vacation and took incriminating photos of their romantic getaway. Once Howard heard about this, he paid so that these photos wouldn’t get release. If so, they would’ve ruined Hepburn and Tracey’s life. His second high profile love was the beautiful Ava Gardner. She at the time was Hollywood’s starlet and with Howard involved with her, the paparazzi would follow. An example of this was shown when heading to dinner, Gardner and Hughes was attacked in their car by Hughes former love, Faith Domergue, who rammed their car. The paparazzi flashed away as he made headline news of being a love triangle.
The film makes you reevaluate the idea of fame. It makes you wonder if this is really what you want. Do you want your name to be dragged in the mud? Do you want people think that this is the way you are because the media portrayed you that way? Is it worth it? For Howard Hughes, it look as if he could do his all the things he loved for aviation and not tamper with Hollywood, I think he would’ve been better off. It was the path he chose and his path is what makes people legends.

Monday, May 14, 2007

Mini Projects 1-3 Melinda Glass

1. Are we all just itching to appear on a reality show? Conduct short interviews with three or four people in the hopes of coming up with an answer to this question. What do your subjects think about the folks who do appear on these shows?

I interviewed three people to find out "if we're all just itching to appear on reality shows." I discovered this itch doesn't necessarily occur for everyone.

I went home this past weekend, and the first person I wanted to see was my best friend, Amanda. We've known each other since we were five years-old. We know everything about each other. We have the exact same humor, and when you get us together we can finish each other's sentences. We've often joked, in fact, that we should have our own reality show. I understand it's more than a bit vain to think our lives are interesting enough to be aired on television, but nonetheless, we've assured ourselves it would be the best show EVER. With that said, I was sure when I presented her with the question, she would immediately say she'd LOVE to be on a reality TV show. Her answer, however, was quite the opposite. When I asked her the question, shows like The Real World popped into her head. She told me she couldn't do it. When I asked why, she said, "Because it would ruin my career." Amanda is going to school for secondary English education. She said no one wanted to see their future teacher or their future employee doing shots with her roommates every Friday night. I then asked her, "What about shows like Survivor?" She thought about it for a minute and then said simply, "Nah." She said the chances of her winning a competition like that were slim-to-none. She'd inevitably get kicked off and return to college sunburned and a semester behind. I then asked Amanda what she thought of the people who appear on reality TV shows. She told me they're the type of people who are willing to put their real lives on the back burner while they peruse a dream of being on television. She described them as, "risk takers." She said personally, however, the risks weren't worth it to her.

The next two people I asked were my 25 year-old sister, and my dad. Both of them responded a little differently than Amanda. They both agreed that neither of them could appear on a show like The Real World. They said shows like this are specifically for dramatic purposes, and have no pay off. They would, however, gladly go on a reality TV show that has the possibility of a cash prize at the end. I pointed out that these shows are for dramatic purposes as well, but they told me it would be worth it. When presented with this opportunity, they saw nothing but money signs. But their opinions of the motives of others who appear on these shows did not match their own. My sister said most of the people who want to be on reality TV just want their 15 minutes. My dad agreed and said most of them wish they could have their own sitcom. It was interesting to me that they didn't think there are some people, like them, who may just be in it for the money and not the fame.

Some people are not itching to be on reality television, some would love the opportunity to make some cash, and some are just in it for the false sense of fame.

2. Locate your favorite fame-related memento. Maybe it's an autograph or a guitar pick thrown to you during a concert. Write about how you obtained it and how the meaning of the item has changed for you over time. Then, bring the memento with you to class during Week 2.

I was in 8th grade when I first saw the film Good Will Hunting. Any girl that age was bound to develop a celebrity crush on either Matt or Ben. It was inevitable. For me, it was Matt Damon. I did what any star-struck 12 year-old would do. I fell in love with Boston, and I watched the movie over and over again until my parents told me the language was too strong (really they were just sick of it). Then, that Christmas, my mom got me an autographed picture online. I was ecstatic. I convinced myself it was his real signature, framed the picture, and hung it in my bedroom. But as time went on, I loved Matt Damon less and less, and in turn, loved the picture less and less. I realized it probably wasn't even his signature, and pictured some random man signing laminated photos of celebrities and selling them on Ebay.

Over time, things can loose their significance--especially superficial things, and especially things from your childhood. That autographed picture is somewhere in a closet now. I guess I was never a die-hard fan. It was just a temporary crush. Funny, though, Boston is still my favorite city.

3. Keep a log of how often you talked about celebrities and their fame this weekend. Once the log is completed, go back and review what you've written down. Write about the experience of reviewing your own involvement with fame and celebrity. Did anything surprise you?

I was very surprised when reviewing my "celebrity log." I don't have cable in my apartment so I tend to believe because I'm not exposed to television very often, I don't really talk about celebrities that often. The frequency of celebrity fame in my conversations this weekend could have been because I was home in Reading, PA, and exposed to cable TV. But I have a suspicious feeling that had I been in Philadelphia, the log would have been similar. It just seems so natural to bring up celebrities during conversation. So natural, in fact, that I'm sure there were times I didn't even think to record it in the log.

I remember I was at my friend Amanda's house yesterday and I was flipping through her 2006-2007 calendar. Every month featured a movie that came out this year. I flipped to January- The Breakup and immediately I blurted, "Are Vince Vaughn and Jennifer Aniston still together??" Amanda and I spent the next half hour talking about the Jen/Vince/Brad/Angelena fiasco. WHY DO WE CARE SO MUCH? There are so many other things going on in our lives that we could have talked about-things that actually affect us. But during that moment, Jen and Brad's love lives were all that mattered.

We talk about celebrities because they're the only people you can talk poorly about with no consequence. We talk about them to escape from the problems of our own lives. We talk about them in an attempt to live vicariously through them. Whatever the reason, people get something out of celebrity fame. It's different for everyone, and different according to the topic and setting. But one thing is for sure, there's a reason we're compelled to talk about them. Otherwise, my log would have been empty.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Mini Project #3 - Gina Carrano

When I first prepared to keep a weekend log of how much time I spent discussing celebrities, I had absolutely no idea what I’d find. I’m not someone who holds most mainstream celebrities—the Lindsay Lohans and Paris Hiltons of the world—in very high regard. Other than the most cursory details that I may hear about on a show like Best Week Ever (which I watch in part because it makes fun of them & their ilk), I have absolutely no idea what’s going on in their lives, nor do I really care to know. However, there are certain celebrities, mainly musicians and athletes, I do like very much, and I suspected that I’d spend a decent amount of time in a given weekend either listening to their music, watching them play on TV, or talking about them. Sure enough, I did, and I even spent a little bit of time talking about those aforementioned “mainstream celebrities,” although in keeping with my habits, any discussion I had about them was mostly making fun of them. I guess I divide celebrities into two categories: people of dubious talent who are often famous just for being famous are the ones I tend not to pay much mind, and people who have a specific talent and/or are famous for something are the ones I do talk about.

On Friday, I went to a Minor League Baseball game, and there was really no talk of celebrities at all, which makes sense since the minor leagues, by definition, are a breeding ground for people who aren’t yet—but might someday be—famous. When I got back to Philly I went out with some friends, and again, there wasn’t much celebrity talk. We criticized the music that was being played at the bar, which led to a conversation about how Journey, Foreigner and ZZ Top constituted the best drinking music ever. We also spent some time talking about the new Nine Inch Nails album, Year Zero, with my friend taking the position that Trent Reznor’s best days were behind him and me disagreeing vehemently. But any of the time we did spend discussing celebrities was to discuss their work, not their personal lives. The only time that night a celebrity’s personal life did come up was later that night when my boyfriend and I were watching an episode of Oz, HBO’s now-defunct prison drama and also the best TV show in the history of the universe. The episode we were watching had a female inmate staying at Oz, so we started talking about how Paris Hilton was going to jail, and in the context of Oz, joked around a bit about what gang she would be in, whether she would get whacked or be someone’s bitch, etc.

On Saturday my involvement with celebrity was definitely a lot greater. I spent most of the afternoon just hanging out and listening to music with my boyfriend and his friend, and every so often a general comment about the song we were listening to, or the artist who created it, would come up. The evening is when my celebrity consumption increased, as there was an NBA playoffs doubleheader on TV. Sadly, my defending champion Miami Heat were knocked out of playoffs in the first round but I’m a longtime basketball fan regardless, so we watched the second half of the Cleveland/New Jersey game and all of the Phoenix/San Antonio game. The first game caused some chaos in the house because my boyfriend is a Nets fan, his friend is a Cavs fan, and I’m rooting for the Cavs as well since LeBron James is good friends with my favorite player, Dwayne Wade. After some tense moments on both ends the Nets won, at which point we all had to give it up for Jason Kidd. Since the Suns/Spurs game was on next, we also spent some time talking about how much better of a player we feel Kidd is than Steve Nash. The Spurs/Suns game was very exciting, with many tight plays and lead changes, but at that point we paid less attention because we’d had a few beers and were also listening to music and talking about other things at the same time. But our attention was captured when the Spurs’ Manu Ginobili got punched in the eye; we all sat up straight after that and cheered as Tim Duncan and Ginobili (black eye and all) went on a scoring rampage and the Spurs won. I did try to get them to indulge in a little bit of celebrity gossip about Eva Longoria and Tony Parker, but since they’re guys, they didn’t really have much to say other than that Tony Parker is lucky. I also watched about half of that night’s Yankees game, as I wanted to see how their young rookie pitcher was doing, but that was about it.

Today, Sunday, I barely spent any time talking about celebrities. I went to my friend’s house and had lunch with her and her parents, who were there for Mother’s Day. I hadn’t seen my friend in a while and hadn’t seen her parents in ages, so most of our time was spent catching up on our lives. We did talk about American Idol a bit, but nothing specific, just that it is kind of boring this year. Also, when I called my mom to wish her a Happy Mother’s Day, we talked about the aforementioned rookie Yankees pitcher and how they said during the pregame show that he reads Camus and Nietzsche in the clubhouse, which I find adorable.

Overall, I guess I spent about the amount of time I was expecting discussing, watching or listening to celebrities—without anything to gauge it against, it seems like an average amount of time to me. Often times, I’d have music or a game on in the background when I was doing something else, which I guess is a halfhearted measure of celebrity consumption. And the majority of this time was spent discussing celebrities’ works of talent, which is my preference over gossip about their personal lives.

Fame On Film - Gina Carrano

(sorry for the delay in posting this, I had some computer problems over the weekend.)

For the “Fame on Film” project, I chose to analyze the movie Almost Famous. As I embarked upon the assignment, my first thought was that I’d never before done schoolwork that actually seemed less like work and more like fun. Almost Famous is one of my all-time favorite movies; in addition to a great soundtrack and interesting characters and storylines, it also stars two actors I admire very much—Frances McDormand and Jason Lee—and it pays tribute to the terrific writing of Lester Bangs.

Although I’d seen Almost Famous many times before, the movie took on many new meanings and symbols when I specifically analyzed it in terms of its statements on fame. I quickly realized that nearly every character in the movie aspired to some sphere of fame. On the surface, it would seem that the only people actively trying to get famous were the members of Stillwater, the band that main character William Miller followed on tour. But taking into account the different spheres of fame we discussed in class, it seemed like every character was trying to be admired in some form.

William Miller is a perfect example of this. At first glance, he doesn’t aspire to fame in the traditional sense; he certainly isn’t trying to be as famous as the rock bands he wants to write about. The great divide between him and bands like Stillwater is emphasized throughout the course of the movie, as much is made of William being “uncool.” At the beginning of the movie, when William’s mother reveals to him that he was skipped two grades in school, making him two years younger than his classmates, we see that William isn’t even considered cool among his peers. Later on, rock critic Lester Bangs tells William, “They [Stillwater] make you feel cool. And I met you—you’re not cool.” William expresses agreement with this idea, indicating that he does not expect to achieve the same sphere of national fame and adoration as a rock critic as they’ve achieved as musicians.

In addition to not wanting to be perceived as a wannabe celebrity, William also takes great care to identify himself as a journalist—a professional there to do a job, rather than a fan who hangs around celebrities to get close to them. When he first meets Penny Lane outside of the Black Sabbath/Stillwater show, he makes it abundantly clear that he’s there to interview the band, not because he’s a “groupie”—a term which causes much protest among Penny Lane and her friends, as they prefer the slightly more euphemistically correct “Band-Aid” to describe their admiration for rock stars.

Because William was so keenly aware of the differences between himself and other groups (the band, the groupies), one might think he didn’t place much importance on fame. But it was actually often evident that he did want to be admired in his own way. In the scene at the end of the initial Stillwater concert he attended, as the band leaves the venue, he addresses all of them very familiarly, even calling some of them by nicknames, as if they’re longtime friends. This shows his desire to be liked and respected by the members of the band. Maybe he doesn’t want to be loved by them at the same level the Band-Aids do, but he does want them to accept him.

When he actually goes on tour with the band, he goes out of his way for them multiple times; for instance, he allows the band’s guitarist, Russell Hammond, to reschedule the interview he had planned with him multiple times at Russell’s convenience and his own frustration. William is so set on getting the band, particularly Russell, to like and respect him that he misses his junior high graduation to stay on the road with the band. And in the first draft of his article on Stillwater for Rolling Stone, the magazine’s staff complains that his piece read “like what [the band] wants [him] to write,” further showing that Stillwater’s fame impresses William enough to seek their approval, even at his own journalistic peril.

Speaking of journalism, this movie shows us that even rock critics aren’t immune to wanting to attain some level of fame. When Rolling Stone’s editor first contacts William to ask him to follow Stillwater on tour and write a piece for the magazine about it, William is so eager to get his byline in America’s most prominent music magazine that he is willing to lie about his age to get the assignment.

Even William’s mentor, Lester Bangs, enjoys recognition. Although Bangs appears to eschew fame and celebrity throughout much of the movie—like when he is the guest at a radio station and encourages the DJ to ditch a mainstream Doors track in favor of the more avant-garde, lesser-known Iggy Pop and the Stooges—he is clearly appreciative when William seeks him out outside the radio station and identifies himself as a fan. He even goes out of his way to help William, first by hiring him to write a piece about Black Sabbath, and then by dispensing guidance and advice when he’s on the road with Stillwater. Maybe Bangs just sees some of himself in William, and would have helped him either way. But his relationship with William shows that on some level, even he wants to be adored and renowned.

Stillwater’s quest for fame is much more obvious than William’s or Lester Bangs. It is pretty clear that all the members of Stillwater want to be big-time rock stars and attain the same sphere of fame as icons like Led Zeppelin or Bob Dylan. An interesting picture of their attitudes towards fame is painted in their relationships with each other and other people on the road. The band members feel a great deal of insecurity about how famous they actually are, and are always seeking validation as a result. When they first see William outside the venue at which they’re about to perform, they don’t pay him much mind when he tries to talk to them—until he calls Russell, the guitarist, “incendiary.” They’re on a quest for fame, and he is verbally co-signing their success; all of a sudden, wanting to hear more, they turn back and invite him to attend the show as their guest.

There is also a lot of insecurity at play in Stillwater’s relationships with each other. Out of the four of them, Russell is generally the one to garner the most admiration and acclaim. Stillwater’s other members, particularly the lead singer Jeff Bebe (who feels as the frontman, he should get all the attention) are jealous of Russell as a result. The band’s resentments towards Russell intensify when their record company sends over t-shirts that have Russell’s image front and center, with the rest of the band’s faces a blur behind him, and come to a head when they believe their plane will crash while flying home from their tour. As they’re staring death in the face, the truth comes out, and Jeff angrily tells Russell that he always acts like he’s better than his bandmates, and lords his superiority over their heads, teasing them with the prospect that he might leave them in the dust to go solo.

Although he never comes out and says it, Russell does hint to William that he believes he is in fact the band’s most talented member, but his insecurities manifest themselves in his relationship with the band’s head groupie (or “Band-Aid”) Penny Lane. Despite being engaged, Russell has a close relationship with Penny on the road that is both romantic and sexual in nature. He and the other members of the band have groupies because they want to feel adored, and in part because it is a rite of passage in rock’n’roll, thus making them feel more famous if they do it, too. The dynamic of Russell’s relationship with Penny also makes him feel more powerful, as exhibited when he “trades” her to another band, Humble Pie, for $50 and a case of beer. This is a prime example of the pull the famous have over the fame seeking.

Everybody who traveled on the road with the band aspired to their own spheres of fame, and Penny was no exception. She had carved out her own niche of renown as the first “Band Aid,” and was well known and respected among her group. She was even known among the bands, which seemed to be what motivated her lifestyle. She truly did love the bands she followed, and wanted, even for a moment, to inspire their members the way they inspired her. On some level, though, she always knew they were using her. Almost overdosing on Quaaludes after seeing Russell with his fiancé was merely the breaking point at which she couldn’t lie to herself about it anymore.

Despite all this, the movie didn’t make the famous out to be completely heartless. In the end, Russell had an attack of conscience, fueled by William’s impassioned declarations on their near-fatal flight home about how badly he’d treated Penny. Ultimately this was one of the primary statements the movie is making about fame—even rock stars have hearts. They may use people sometimes, and indeed Stillwater may have used William throughout much of the movie, both to get on the cover of Rolling Stone and to feel cool and validate their fame in their own minds. But Russell’s conscience overcame him and he made things right with Penny and with William, when he called the Rolling Stone editors and told them the “honest and unforgiving” article he wrote about Stillwater was, in fact, true. The truth may not have made the band look as cool, but it sure made them look a lot more human. Humanity can also be likeable, and in the end every character in this movie just wants to be liked.

Friday, May 11, 2007

Paper Two, Andrew Damiter

Well, this is a bit of a mess. Made sense at the time (read: early morning hours).

Fame is a subjective concept, insomuch as it depends on who’s looking at it. What fame means to the rising movie star differs from the ideas of the young boy enchanted by what he sees on a movie screen. From a neutral perspective it might be easy to figure out where everyone fits in the puzzle, but when all of the pieces are thrown together with no regard to placement, things don’t always work themselves out neatly. In Cameron Crowe’s “Almost Famous,” people from all different fame perspectives are brought together in what becomes a thoroughly detailed exploration of the impact of fame.

“Almost Famous” follows a young William Miller (Patrick Fugit) as he takes on the overwhelming task of writing an article exploring the inner workings of the up-and-coming band Stillwater. Before even bringing the band into the picture, a tour through William’s childhood reveals a lot about what fame can do. His mother, Elaine (Frances McDormand), a college professor, bans all rock music from the house and attempts to raise William in a world free of temptation and commercialization. William’s sister, Anita (Zooey Deschanel), is the rebellious youth that leaves home at 18 to become a stewardess and leaves behind all of her music records for William. William, having little to no connection with the musical generation of his age, becomes completely absorbed by what he hears.

And so begins William’s journey into the trenches of fame, where he takes part in a war with inconsistent sides. William views the musicians he sets out to interview as can-do-no-wrong idols. When he first comes in contact with the members of Stillwater, they brush him off as “the enemy,” a nickname that sticks for the remainder of the film, and he replies with compliments. The environment is so foreign to him that he can’t even bring himself to put down, if only to himself, the “band-aids” he meets outside the backstage entrance.

Penny Lane (Kate Hudson), who firmly states that she is far from a groupie, becomes William’s liaison to the world of musical fame. Penny’s character is interesting because she believes she is free of the influences of the celebrity world and is merely there to support the music. This is of course her excuse to chase around Stillwater member Russell Hammond (Billy Crudup), but it becomes obvious that parts of her truly believe she exists outside the accepted rules. It isn’t until late in the film when William finally comes to terms with the reality of fame that she herself has the same epiphany during the aftermath of her suicide attempt.

It is the direct and indirect actions between Penny and William that really show the diverse perspectives that exist within the presented spheres of fame. Russell is a major influence on their relationship, but the best examples of evolving perspectives come during scenes involving just the two of them. William puts Penny up on a pedestal like a divine being he can’t help but worship. During the course of the film her armor begins to show chinks and he realizes she is much more human than she lets on. It’s interesting to see how William shifts his idolizing from the musicians to Penny when he begins to become less of a fan and more of a friend, and then to watch his opinion of Penny slowly slip.

The dynamic between William and magazine editor Lester Bangs (Philip Seymour Hoffman) is interesting, as it plays a part in William’s other developing relationships. Lester is more or less against anything popular and advises William to not make friends and to be as unmerciful as possible. His outlooks and advice are sound, but they lack consideration for human emotion. No matter what William is told he cannot bring himself to remain either just a writer or just a fan. When the people he idolizes begin to do things he does not agree with, like Russell’s inconsistent treatment of Penny, he begins to see them as fallible humans and that makes it much easier for him to befriend them rather than admire them. This extends to Penny as well. Were William only to see her at concerts and not in more intimate settings he likely would have continued idolizing her.

While these characters are on the outside looking in, the members of Stillwater are on the inside looking out and as such have a much different view of things. Lead singer Jeff Bebe (Jason Lee) likes to think he does everything for the thrill of the music, but his commercial interests run deep. Russell on the other hand is genuinely interested in how his music is received, but maintains an aura of selfishness that is difficult to see through. The best example of their differing viewpoints colliding is during a scene in which their manager presents them with a misprinted t-shirt. Russell blows it off as no big deal while Jeff takes the mistake to heart. The differing opinions do not mesh well and a verbal altercation ensues. William also snags the t-shirt when the band leaves the room, since at that point he still viewed the band as something to look up to.

While the relationship between William and Penny emphasizes the constantly changing perspectives, it is the relationship between William and Russell that highlights the acceptance of this change. When both attend a party at a random fan’s house and William must cope with an acid-tripping Russell, a new type of relationship is born. It is at this time that William comes to accept the musicians he is traveling with as more normal than he originally thought and thus he begins to look at them with a more critical eye, albeit in a well-mannered way.

What this event also highlights is the portrayal of the everyday fan. Russell is the only celebrity at the party and he is more or less worshipped by the other attendees. He tells them stories, drinks with them and indulges in drugs with them. The fans only know him as Russell of Stillwater, and this chance encounter only heightens their admiration for him. “He’s just like us!” they likely proclaim during later discussions. By being able to relate to a celebrity in any way it makes them feel more like celebrities themselves, which raises their self esteem and increases the celebrity’s status in their collective eyes.

And it is through the eyes of the fans that the film’s true concept of fame is born. Through Russell’s fall from grace, Penny’s journey through love, suicide and understanding and the humanizing of William’s idols, we find that fame only truly exists within the detached. The legions of fans that chant with the chorus of a song and sway hypnotically through a ballad are the ones that dictate who gets to be famous. It is the obsessed, pen-wielding fan patrolling the halls of a celebrity hotel that showcases just how much influence someone can have even when the person they really are isn’t fully understood. Were the person behind the celebrity revealed, opinions might change. They might still be famous, but for different reasons – reasons the celebrity may not like. This is something we see a lot of within modern day celebrity culture.

Fame isn’t interesting; the people behind fame are interesting. William looked up to people like Russell, but he didn’t really know the real Russell. When Russell walked into William’s home, Anita was awestruck and reacted as one would expect a surprised fan to act. William? He knew Russell, and his reaction to Russell’s arrival was that of a friend and not of a fan. Fame is about appearances. Dig a little deeper and you’ll find a much more interesting story. Will it shatter perceptions? Probably. Is that a bad thing? That’s subjective. “Just make us look cool,” Russell spoke to William early on. That, in a nutshell, is the foundation of fame.