red carpet, and thought of Nick Prugo and Rachel Lee watching it, somewhere, transfixed. Then Jennifer Lopez was singing her song âLouboutinsâ (2009): â Iâm throwing on my Louboutins. . . Watch this Benz/Exit that driveway. . . . â I turned it off.
If the kids at the Calabasas Commons were right, then everybody not only wanted to be famous, but thought it was within their reach. Itâs telling that the most popular show on television between 2003 and 2011âin fact, the only show ever to be number one in the Nielsen ratings for eight consecutive seasonsâwas American Idol , a competition program celebrating the attainment of instant notoriety. âThis is America,â said Idol co-host Ryan Seacrest in 2010, âwhere everyone has the right to life, love, and the pursuit of fame.â As proof of this, Seacrest is also the executive producer of Keeping Up with the Kardashians .
The narrative of fame runs deep in American culture, dating back to A Star Is Born (1937) and beyond (arguably to the spread of photography in the 1850s and 1868âs Little Women âJo wants to be a famous writerâwhich isnât quite the same as wanting to be on The Real Housewives of Atlanta ). But itâs safe to say thereâs never been more of an emphasis on the glory of fame in the history of American popular culture. There are the countless competition shows ( The X Factor, Americaâs Got Talent, The Voice, Americaâs Next Top Model, Project Runway ); awards shows; reality television, on which even âhoardersâ and âAmerican pickersâ can become famous. There are Justin Bieber and Kate Upton, self-made sensations through the wonders of self-broadcasting. Explaining the success of YouTube in 2007, co-founder Chad Hurley said, âEveryone, in the back of his mind, wants to be a star.â Thereâs the new 24/7 celebrity news industry exemplified by TMZ and gossip blogs. Thereâs the way in which even legitimate news venues have become infused with celebrity reporting.
Unsurprisingly, the massive growth of the celebrity industrial complex hasnât failed to affect kids. To put it mildly, kids today are obsessed with fame. Thereâs already a fair amount of research about thisâit seems weâre obsessed with how obsessed kids are with becoming famous. A 2007 survey by the Pew Research Center found that 51 percent of 18-to-25-year-olds said their most or second-most important life goalâafter becoming richâwas becoming famous. In a 2005 survey of American high school students, 31 percent said they âexpectâ to be famous one day. For his book Fame Junkies (2007), author Jake Halpern and a team of academics conducted a survey of 650 teenagers in the Rochester, New York area. Among their findings: Given the choice of becoming stronger, smarter, famous, or more beautiful, boys chose fame almost as often as they chose intelligence, and girls chose it more often. Forty-three percent of girls said they would like to grow up to become a âpersonal assistant to a very famous singer or movie starââthree times more than as chose âa United States Senatorâ and four times more than chose âchief of a major company like General Motors.â When asked whom they would most like to have dinner with, more kids chose Jennifer Lopez than Jesus. More girls with symptoms of low self-esteem said they would like to have dinner with Paris Hilton.
Interestingly, kids who read tabloids and watch celebrity news shows like Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood are more likely to feel that they, too, will one day become famous. Girls and boys who describe themselves as lonely are more likely to endorse the statement: âMy favorite celebrity just helps me feel good and forget about all of my troubles.â
The fame bug is more prevalent in industrialized nations than in the developing world. A 2011