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Web Literacy: Fame and Power Part 2 217 Views
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Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:06
Power in Literature
- 00:07
Web Literacy
- 00:09
Fame and Power
- 00:12
[ bird caws ]
Full Transcript
- 00:13
Why would a celebrity use their power for good?
- 00:16
This all depends on what drives
- 00:20
the desire to be famous to begin with.
- 00:21
If your goal is to become famous
- 00:23
because you wanna live the celebrity lifestyle,
- 00:25
you're probably not going to be philanthropic.
- 00:29
If your goal is to be famous
- 00:31
so that you can make a difference in the world,
- 00:33
then you're probably gonna become famous
- 00:35
and then do good.
- 00:37
There are plenty of celebrities
- 00:39
who are just saying like,
- 00:40
"Oh, yeah, I have enough cash.
- 00:41
Let me throw some money at this."
- 00:42
They don't really care about the issues
- 00:45
or, you know, they don't act
- 00:48
the way they tell other people to be acting.
- 00:50
But that kind of brings up this idea of --
- 00:52
There's a few reasons why someone would desire fame
- 00:56
and I think the most common one is probably just that people
- 00:58
want to be seen as having value.
- 01:01
You know, if you grow up in a house where
- 01:03
maybe you're not the smartest sibling
- 01:06
or maybe you're not the funniest or the most interesting
- 01:09
or whatever the case is.
- 01:10
You kind of want to be like,
- 01:11
"Hey, look! I'm valuable too!"
- 01:12
And so becoming famous is a way
- 01:14
to prove to yourself
- 01:15
and to everyone else around you,
- 01:17
whether it's your family, your friends,
- 01:18
or just kind of everyone,
- 01:19
that you're a valuable person.
- 01:21
And those people also
- 01:23
might not be doing the philanthropic thing
- 01:28
or the do-gooder thing,
- 01:29
because they just wanted to get to that point to say kind of,
- 01:31
"I told you so."
- 01:32
Well you have sort of a bifurcation of personalities.
- 01:34
So let's pull one example out of thin air.
- 01:37
The Kardashians, who, if they do stand for anything good,
- 01:41
I don't know what that is.
- 01:42
You see them focused a lot on sexual practices
- 01:46
and divorce and a lot of really odd entertainment things.
- 01:51
And then, at the other end of the rainbow,
- 01:53
is Princess Diana,
- 01:55
who famously went to Africa during the very beginning
- 01:58
of the AIDS scandal,
- 02:00
and was purposely photographed carrying
- 02:02
black babies who had AIDS.
- 02:05
And basically telling the world,
- 02:07
"It's not Ebola.
- 02:09
It's not even close.
- 02:10
And we need to take care of these people."
- 02:13
And she is cited, I think, pretty broadly
- 02:14
as someone who is truly courageous,
- 02:16
who used her celebrity and fame
- 02:17
and the royal brand and everything else
- 02:19
in the right way, the way you're supposed to do things
- 02:22
in this world when you're truly, sincerely trying to do good.
- 02:25
So how does that operate
- 02:27
in a very odd press that we have today?
- 02:30
That today, Princess Diana,
- 02:32
if she'd gone to the Ebola victims in Africa,
- 02:35
I don't think there'd be a whole lot of press attention to it.
- 02:37
But Kim Kardashian puts on 20 pounds
- 02:39
and wears tight jeans, that's the cover of People.
- 02:42
What is that saying about our world and sort of
- 02:46
what drives all this?
- 02:47
Yeah, I think it comes back to the reason
- 02:49
we obsess over celebrities.
- 02:52
And, as I said, it used to be
- 02:53
this kind of -- Princess Diana's a perfect example
- 02:55
because she actually is royalty and was a celebrity.
- 02:57
But, you know, it comes back to this idea of
- 02:59
what we used to value in celebrities,
- 03:02
in royalty, is that they were just
- 03:04
beyond anything we'd imagine.
- 03:05
They inspired awe in us, kind of like
- 03:07
you know, you compare Christians,
- 03:10
who might say like,
- 03:11
"God is this untouchable -- Can't understand him; he's an enigma."
- 03:16
Same with celebrities.
- 03:17
You know, they're the secular God.
- 03:19
We look up to them and we're like,
- 03:20
"We can't even -- Whatever they do,
- 03:22
we can't possibly understand it."
- 03:23
So it kind of started like that
- 03:25
and then now, as you're saying, you know,
- 03:27
what pair of shoes is someone wearing.
- 03:28
It's more just kind of
- 03:30
whether they're people, too.
- 03:32
They have worse lives than us.
- 03:35
The daily grind of getting away from our problems
- 03:38
and kind of escaping by looking at other people's problems.
- 03:41
So that whole process seems to me to be very ephemeral,
- 03:43
meaning it evaporates quickly.
- 03:46
There's no foundation.
- 03:47
It's not like owning a building in Manhattan
- 03:49
that you know is gonna be around a while.
- 03:50
Paris Hilton.
- 03:51
She was Kim Kardashian
- 03:53
eight years ago, I think.
- 03:55
And now you see kind of an aging
- 03:58
not, I guess, that hot anymore gal
- 04:01
doing a revamp of a cheeseburger commercial
- 04:04
where she's in a bikini sitting on a car
- 04:05
and it's kind of just very depressing.
- 04:07
How does that play out in like...
- 04:10
Yeah, what you're talking about is
- 04:11
people who are famous because they're famous.
- 04:13
And that's a new thing.
- 04:15
For the most part, that's a new thing.
- 04:17
Paris Hilton is one of the earliest examples of this
- 04:21
that people in our generation would think of -- our generation.
- 04:25
- [ laughs ] - Of course. Yeah.
- 04:27
But yeah, being famous for the sake of being famous is --
- 04:31
That's Paris Hilton, that's Kim Kardashian.
- 04:33
That's the Real Housewives.
- 04:35
They're famous because they're famous.
- 04:36
The difference is
- 04:38
there are plenty of people who are famous because they're talented,
- 04:41
or because they discovered something amazing,
- 04:44
or because they're running a country,
- 04:46
or whatever the case is.
- 04:48
So there are differen kind of categories
- 04:50
of fame and this Paris Hilton type of fame
- 04:54
is very ephemeral.
- 04:55
It does kind of go away.
- 04:56
Nobody has forgotten about
- 04:59
every president, up until now, of the United States.
- 05:02
We can name them all -- Hopefully, you can name them all.
- 05:05
But, you know, probably 20 years from now,
- 05:07
you're not gonna be able to remember Paris Hilton's name.
- 05:09
So that's the difference.
- 05:11
And people who achieve fame by actually doing something memorable,
- 05:15
those are the ones that are actually going to be remembered.
- 05:16
But it doesn't really matter because, you know,
- 05:18
Paris Hilton is in her heyday now
- 05:21
and who knows if
- 05:22
maybe that'll get her through the rest of her life
- 05:24
and she'll have all the money she needs
- 05:27
and have the fame and she's kind of over it
- 05:29
and then she can go live a secluded life.
- 05:30
So the money is an interesting thing.
- 05:32
I think most people are shocked at how little money
- 05:35
celebrities actually make.
- 05:37
[ record scratch ]
- 05:38
Once you get to a point where you can
- 05:40
launch your own line of clothing,
- 05:42
then the world's different.
- 05:44
But there's maybe five, ten of those people in the world.
- 05:48
Whereas there's hundreds of celebrities
- 05:51
who you'd recognize -- Go through the last year's worth
- 05:54
of People magazines, you'll see them all there.
- 05:56
But most of them don't make that much
- 05:58
for a TV series.
- 05:59
Really weird dynamics in this perception of great wealth
- 06:03
that people associate with power
- 06:05
when it's really an illusion.
- 06:07
And so much of Hollywood
- 06:10
is incentivized to have celebrities spend all their dough
- 06:13
because then they need the infrastructure,
- 06:15
meaning the agent, the manager, the next job.
- 06:18
Yeah, and you do hear about a lot of celebrities going bankrupt, right?
- 06:20
That's like one of the common stories
- 06:22
is the celebrity goes bankrupt.
- 06:23
So those people who have --
- 06:25
They probably didn't save their money well.
- 06:27
The seven million a year
- 06:29
would have gotten them through.
- 06:30
Well this is seven million in one year, at the end.
- 06:32
It wasn't like that for years and years.
- 06:34
Right, right.
- 06:34
But that celebrities who do make millions
- 06:36
can still go bankrupt
- 06:38
shows you that the people who get into
- 06:40
the celebrity lifestyle
- 06:42
for the wealth,
- 06:43
which is another reason that people wanna be famous,
- 06:45
are probably -- that type of personality
- 06:47
probably isn't gonna have you maintain your wealth.
- 06:50
Absolutely. And what a lot of people don't understand is
- 06:52
so many celebrities come from small towns in the Midwest
- 06:55
and they came out here desperate and hungry and pretty
- 06:57
and got an acting job through whatever process was involved.
- 07:02
A really nice home in Kansas City
- 07:04
is $400,000.
- 07:07
Well, $400,000 in Beverly Hills
- 07:09
doesn't buy you a parking spot.
- 07:10
So a lot of times,
- 07:11
what they think -- In Kansas City
- 07:13
on a million dollars, I don't know,
- 07:14
you can probably retire and live nice.
- 07:16
But a million dollars in California -
- 07:18
no, not even close.
- 07:20
So it's a very different dynamic
- 07:23
and a lot of them are not financial gurus
- 07:25
and so they go bankrupt
- 07:26
and it's incentivized by their managers and their agents
- 07:29
to keep them on the edge of going bankrupt
- 07:31
so that they need the next job
- 07:32
so they have a client to sell into the next deal.
- 07:35
So, a very sad thing,
- 07:36
but that's, I think, why so many go bankrupt.
- 07:38
Pro athletes, you obviously see that a lot, too.
- 07:43
Why do people wanna be famous in the first place?
- 07:46
What do celebrities do with their fame?
- 07:49
How has our perception of celebrity changed?
- 07:55
[ jazzy musical flourish ]
- 07:57
Part 1B - The Revenge.
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