At TMZ, "JENNA DEWAN: NAKED & NOT AFRAID OF HER NEW SINGLE LIFE --- Roaming Hottie Goes Fully Nude for Women's Health Magazine (PHOTOS)."
Jenna Dewan Goes Fully Nude for Women's Health https://t.co/RRu5a6ZAtV
— TMZ (@TMZ) July 28, 2018
Commentary and analysis on American politics, culture, and national identity, U.S. foreign policy and international relations, and the state of education - from a neoconservative perspective! - Keeping an eye on the communist-left so you don't have to!
Jenna Dewan Goes Fully Nude for Women's Health https://t.co/RRu5a6ZAtV
— TMZ (@TMZ) July 28, 2018
The Fame Trap: How the Pursuit of Fame Is Warping American Society https://t.co/RP3y1NHyFJ #Lifestyle via @pjmedia_com
— John Hawkins (@johnhawkinsrwn) January 8, 2019
“In the future, everyone will be world-famous for 15 minutes.” – Andy WarholKeep reading.
Fame used to be quite the rare commodity if only because there were fewer ways to become famous in the first place. Radio really started to take off in the 1920s, half of all American families acquired a TV in 1955, and the internet only started to be widely used in the early '90s. Facebook came along in 2004, YouTube in 2005, and Twitter in 2006. In 1991, there were 90 adult magazines in America. Today, there are millions of porn websites. The first UFC was in 1993. Amazon sells roughly 15 million regular books per year and another 22 million on Kindle. Amazon did not exist in 1993.
Because of the vast number of websites on the internet looking for something to cover, the almost inexhaustible number of large niches out there, and the nature of social media, fame seems closer than ever for most people and for that reason, more people than ever seem to be seeking it.
We have reality TV shows, where unstable, explosive people are put together and the rest of us “oooh and aaah” at the crazy things they do. Are you good at a video game? Well, there are plenty of people like you with hundreds of thousands of followers on Twitch and YouTube. Some people even go pro. There are also more than a few attractive women putting up pictures of themselves on Instagram looking sexy and getting contributions towards, well, whatever it is they do on Patreon. YouTube also has plenty of personalities making big bucks playing a role. Some of the numbers are just staggering.
WHAT GIRLS THINK ON THEIR FIRST PERIOD: 4.9 million views
I only ate LUNCHABLES for 24 hours: 2.5 million views
LOGAN PAUL - WHY 2018 WAS THE MOST IMPORTANT YEAR OF MY LIFE: 5.7 million views
RATING YOUTUBER APOLOGY VIDEOS 12 million views
Incidentally, the #1 channel on YouTube, PewDiePie, has 80 million subscribers. That’s greater than the population of the entire United States in 1900.
Of course, when you are talking about micro-doses of fame, they’re even easier to get.
Go scream at Ted Cruz and his wife while they’re having dinner and you can guarantee that tens of millions of people will see it. Tell a sad story about how someone didn’t tip you or a fast-food worker was mean to you and you can make headlines all over the country. Say something witty or maybe even not all that witty and if it catches the eye of someone famous and he retweets it, you may get tens of thousands of new followers and hundreds of thousands of likes. Candace Owens’ entire career on the Right is built on the fact that Kanye West liked what she was tweeting. And there are more than a few people with 50,000+ followers because Donald Trump retweeted them. Get enough Instagram or Twitter followers and you get treated like you’re important. Are you famous if you have 50,000 or 100,000 people following you on some social network? Not really, but the level of validation must feel like it. Then, there’s Joe and Jill Average's Facebook page. Here’s the best selfie they took out by the lake. It only took them 17 tries to get that shot. Here they are on a trip to Las Vegas, beside a pretty girl, making a goofy face at a statue.
You might argue that once you’re getting down to this level, people are chasing validation more than fame, but it’s not that different. They’re creating a brand that they hope will get as many people as possible to respond positively to them instead of showing their real life.
Of course, that’s not the only way we change our lives for fame. Those of us who have been around the internet for a while can remember when trolling was considered something unusual done by misanthropes living in their moms’ basements. Today, trolling is commonplace and is done by everyone from the president of the United States on down. Why? Because if you want that fame and attention, one of the best ways to get it is to find a popular post and post something that will irritate most of the people reading it. Then you’ll get lots of hate and aggravate lots of people, but you also may get new followers along with lots of likes and shares.
Not every person chasing that fame is inauthentic, bad or doing something wrong; nor is fame in and of itself a bad thing. But, what is chasing that fame turning us into as a society? What happens when hundreds of millions of people are looking to feel special for a little while as the likes, follows, and shares roll in or alternately, among the more dedicated, looking for a way to get their name in the news?
How many women do you think grew up dreaming of dressing in lingerie and offering lewds on Patreon to entice horny losers to give them money? How many people are wasting their lives on social media? I ask that as I just noticed a reply from someone on Twitter who has done 134K tweets with only 2,868 followers. What could she have done with that time if she had applied it to something meaningful in her life? That applies to what most of us are doing on social media. How much of Twitter is just people being deliberately cruel to other people or saying crazy things to get likes, shares and followers? 25 percent? 40 percent? 50 percent?
People are so nasty. I don't understand it. I very strongly disagree with many people and actively dislike a smaller number of people but the sheer level of seemingly casual vitriol coming at me on a daily basis now is very dispiriting. It challenges my humanism.
— Helen Pluckrose (@HPluckrose) January 9, 2019
It's like they conceptualise the world as made up of good and evil people and have accepted this as normal and adjusted to it so they can just say hateful things to and about the bad people without it being a big deal. Some people are just evil and I am one of them.
— Helen Pluckrose (@HPluckrose) January 9, 2019
If I thought there were a significant number of people in this world who were as ill-motivated and dishonest as these people who have never talked to me seemingly casually assume I am, I'd be in complete despair and horror all the time.
— Helen Pluckrose (@HPluckrose) January 9, 2019
I think there are terrible people but that most people mean well even if they are horribly wrong & doing much harm. I cld only imagine myself saying the things people say to me daily to another human being if I'd spent much time listening & trying & failing to get through to them
— Helen Pluckrose (@HPluckrose) January 9, 2019
I will just have to learn to shrug them off and focus on the people who can connect with me and have conversations.
— Helen Pluckrose (@HPluckrose) January 9, 2019
Well, now people are being kind and encouraging and I suddenly feel much better. Kindness is the best part of humanity. And now I shall go to bed. Goodnight, tweeps.
— Helen Pluckrose (@HPluckrose) January 9, 2019
“For me, the relationship journey has been very up and down. But it didn’t have to do with anybody else…it was about me figuring out me.” —@JLohttps://t.co/9nfO5zFDRC
— Harper's Bazaar (@harpersbazaarus) January 9, 2019
"The thing about people, women especially, is that you can have 12 people telling you you’re amazing, but that one person kind of putting you down, that’s the voice that sticks in your head." —Read @JLo's full interview for BAZAAR’s February issue here: https://t.co/8PZ9UkP9qm pic.twitter.com/PNTvzDG4Q6
— Harper's Bazaar (@harpersbazaarus) January 9, 2019
"I don’t have everything figured out, and everything isn’t perfect. But I feel very proud that with all the things I’ve gone through in my personal life, I’m still optimistic and hopeful." —Read @JLo's full interview for BAZAAR’s February issue: https://t.co/8PZ9UkP9qm pic.twitter.com/OqneDUrItH
— Harper's Bazaar (@harpersbazaarus) January 9, 2019
"From early on in my career, I felt like people wanted to put me in a box…I felt very confined by that because I knew I was going to do different things." —Read @JLo's full interview for BAZAAR’s February issue here: https://t.co/8PZ9UkP9qm pic.twitter.com/774Umq7cwb
— Harper's Bazaar (@harpersbazaarus) January 9, 2019
💥 Light it up in 2019 💥
— Jennifer Lopez (@JLo) January 9, 2019
Cover Story: https://t.co/aPHRprlsOW pic.twitter.com/6Esu8YyvaD
‘Chuck and Nancy already look like a meme’: Democrat response is an optics fail https://t.co/fCPEPm1OSN— Twitchy Team (@TwitchyTeam) January 9, 2019
TV tip for Schumer and Pelosi - When on a two shot, look at the person talking, not at the camera. Gives impression of hostage tape.— Emily Miller (@EmilyMiller) January 9, 2019
I’m sure Chuck and Nancy have been on TV as much as I have. How do they not know to look at the speaker ?— Emily Miller (@EmilyMiller) January 9, 2019
2. The other TV tip reason Chuck and Nancy seemed weird to viewers is they were both reading along the TelePrompTer as the other spoke. They weren’t reacting to the other’s message. Thus the dead in the eyes appearance.— Emily Miller (@EmilyMiller) January 9, 2019
Eminem's Daughter Hailie, 23, Shares Sexy Bikini Pic from New Year's Vacation https://t.co/NO3PByWQZL— People (@people) January 4, 2019
Eminem's daughter Hailie Scott Mathers is an Instagram sensation https://t.co/2qy6S7Rbey pic.twitter.com/PX7pO6Pm6T
— Mirror Celeb (@MirrorCeleb) January 4, 2019
@threadreaderapp , would you please unroll this? Thank you very much for being a good bot.— Claire Berlinski (@ClaireBerlinski) January 8, 2019
Hello you can read it here: Thread by @ClaireBerlinski: "I agree completely with @NTenzer when he says that violence is consubstantial with this movement. It's not the word I wo […]" https://t.co/zwj2JwOKf9— Thread Reader App (@threadreaderapp) January 8, 2019
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Yellow vests: France to crack down on unsanctioned protests https://t.co/ACOI7GLrUz— BBC News (World) (@BBCWorld) January 7, 2019
7 January 2019— Maria Battles (@maria_battles) January 8, 2019
Christophe Dettinger: Boxer surrenders after clash with riot police in Paris
PHOTO: A former professional boxer who was filmed at the weekend punching a police officer on a bridge in Paris during a "yellow vest"... https://t.co/yKwxeUvfhC
If you're wondering why @CNN's Thought Police commissar @oliverdarcy is throwing a tantrum today, it involves this WSJ article. https://t.co/yE0qL3luW7
— The Patriarch Tree (@PatriarchTree) January 8, 2019
What in the world? Ali Akbar isn't exactly a traditional conservative activist. He's aligned with fringe pro-Trump voices on the right. Why is @jack seeking advice from him? https://t.co/lrQxNMiG3m
— Oliver Darcy (@oliverdarcy) January 8, 2019
I worked for McCain in 2008 and also as a high level Convention staffer working as a liaison between Secret Service and the campaign.
— Ali Alexander (@ali) January 8, 2019
Cofounded the Tea Party movement.
Over 150 mainstream conservative groups have sponsored my events.
Oliver Darcy is trying to deplatform me. pic.twitter.com/ZCOcbFWp3S
New @QuilletteM
— Jonathan Kay (@jonkay) January 8, 2019
Lindsay Shepherd @NewWorldHominin describes her excommunication at @Laurier after she blew the whistle on Nathan Rambukkana and the diversity-enforcement officials who convened her star chamber https://t.co/5BB8wUR6RA
...in another one of my courses, our last three classes (which were to consist of graduate student presentations) were nominally “cancelled.” In fact, they went on behind closed doors: The professor changed the program structure, so that students could invite whoever they wanted to attend their own class presentations—which effectively meant that every other student in the class attended everyone else’s presentations, with me being excluded from all of them. This was a way of shunning me—singling me out so that I would miss the opportunity to learn from and discuss the presentations of my colleagues...RTWT.
Taylor Swift Bustier And More Cleavagy Than Ever? Yes Please! https://t.co/XL6nsXB3z3 #TaylorSwift #GoldenGlobes pic.twitter.com/6HKDJsU7qw
— Popoholic (@Popoholic) January 8, 2019
"Stand by Me. "
Ed Driscoll, at Instapundit "AND THE ROLE OF EMMANUEL GOLDSTEIN WILL BE PLAYED BY…: Liberals’ Knives Come Out for Nate Silver After His Model Points to a Trump Victory..."
R.S. McCain, "'Jews Are Dead, Hamas Is Happy, and Podhoretz Has Got His Rage On ..."
Ace, "Georgia Shooter's Father Berated Him as a "Sissy" and Bought Him an AR-15 to 'Toughen Him Up'..."Free Beacon..., "Kamala Harris, the ‘Candidate of Change,’ Copies Sections of Her Policy Page Directly From Biden's Platform..."