Misplaced Pages

Famous for being famous: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 19:37, 28 December 2009 editDamiens.rf (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users23,536 edits These two men opinions are irrelevant to the matter. No reason to promote them← Previous edit Latest revision as of 14:17, 7 December 2024 edit undoMb2437 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users5,294 editsNo edit summary 
(550 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|Phrase to refer to someone who is famous for no particular reason}}
'''Famous for being famous''', in ] terminology, refers to someone who attains ] status for no particular identifiable reason, or who achieves fame through association with a celebrity.<ref name="Jenkins">{{cite book|last=Jenkins|first=Joe|title=Contemporary moral issues|publisher=Heinemann|date=2002|edition=4, illustrated|series=Examining Religions |pages=178|isbn=0435303090, 9780435303099}}</ref> The term is a ], suggesting that the individual has no particular talents or abilities.<ref name="JenJones">{{cite book|last=Jones|first=Jen|title=Being Famous|publisher=Capstone Press|date=2007|series=Snap Books: 10 Things You Need to Know about|pages=20|isbn=1429601264, 9781429601269}}</ref> Even when their fame arises from a particular talent or action on their part, the term will sometimes still apply if their fame is disproportionate to what they earned through their own talent or work.
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2023}}


'''''Famous for being famous''''' is a ] term, often used ]ly, for someone who attains ] status for no clearly identifiable reason—as opposed to fame based on ], ], or ]—and appears to generate their own fame, or someone who achieves fame through a family or relationship association with an existing celebrity.<ref name="Jenkins">{{cite book|last=Jenkins|first=Joe|title=Contemporary moral issues|publisher=Heinemann|year=2002|edition=4, illustrated|series=Examining Religions|pages=|isbn=978-0-435-30309-9|url=https://archive.org/details/contemporarymora0000jenk/page/178}}</ref>
], who dubbed the term "famesque", identified ] stars Zsa Zsa Gabor, ], and ] as early "dawn of TV creations".<ref name="Argetsinger" /> Argetslinger has also applied the term to athletes like ] and ] who have received significant media attention while having achieved little to no success in their professional athletic careers. <ref name="Argetsinger">{{cite news|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/09/AR2009080902084.html|title=They Must Be Stars Because They Get So Much Press, but What Is It They Do Again?|last=Argetsinger|first=Amy|date=August 10, 2009 |publisher=Washington Post|accessdate=2009-08-15}}</ref>


==History==
The term has been applied in other ways, for example to tourist attractions such as the ].<ref name="Anderman">{{cite book|last=Anderman|first=Gunilla M.|coauthors=Margaret Rogers, Peter Newmark|title=Word, text, translation: liber amicorum for Peter Newmark|publisher=Multilingual Matters|date=1999|isbn=1853594601, 9781853594601}}</ref><ref name="Urry" /> Examples include places which have lost their basis for fame, such as the ].<ref name="Urry">{{cite book|last=Urry|first=John|title=The tourist gaze: Theory, culture & society (Nottingham Trent University. TCS Centre)|publisher=Sage Publications, Inc.|date=2002|edition=2, illustrated|pages=12|isbn=0761973478, 9780761973478}}</ref>
The term originates from an analysis of the media-dominated world called '']'' (1962), by historian and social theorist ].<ref name="Richards">{{cite book|last=Richards|first=Jeffrey |title=Sir Henry Irving: A Victorian Actor and His World|publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group|year=2007|pages=259|isbn=978-1-85285-591-8}}</ref> In it, he defined the celebrity as "a person who is known for his well-knownness".<ref>{{cite book|last=Boorstin|first=Daniel Joseph|title=The image: A guide to pseudo-events in America|publisher=Vintage|location=New York|year=1962|isbn=978-0-679-74180-0|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/imageguidetopseu00boor_0}}</ref> He further argued that the graphic revolution in journalism and other forms of communication had severed fame from greatness, and that this severance hastened the decay of fame into mere notoriety. Over the years, the phrase has been glossed as "a celebrity is someone who is famous for being famous".<ref name="Richards" />


The British journalist ] may have been the first to use the actual phrase in the introduction to his book ''Muggeridge Through The Microphone'' (1967) in which he wrote:<blockquote>In the past if someone was famous or notorious, it was for something—as a writer or an actor or a criminal; for some talent or distinction or abomination. Today one is famous for being famous. People who come up to one in the street or in public places to claim recognition nearly always say: "I've seen you on the telly!"<ref>{{Cite book|title=Muggeridge Through The Microphone|last=Muggeridge|first=Malcolm|date=1967|page=7}}</ref></blockquote>
{| class="wikitable" border="1"
|+Examples of people to whom the term has been notably applied
!Person
!Description
|-
|]<ref></ref>
|Billboard model and one-time ] for California governor (though at least one source<ref></ref> suggests she is not famous enough for this characterization).
|-
|]<ref name="cnn"></ref>
|Former husband and back-up-dancer of ] and father of her children.
|-
|]<ref></ref>
|Primarily famous for being the daughter of ].
|-
|]<ref name="Arabian Business">{{cite web|url=http://www.arabianbusiness.com/558497-well-always-have-paris|title=We’ll always have Paris|publisher=ArabianBusiness.com|quote='' girl who is ostensibly famous for being famous, and whose chief achievements seem to be that she is slim, stupid, and swimming in cash... symbol of all that is wrong with materialistic America.''|date=June 12, 2009|accessdate=Jun. 21, 2009}}</ref>
|Heiress to the ] dynasty, who is primarily famous for making many media appearances, and for a sex video.
|-
|]<ref></ref>
|Friend of ] who provided testimony during the ].
|-
|]<ref> {{cite web|url=http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/CelebrityCafe/Story?id=7762876&page=2|title=Top 5 Celebrities Famous For...Nothing|publisher=ABC News|date=|accessdate=2009-08-25}}</ref>
|Famous for being in a sex video and subsequently for her television show ]
|-
|]<ref></ref>
|Primarily famous for being the son of former ] ], he utilized his name to create the magazine '']''.
|-
|]<ref name="cnn"/>
|Mainly famous as Paris Hilton's show-business partner and as the adopted daughter of ].
|-
|}


] more recently refined the definition of celebrity to distinguish those who have gained recognition for having done virtually nothing of significance—a phenomenon he dubbed the "Zsa Zsa Factor" in honor of ], who parlayed her marriage to actor ] into a brief movie career and the movie career into a much more enduring celebrity.<ref name="Gabler">{{cite journal |last=Gabler |first=Neal |title=Toward a New Definition of Celebrity |url=https://archive.learcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Gabler1.pdf |journal=The Norman Lear Center |publisher=]}}</ref> He goes on to define the celebrity as "human entertainment", by which he means a person who provides entertainment by the very process of living.<ref name="Gabler" />
==See also==

*]
This topic is also known in German-speaking countries. Terms like "Schickeria" or "Adabei" characterize the media, which on the one hand are also understood critically but on the other hand are an important editorial topic that electronic quality media do not want to do without today for commercial reasons. People's reporting is fundamentally an important area of journalism that functions according to its own rules, especially in the print medium, and according to journalist ] is characterized as "We no longer just write about an event, we tell stories".<ref>„Society-Berichterstattung im Wandel. Wer berichtete denn noch über Promis?“, In: Wiener Zeitung, 28 June 2013.</ref><ref>Franz Kotteder „Schick, schick, Schickeria“ In: Süddeutsche Zeitung, 17 May 2010.</ref><ref>Matthias Heine „Nimmt Helmut Dietl die Schickeria mit ins Grab?“, In: Die Welt 31. March 2015.</ref>
*]

==Similar terms==

===Famesque===
{{Multiple image
| image1 = Zsa Zsa Gabor - 1959.jpg
| image2 = Dr. Joyce Brothers 1988.jpg
| caption1 = ]
| caption2 = ]
| image3 = The Ghost & Mrs. Muir Charles Nelson Reilly 1969.jpg
| caption3 = ]
| image4 = MJK34388 Sienna Miller (The Lost City Of Z, Berlinale 2017).jpg
| caption4 = ]
| total_width = 400
| direction = horizontal
| perrow = 4
| footer = Individuals cited as "famesque" by ]
}}
'']'' writer ] coined the term '''famesque''' to define actors, singers, or athletes whose fame is mostly (if not entirely) due to one's physical attractiveness and/or personal life, rather than actual talent and (if any) successful career accomplishments. Argetsinger argued, "The famesque of 2009 are descended from that dawn-of-TV creation, the Famous for Being Famous. Turn on a talk show or '']'' and there'd be ], ], ], so friendly and familiar and—what was it they did again?" She also used actress ] as a modern-day example; "Miller became famesque by dating {{nowrap|] . . .}} and then really famesque when he cheated on her with the nanny—to the point that she was the one who made ] famesque (even though he's the one with the hit TV series, '']'') when he reportedly ran off from his wife with her for a while."<ref name="Argetsinger">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/09/AR2009080902084.html|title=They Must Be Stars Because They Get So Much Press, but What Is It They Do Again?|last=Argetsinger|first=Amy|date=August 10, 2009|newspaper=Washington Post|access-date=2009-08-15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100424224810/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/08/09/AR2009080902084.html|archive-date=2010-04-24|url-status=live}}</ref>

===Celebutante===
{{Multiple image
| image1 = Paris Hilton Monaco 2019 (cropped).jpg
| image2 = Kim Kardashian West, Parramatta Westfield Sydney Australia.jpg
| image3 = Nicole Richie 2012.jpg
| caption1 = ]
| caption2 = ]
| caption3 = ]
| total_width = 400
| direction = horizontal
| perrow = 4
| footer = Individuals described as celebutantes
}}

'''Celebutante''' is a ] of the words "]" and "]". The male equivalent is sometimes spelled '''celebutant'''. The term has been used to describe heiresses like ] and ] in ].<ref name="llog">{{cite web |url=http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/004066.html |title=Celeb-u-rama |first=Ben |last=Zimmer |publisher=] |date=January 20, 2007 |access-date=2011-09-24 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111112182850/http://itre.cis.upenn.edu/~myl/languagelog/archives/004066.html |archive-date=2011-11-12 |url-status=live }}</ref> More recently, the term and descriptions similar to the term have been applied to the ]. During an interview in 2011 with some of the Kardashians, interviewer ] said, ''"You are all often described as 'famous for being famous'. You don't really act, you don’t sing, you don’t dance. You don't have any - forgive me - any talent."''<ref>{{cite web |last=Ott |first=Veronica |date=November 26, 2020 |title=KUWTK: Barbara Walters' 'No Talent' Jab At Kardashians Goes Viral on Vine |url=https://screenrant.com/kuwtk-kardashians-respond-barbara-walters-no-talent-insult/ |archive-url= |archive-date= |access-date=2022-08-02 |publisher=]}}</ref> Later in 2016, ] described the Kardashian-Jenner family as ubiquitous celebutantes for being the highest earning reality stars.<ref>{{ cite web |url=https://time.com/4573660/kardashians-jenners-forbes-highest-earning-reality-stars-2016/ |title=The Kardashian-Jenners Are Officially the Highest-Earning Reality Stars | first = Cady | last = Lang | publisher = ] | date = November 16, 2016 |access-date= 2022-08-02 |archive-url= |archive-date= }}</ref>

The term has been traced back to a 1939 ] society column in which he used the word to describe prominent society debutante ], who was a traditional "high-society" debutante from a noted family, but whose debut attracted an unprecedented wave of media attention.<ref name="llog" /><ref name="winchell">{{Cite news
| last = Winchell
| first = Walter
| title = On Broadway (syndicated column)
| work =Daily Times-News
| date =April 7, 1939
}}</ref> The word appeared again in a 1985 '']'' article about ]'s clubland celebrities, focusing on the lifestyles of writer ], ] and ], who was crowned "Queen of the Night" by ].<ref name="llog" /><ref>{{Cite news
| title = James St. James profile
| work =Newsweek
| date =June 3, 1985
}}</ref>

== See also ==
{{wiktionary}}
*]
*]
*]
*'']''
*]
*] *]
*]
*]


==References== ==References==
{{reflist}} {{Reflist|30em}}

]
]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Famous For Being Famous}}
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 14:17, 7 December 2024

Phrase to refer to someone who is famous for no particular reason

Famous for being famous is a paradoxical term, often used pejoratively, for someone who attains celebrity status for no clearly identifiable reason—as opposed to fame based on achievement, skill, or talent—and appears to generate their own fame, or someone who achieves fame through a family or relationship association with an existing celebrity.

History

The term originates from an analysis of the media-dominated world called The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-events in America (1962), by historian and social theorist Daniel J. Boorstin. In it, he defined the celebrity as "a person who is known for his well-knownness". He further argued that the graphic revolution in journalism and other forms of communication had severed fame from greatness, and that this severance hastened the decay of fame into mere notoriety. Over the years, the phrase has been glossed as "a celebrity is someone who is famous for being famous".

The British journalist Malcolm Muggeridge may have been the first to use the actual phrase in the introduction to his book Muggeridge Through The Microphone (1967) in which he wrote:

In the past if someone was famous or notorious, it was for something—as a writer or an actor or a criminal; for some talent or distinction or abomination. Today one is famous for being famous. People who come up to one in the street or in public places to claim recognition nearly always say: "I've seen you on the telly!"

Neal Gabler more recently refined the definition of celebrity to distinguish those who have gained recognition for having done virtually nothing of significance—a phenomenon he dubbed the "Zsa Zsa Factor" in honor of Zsa Zsa Gabor, who parlayed her marriage to actor George Sanders into a brief movie career and the movie career into a much more enduring celebrity. He goes on to define the celebrity as "human entertainment", by which he means a person who provides entertainment by the very process of living.

This topic is also known in German-speaking countries. Terms like "Schickeria" or "Adabei" characterize the media, which on the one hand are also understood critically but on the other hand are an important editorial topic that electronic quality media do not want to do without today for commercial reasons. People's reporting is fundamentally an important area of journalism that functions according to its own rules, especially in the print medium, and according to journalist Norman Schenz is characterized as "We no longer just write about an event, we tell stories".

Similar terms

Famesque

Zsa Zsa GaborJoyce BrothersCharles Nelson ReillySienna MillerIndividuals cited as "famesque" by Amy Argetsinger

The Washington Post writer Amy Argetsinger coined the term famesque to define actors, singers, or athletes whose fame is mostly (if not entirely) due to one's physical attractiveness and/or personal life, rather than actual talent and (if any) successful career accomplishments. Argetsinger argued, "The famesque of 2009 are descended from that dawn-of-TV creation, the Famous for Being Famous. Turn on a talk show or Hollywood Squares and there'd be Zsa Zsa Gabor, Joyce Brothers, Charles Nelson Reilly, so friendly and familiar and—what was it they did again?" She also used actress Sienna Miller as a modern-day example; "Miller became famesque by dating Jude Law . . . and then really famesque when he cheated on her with the nanny—to the point that she was the one who made Balthazar Getty famesque (even though he's the one with the hit TV series, Brothers & Sisters) when he reportedly ran off from his wife with her for a while."

Celebutante

Paris HiltonKim KardashianNicole RichieIndividuals described as celebutantes

Celebutante is a portmanteau of the words "celebrity" and "debutante". The male equivalent is sometimes spelled celebutant. The term has been used to describe heiresses like Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie in entertainment journalism. More recently, the term and descriptions similar to the term have been applied to the Kardashian-Jenner family. During an interview in 2011 with some of the Kardashians, interviewer Barbara Walters said, "You are all often described as 'famous for being famous'. You don't really act, you don’t sing, you don’t dance. You don't have any - forgive me - any talent." Later in 2016, Time described the Kardashian-Jenner family as ubiquitous celebutantes for being the highest earning reality stars.

The term has been traced back to a 1939 Walter Winchell society column in which he used the word to describe prominent society debutante Brenda Frazier, who was a traditional "high-society" debutante from a noted family, but whose debut attracted an unprecedented wave of media attention. The word appeared again in a 1985 Newsweek article about New York City's clubland celebrities, focusing on the lifestyles of writer James St. James, Lisa Edelstein and Dianne Brill, who was crowned "Queen of the Night" by Andy Warhol.

See also

References

  1. Jenkins, Joe (2002). Contemporary moral issues. Examining Religions (4, illustrated ed.). Heinemann. pp. 178. ISBN 978-0-435-30309-9.
  2. ^ Richards, Jeffrey (2007). Sir Henry Irving: A Victorian Actor and His World. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 259. ISBN 978-1-85285-591-8.
  3. Boorstin, Daniel Joseph (1962). The image: A guide to pseudo-events in America. New York: Vintage. ISBN 978-0-679-74180-0.
  4. Muggeridge, Malcolm (1967). Muggeridge Through The Microphone. p. 7.
  5. ^ Gabler, Neal. "Toward a New Definition of Celebrity" (PDF). The Norman Lear Center. USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.
  6. „Society-Berichterstattung im Wandel. Wer berichtete denn noch über Promis?“, In: Wiener Zeitung, 28 June 2013.
  7. Franz Kotteder „Schick, schick, Schickeria“ In: Süddeutsche Zeitung, 17 May 2010.
  8. Matthias Heine „Nimmt Helmut Dietl die Schickeria mit ins Grab?“, In: Die Welt 31. March 2015.
  9. Argetsinger, Amy (August 10, 2009). "They Must Be Stars Because They Get So Much Press, but What Is It They Do Again?". Washington Post. Archived from the original on April 24, 2010. Retrieved August 15, 2009.
  10. ^ Zimmer, Ben (January 20, 2007). "Celeb-u-rama". Language Log. Archived from the original on November 12, 2011. Retrieved September 24, 2011.
  11. Ott, Veronica (November 26, 2020). "KUWTK: Barbara Walters' 'No Talent' Jab At Kardashians Goes Viral on Vine". Screen Rant. Retrieved August 2, 2022.
  12. Lang, Cady (November 16, 2016). "The Kardashian-Jenners Are Officially the Highest-Earning Reality Stars". Time. Retrieved August 2, 2022.
  13. Winchell, Walter (April 7, 1939). "On Broadway (syndicated column)". Daily Times-News.
  14. "James St. James profile". Newsweek. June 3, 1985.
Categories: