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Celeb 'train wrecks' examined
26/06/2008 15:39  - (SA)  

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Amy Winehouse has a drink while performing at Portugal's Rock in Rio Lisboa music festival in May 2008. (AP)
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  • London - Topics included Britney's Tears: the Abject Female Celebrity in Post-emotional Society and Hooker, Victim and/or Doormat: Lindsay Lohan and the Culture of Celebrity Notoriety.

    European and American academics met on Wednesday to examine society's fascination with "train-wreck" female celebrities and why the public and the media seem to get a kick out of Britney's meltdown, Lindsay's drink and drug arrests and Amy Winehouse's rehab struggles.

    Diane Negra, one of the organisers, said participants wanted to study why we take "pleasure in seeing women brought low".

    "The massive coverage these women draw is only a little bit about themselves," said Negra, a professor of film and television at the host university in Norwich, 185 kilometres northeast of London. "These women operate as lightning rods for a lot of other concerns."

    There's nothing new in society's fascination with celebrities. But the internet and the spread of "tabloid" culture into the mainstream have created a whirlwind in which rumour, claim and rebuttal swirl and feed off one another.

    A Google News search for troubled soul diva Winehouse on Wednesday produced almost 10 000 stories.

    Personal difficulties

    In British newspapers, the story of the singer's erratic public appearances, struggle with drugs and health worries is played out almost daily.

    There are plenty of male celebrities, from Pete Doherty to Robert Downey Jnr, whose personal and legal difficulties also make headlines.

    But Negra claimed the coverage of women is more judgmental, casting wayward female celebrities as "cautionary tales."

    She said coverage of female celebs is less likely to celebrate a troubled star's triumphant comeback, the way Downey has been lauded for Iron Man, or Owen Wilson has been shown returning to work after a reported suicide attempt.

    "We seem to have a lot more fixed ideas about what women's lives should be like than we do of men," she said.

    "When we use female celebrities this way, we see them failing and struggling, they serve as proof that for women the work-life balance is impossible. Can you have it all? The answer these stories give again and again is 'absolutely not'."

    Unsurprisingly, celebrity journalists disagree. Gordon Smart, who edits The Sun newspaper's celebrity pages, said the preponderance of troubled female stars in the news was a coincidence.

    "I just think at the moment there just happens to be cluster of female celebrities that are going through difficult times," Smart told British Broadcasting Corp radio.

    'It makes people feel good'

    Cary Cooper, a professor of psychology and health at Lancaster University in England, said negative celebrity coverage is not the media's fault - readers and viewers want to watch celebrities struggle

    "It makes people feel good," Cooper said. Celebrities "look like they lead a golden life, and yet it doesn't make them happy. So in a way it justifies our humdrum existence."

    Negra suggested the negative tone of much coverage reflects public concern about the growing number of celebrities with no obvious talent - people like Paris Hilton or the stars of reality-TV shows, who are famous simply for being famous.

    The criticism is a way of addressing troubling questions about the link between talent and fame.

    "Do we expect people who are famous to be talented?" she said. "How do we deal with the ubiquity of reality TV?"

    She thinks much of the hostility to Paul McCartney's ex-wife, Heather Mills - depicted as a self-serving gold-digger by the British press - arose "because of the sense that her fame was unearned," in comparison to that of the former Beatle.

    Veteran celebrity publicist Max Clifford doesn't believe women get a harder time from the media. He thinks the knives are out for all celebrities.

    "The media don't mind whether it's a male or a female - if they can assassinate them and sell newspapers, they will," Clifford said. "The sad thing is, bad news is news and good news isn't.

    "When I started out in the business in 1962, it was all about promotion. Now most of my job is about protection - protecting celebrities from an ever-more vicious media."

    - AP



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