Sunday, March 6, 2016

The Blame Game

The article Celebrity Bodies started out with exactly what one might expect from the title: another discussion about the unrealistic body standards set by celebrities and models. However, it didn't take long for the essay to change course. In fact, it continually changed its direction throughout the essay without ever leaving the subject of celebrities. Although it was not set up in the best way, the article certainly made some good points. 
After reading I realized that the phenomenon that is "celebrities" is a strange (and ironic) one indeed. Society creates celebrities. It chooses the select few that interest it most and says "These people are the best people. We shall put them on a pedestal, and all the other people who are not as good as them will aspire to be." After that point though, there is an ironic twist. Now that society has idolized these people, it wants to break them down, tear them apart and show their insides to everyone. The only reason we do this is because their lives are made to be so much more interesting than our own. Celebrities' lives are dramatic and exciting, and society wants to know about them. But why are we destroying these idols? Are humans simply so sadistic that they immediately want to break what they built? Perhaps we do it without truly realizing it, hiding behind the excuse that "they're celebrities and, therefore, want their lives shown to everyone."
The worst part of it all is that the whole thing is actually hurting regular members of society as well. Boys and girls look at the celebrities they see on television and think about what it would be like if they looked like whats-his-name or whoever-that-is. Then that girl goes to the bathroom to vomit up what she just ate because she's "too fat", and that boy works out at the gym way too much because he's "too weak".  The rest of society sees the boy and girl and blames the celebrities, even though society made the celebrities. But society would never, ever, ever blame itself. So it blames its creations the same way Nero blamed the Christians. 
Celebrities give us something to aspire to, but sometimes that aspiration goes too far. Society makes celebrities only to crush them. What might the world be without celebrities?
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