New Hairpin Post — Elizabeth Taylor, Black Widow

For those of you who don’t follow the blog’s Facebook page, follow me on Twitter, or regularly read The Hairpin, you may have missed the fact that I’ve been writing Scandal pieces every two weeks throughout the summer.

The newest is on Elizabeth Taylor, the early years, but you can find the backlog here.

And in case you need new reasons (I already gave you some old ones) to read the Hairpin everyday, some recent favorites:

1.) Favorite Books of the Secretly Jerky
2.) Sometimes State Flags (Hilarious, just trust me)
3.) You Look Tired
4.) And, of course, everything that Jane Feltes does/writes/suggests

J. Lo Rising

So Jennifer Lopez and Marc Antony broke up. So People makes it clear that it’s not amicable with a cover story. So “her side of the story” is on the cover of this week’s Us. So there seem to be a lot of down-and-dirty details, including an email from Lopez’s mom to Ben Affleck. You can find a great recap of the recent hoopla on Lainey.

This is, as Lainey makes clear, good for gossip. But what people aren’t talking about — at least not explicitly — is how good this is for Lopez.

A year ago, Lopez was nearing irrelevancy. When she was suggested for judge position on American Idol, people scoffed. Her collaborations with Marc Antony had tanked (at least stateside) and she seemed a relic of an earlier era — the celebrity antecedent to the Kim Kardashians and Beyonces of the world. (I mean, doesn’t Maid in Manhattan seem like a relic? And Jenny from the Block? AND THAT WEIRD SURVEILLANCY ‘IF YOU HAD MY LOVE’ VIDEO, which I totally watched on repeat as a senior in high school in the basement of my best friend’s house while trying to replicate dance moves? And Selena, GOD, Selena!)

But then there was Affleck, and then there was Gigli, and then there was the break-up and then there was massive overexposure, and then there was Marc Anthony and all sorts of speculation over why she would marry Hispanic Skeletor. (One of the best theories: he told her to move the F away from Miami, and then the paps would stop hassling her. She did, and her life became less of a circus). But as her life became less of a circus, she also became less interesting.

She tried to have babies to make herself interesting. Twins, even! (She might have also wanted to have babies for other reasons, but trust me, readers, she also wanted to have babies to respark interest in her. Just look at Posh. Sometimes I think the baby-making (or baby-adoption; I’m talking to you, Denise Richards) can signify as the most desperate of publicity moves. (TO BE CLEAR: I do not think that celebrities don’t want their babies, or do it simply for publicity. But it is a convenient and strategic by-product). But the twins didn’t work — at least not publicity wise; I’m sure they work as children just fine — and Lopez was left with more failed projects and nickname that just wouldn’t go away, no matter how much she insisted on being called Jennifer Lopez.

But then J. Lo’s fortunes turned. Despite rumors that she would not be hired on American Idol due to “outrageous demands” (her bottled water preferences are very specific), audiences like her, People named her the world’s most beautiful woman, and she’s become highly visible to a broad swath of America once again.

Which might explain how her new album, featuring the single “Up on the Floor” has also done well.

In the video for “On the Floor,” she not only proves that she still has a ridiculous body (I mean seriously, this woman is 41, that’s amazing) but also hails two generations of listeners at once: by allowing Pitbull to call her “J.Lo,” she’s re-embracing the image (and fandom) that made her famous in late ’90s/early 2000s; by having the song feature Pitbull himself, she bolsters her appeal to the Latin market and to the teen market. (Unlike Marc Antony, Pitbull’s recent music has crossed over into the Top 40 mainstream market). The song peaked at #3 on the American charts, giving Lopez her first hit since 2003.

In other words, the music — aka the talent, or the thing that undergirds celebrity — is back. So is the visibility. What was missing, then, was the intrigue — because to be a big-time celebrity in America, you need all three.

Lopez solved that problem last week with the unexpected break-up from Marc Antony…..which then snowballed into the the accusations and the People cover and the tell-all with Us. Which completes the celebrity triangle: talent, visibility, and extra-textual intrigue. She’s back in the gossip mags — which, combined with a hit single and a continuing gig on Idol (plus rumors of a stint on Glee next year) means she’s back in the game.

Obviously, broken marriages suck. But gossip is always the inverse of real life: things that are bad in real life are good gossip; things that are good in real life are bad gossip. And, at least for the time being, things couldn’t be going better — gossip-wise, career-wise, image-wise — for J. Lo, Pt. 2.

But the reason I wrote this wasn’t necessarily to point out that Lopez is a bonafide celebrity again. it’s to point out the ways in which celebrities (with the help of their agents) wield personal developments to their personal benefit. I don’t think it’s necessarily cynical to believe this — it’s just the way that image-making works. It worked like this in classic Hollywood (if not more so) and it continues to work that way today. The timing of this break-up was no mistake, falling, as it did, during a lull in publicity for Lopez, Idol, and her music. The goal for celebrities, whether big time like Angelina Jolie or small time like Jennifer Love Hewitt, is to always have something to keep your name on people’s lips, whether in the form of a hit song, a new movie, “25 Things You Don’t Know About Me,” a new baby, or a break-up.

Jennifer Lopez, the living-breathing-person, probably doesn’t love exploiting her personal life. But Jennifer Lopez, the image, the celebrity, the concept that lives in people’s minds, demands it.

This Week in Arguments: Top 24 Female Stars?

In Bill Simmons’ very Bill Simmonisy article on the Movie Star in today’s Grantland, he makes the argument that 1.) Stars are sold as stars even when they haven’t actually earned the designation (his example: Ryan Reynolds). 2.) The only “real” movie star, as in the only star who consistently brings in huge audiences, is Will Smith, but
3.) Will Smith is a chicken shit when it comes to actually doing anything risky or awesome (at least since Six Degrees of Separation, his first role post-Fresh Prince) and that the fact that he’s the “only” movie star betrays something unsettling about the way that Hollywood (and its audiences) work.

This is all true, and I like the article, in part because it illuminates what a well-placed gossip-generating bit can do for an actor (marriage to ScarJo = tremendous rise in the Ryan Reynolds “stock”) and because it grapples with a question that has confounded analysts, academics, and audiences alike: what makes a star? Is it pure box office gross? Is it charisma? Is it audience affection? How do we define “movie star,” and why does it matter? (It obviously does, otherwise we wouldn’t hash it out so often).

And because this is Bill Simmons, he also employs an elaborate sports metaphor to get at the point he’s trying to make concerning pop culture. In this case, it’s quarterbacks and all-stars.

Reynolds has three things going for him: he’s likable and handsome; he dated and married Scarlett Johanssen at the peak of her buxom powers (getting a nice Us Weekly career boost out of it); and he works in an industry that doesn’t have nearly enough leading men. The third point matters the most. I’d compare the “leading man” position to the NFL’s quarterback position — we need 32 starting QB’s every year regardless of whether we actually have 32 good ones, just like we need 40 to 45 leading men every year regardless of whether have 40 to 45 good ones. That makes Reynolds someone like Alex Smith: he’s a no. 1 draft pick, he has all the tools, you can easily talk yourself into him being good … and then, six games into the season, you realize that you’re not making the Super Bowl with Alex Smith….

…..A good way to think about it: You know how 24 players make the NBA All-Star game every year? Those are the stars for that season. Just because Richard Hamilton made the 2008 All-Star team doesn’t make him an All-Star in 2011. Things change. Careers go up. Careers go down. You pick another All-Star team. It’s really that simple. Of course, Hollywood can be confusing because someone can feel like an All-Star without ever having a good “season.” Reynolds is the best example.

Later in the piece, Simmons takes the idea of the 24-person all-star team and extends it to Hollywood today. Going on the unscientific and unspecific combination of movie-opening, visibility, pay-check, and leading-man-placement, there are 24 stars today:

Smith and Leo; Depp and Cruise; Clooney, Damon and Pitt; Downey and Bale; Hanks and Denzel; Stiller and Sandler; Crowe and Bridges; Carell, Rogen, Ferrell and Galifianakis; Wahlberg and Affleck; Gyllenhall (it kills me to put him on here, but there’s just no way to avoid it); Justin Timberlake (who became a movie star simply by being so famous that he brainwashed us); and amazingly, Kevin James.12 All of them can open any movie in their wheelhouse that’s half-decent; if it’s a well-reviewed movie, even better.

With the exception of Kevin James, I’m pretty much on board, and I like the way he’s put them in pairs that make some sort of weird sense. Except, as noted by one commenter on the blog’s Facebook page [seriously, join, just do it], this list has no women. Now, I don’t think that Simmons doesn’t think that there aren’t female movie stars, but he never explicitly said “I’m talking about male stars.” Maybe it’s that he doesn’t see enough movies with major female stars and considers it outside of his realm of expertise. Maybe that would’ve doubled the length of the article, and he was, after all, talking about Ryan Reynolds and Will Smith. Whatever. What matters, at least for this post, is that we’ve got our work cut out for us. I’m going to start with some sure-things, and then we’ll have to duke it out for the rest.

SO LET’S DO THIS, KIDS. TWENTY-FOUR FEMALE STARS. But maybe we’ll rank them somewhat differently? Going for a score of 50? Totally unscientific but maybe ballparky?

Category 1: Bankability/Box Office Grosses (10 points)

Category 2: Charisma/”Movie star quality” (10 points)

Category 3: Gossip/Visibility (10 points)

Category 4: Prestige/Diversity of films/Oscar bait (10 points)

Category 5: Endurance/Tested-and-True/Even-your-parents-know-who-this-person-is (10 points)

 

TIER ONE: THE MAINSTAYS

 

1.) Angelina Jolie

Bankability: 8. Tomb Raider, Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Wanted, Salt

Charisma: 10.

Gossip: 10. Do I need to explain this to you?

Prestige: 9. A Mighty Heart, other indie stuff from early career, massive points for global philanthropy efforts.

Endurance: 8.

TOTAL: 45

 

 

 

 

 

 

2.) Sandra Bullock

Bankability: At the moment, 9. The Proposal and The Blind Side both hit it out of the park. Riding that wave with adaptation of Jonathan Franzen’s Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close with Tom Hanks.

Charisma: 7.

Gossip: A year ago, this was a 10. Today, an 8.

Prestige: 5. I don’t care if she won an Oscar and was all gracious, she still plays the same character over and over again, which is the opposite of “prestige” and what truly makes stars interesting.

Endurance: 10. Speed and Hope Floats to the present. All ages love this woman.

TOTAL: 39

 

 

 

 

3.) Meryl Streep

Bankability: I can’t believe I’m typing this, but 9. It’s Complicated, Julie & Julia, Mamma Mia, The Devil Wears Prada — lady’s got PULL.

Charisma: 7. She’s not a movie star so much as a phenomenal actress, which means that the charisma gets a bit sublimated in favor of the performance.

Gossip: 1. Which is the fascinating thing about Streep: a movie star with very little extra-textual information available for consumption.

Prestige: 10.

Endurance: 10.

TOTAL: 37

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4.) Julia Roberts

Bankability: Used to be a 10, now a 7. Eat Pray Love did well, but Duplicity made everyone question her value. Before that, hadn’t opened a film on her own since Mona Lisa Smile.

Charisma: 10. Yes, horse mouth, etc. etc., but you can’t deny what this woman has.

Gossip: 5. She was gossip’s dream girl for most of her 20s and 30s, but is now super boring.

Prestige: 5. Like Bullock, an Oscar in a role in which you play a slightly different version of your star persona does not equal prestige.

Endurance: 10. After a hiatus to have children, seems to be back in the game. Arguably the only one on this list who’s been a true powerhouse at the box office.

TOTAL: 37

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5.) Cameron Diaz

Bankability: 6. Unreliable; seems to have made some poor choices. Bad Teacher, What Happens in Vegas (barf), sure, but also My Sister’s Keeper (poor Alec Baldwin), The Box, and the misfire that was Knight and Day. Even The Holiday (which I kinda secretly like?) was no hit.

Charisma: 7.5 (Funniness is not necessarily movie-star-ness)

Gossip: 8, although I hate that it has everything to do with A-Rod.

Prestige: Used to be a 9, now about a 5. Remember Being John Malkovich?

Endurance: 9. The Mask was in 1995.

TOTAL: 36.5

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6.) Reese Witherspoon

Bankability: 6. Sweet Home Alabama, Legally Blonde 1 & 2, Walk the Line, Water for Elephants, but also a bunch of stinkers: Just like Heaven, Rendition, Penelope, Four Christmases, How Do You Know.

Charisma: 9. That face.

Gossip: 6. Much more interesting when she was with Jakey G; a handsome agent is so borrrrrrring.

Prestige: 7. Oscar for Walk the Line, amazingness in Election. Needs another curveball.

Endurance: 8. Remember Man on the Moon? A Far off Place? Girls got legs.

TOTAL: 36

 

 

 

TIER TWO: THE BORDER-LINERS

7.) Natalie Portman

Bankability: 4. Sure, Black Swan, but Your Highness, Brothers, Hesher, No Strings Attached, and The Other Woman all underperformed and/or bombed. Thor also did well, but I wonder how much that had ot do with Portman (I didn’t even really know she was in the movie?)

Charisma: 7.

Gossip: 5. Smart move with the baby-daddy; too bad he’s such a creepazoid. Not like she’s going to sell the baby pictures any time soon.

Prestige: 10. Her movies may not always do well, but the girl’s got guts. Still on the Oscar-high.

Endurance: 8. Picking and choosing ever since The Professional, but still young.

TOTAL: 36

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

8.) Rachel McAdams

Bankability: 7. She’s not quite strong enough to open a picture on her own — see Morning Glory and State of Play - but she’s getting there. Good showings in The Notebook, Red Eye, The Time Traveler’s Wife, Sherlock Holmes.

Charisma: 10. They don’t call her the next Julia Roberts for nothing.

Gossip: 8. Much higher when she was with The Goz, but we’ll settle for the relationship with Michael Sheen.

Prestige: 7. Attempt at arthouse with Married Life, nothing that’s really stretched her, save the recent turn in Midnight in Paris, which was so deliciously unlikable.

Endurance: 5.

TOTAL: 37

 

 

 

 

 

 

9.) Kate Winslet

Bankability: 5. The woman does not make blockbuster films.

Charisma: 7. Something in the eyes.

Gossip: 4. Split from Sam Mendes? Yawn.

Prestige: 10. Even an HBO remake of Mildred Pierce. All prestige, all the time — in fact, maybe she’d do well to do a non-prestige pic?

Endurance: 8. I loved you in Titanic and Sense and Sensibility, young Kate!

TOTAL: 34


 

 

 

 

 

 

10.) Anne Hathaway

Bankability: 6. Hasn’t really proven herself as a leading actress who can pull in audiences — both Devil Wears Prada and Bridewars had major names other than hers. Love and Other Drugs was a disappointment. We’ll see how One Day fares.

Charisma: God I cannot stand her, but 8.

Gossip: After the engaged-to-embezzler-business, nothing much. 6.

Prestige: Rachel Getting Married was a brilliant choice for her star brand.. Plus Becoming Jane, in which I can nearly stand her. 8.

Endurance: Princess Diaries! 6.

TOTAL: 34

 

 

 

 

11.) Scarlett Johannson

Bankability: 6. She’s a big part of Iron Man 2 and The Avengers, but she’s certainly not the franchise. Hasn’t carried anything big since The Nanny Diaries, which wasn’t a huge success. Lots of supporting roles in ensemble pieces.

Charisma: Once there, now faded. See my earlier piece. 6.

Gossip: 8. Divorce from Ryan Reynolds, dalliance with Sean Penn.

Prestige: 8. The roles in Lost in Translation and Ghost World will carry you a long way. Plus Woody Allen’s new muse.

Endurance: 6.

TOTAL: 44


 

 

 

 

 

12.) Halle Berry

Bankability: 3. A string of real bombs: Frankie & Alice, Things We Lost in the Fire, Catwoman, with only the X-Men and Bond Girl roles in between to anchor her.

Charisma: 7. Beguiling.

Gossip: 7. Oh gawd the Gabriel Autrey saga. Plus a baby that’s fifty times ridiculously adorable.

Prestige: Struggling to get her films seen, still an 8 — and with an Oscar.

Endurance: 7.

TOTAL: 32

 

 

 

 

TIER THREE: THE UNTESTED

13.) Kristen Stewart

Bankability: 7. I realize that this is all tied to the Twilight franchise, but we’ll see how she works outside of it. I do think she has at least the pull of RPattz or Taylor Lautner, both of whom are considered burgeoning stars.

Charisma: 5. Lip-bitting is not charismatic.

Gossip: 9. Very smart move, that falling in love with Edward/RPattz-ness.

Prestige: 8. Lots of risky, financially unsuccessful, but laudable projects, including Runaways and Adventureland (you guys, watch this movie).

Endurance: 3. Again, so much remains to be seen.

TOTAL: 32

 

 

 

 

 

 

14.) Emma Stone

Bankability: 7, which could very quickly become a 9. This girl is ON: after the success of Easy A, she’s in Crazy Stupid Love with The Gos, The Help (pre-sold up the wahtosee), and then the new Mary Jane in Spider-man. She is on the brink of something BIG.

Charisma: 9. She’s got it.

Gossip: 8. Lots of gossip about potential hook-up with Andrew Garfield, her new Spider-man.

Prestige: 3. Nada. The Help is not a prestige picture just because it’s about race relations, people.

Endurance: 2.

TOTAL: 28

 

 

 

 

 

 

15.) Mila Kunis

Bankability: 5. Totally unproven; up next in Friends with Benefits, which looks like it might hit big. We’ll see. Also a movie with Mark Wahlberg, but no huge franchises or projects on the horizon.

Charisma: 8. Holy shit yes.

Gossip: 7. Rumored hook-ups with Timberlake. Long term relationship with Macaulay Caulkin now over.

Prestige: 5. Lesbian sex scene = prestige? But it was in Black Swan…..

Endurance: 2.

TOTAL: 27

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

***********

Alright. I got 15. We need 9 more. Give me your submissions, ratings, and reasoning? I’ve missed a bunch — Drew Barrymore, Kate Hudson, Kristen Wiig (???) — but tell me who else? I want to make it clear that there are at least 24 all-stars to go with the males in play. [Or, alternately, fight with me. I'm ready. Bring it. I dare you to say that The Other Boleyn Girl was a good movie.]




 



 

 

 

Bon Iver, My Backwoods Boyfriend

Photo via Vanityfair.com

Is Bon Iver a celebrity?

Well, let’s do the checklist.

Is he a popular figure, known across the nation and/or world?

Well, yes. He wasn’t a year ago, or maybe even six months ago, but the string of performances on late night television qualify him for public figurehood. He recorded albums with Kanye and got his name ON THE COVER sandwiches between Rick Ross and Nicki Minaj.

Is he known for doing something — acting, singing, doing crazy shit, being a celebrity — extremely well?

Obviously. Bon Iver is the best high voice deep woods singer in the universe.

Do we know things about his “extra-textual” (personal) life?

Oh, like the fact that he got mono and broke up with his girlfriend and his band and went to go live in his Dad’s cabin in Wisconsin and wrote all of For Emma, Forever Ago and watched a lot of Northern Exposure and that’s how he first heard “Bon Hiver” (which they say to each other as a greeting in that gem from the mid ’90s) and accidentally transcribed it as “Bon Iver”? Like that?

Is he the object of fandom?

You mean the way that I’ve been watching him sing Bonnie Raitt’s “I Can’t Make You Love Me” on continuously loop and fantasizing about the stews I’d make for him in our Wisconsin cabin is called fandom?

WELL OKAY THEN. Bon Iver, celebrity. That means we can gossip about him.

What fascinates me, truly, apart from the fact that I really do conjure up recipes to make for us using only a cast-iron skillet, a wood stove, and my cunning, is how he embodies the appeal of the indie rocker — an appeal that he’s taken somewhat mainstream, reaching its apotheosis in the weeks leading up to/following the release of his second album with appearances on Colbert, Fallon, O’Brien and a highly coveted endorsement (9.5) from the infamously stingy Pitchfork.

The music seduced me two years ago. I seriously went through a phase where I needed to hear it the first thing when I got up and the last thing before I went to bed. There’s something intensely evocative and melancholy and tremendous about the album as a whole, particularly the progression from Song 1 (Skinny Love) through Song 4 (The Wolves Part 1 & 2).

I was first compelled to listen to Bon Iver by Sasha Frere-Jones, the contemporary music critic for The New Yorker, who wrote what can only be called a rave back in January 2009. He goes through the motions of Bon Iver’s creation story, explaining how

Vernon’s story is one of escape and renewal, a road movie that doesn’t spend very long on the road. Three years ago, he was living in Raleigh, North Carolina, playing with friends from Eau Claire in a band called DeYarmond Edison, and dating a woman who is not called Emma. (Emma is a proxy name for a woman he dated years earlier in Eau Claire.) DeYarmond Edison made slow, stately music that was rooted in American acoustic sound, and was vaguely related to old blues and to recent American indie rock. [Editor's note: "Justin Vernon" is Bon Iver's real-person name. I just call him Bon]

And elaborating on how he ended up in a cabin in the middle of the woods in Wisconsin:

Four months later, Vernon experienced a hat trick of bad times: DeYarmond Edison broke up, Vernon split with his girlfriend, and he contracted mononucleosis, which affected his liver. He subsequently spent a lot of time indoors, watching the TV series “Northern Exposure” on DVD. One episode featured the cast greeting a new snowfall in Alaska with the phrase “Bon hiver,” French for “Good winter.” Vernon liked the snow, which reminded him of home, and the phrase, which he first transcribed as “boniverre.” (He later removed the “h” from hiver because the French word reminded him of “liver.”)

And then he talks about the music:

The opening lyrics of “Flume” are both a declaration and a vague confession: “I am my mother’s only one, it’s enough. I wear my garment so it shows—now you know.” It is easy to believe that his lyrics are “sounds that eventually turned into words,” as Vernon once told an interviewer. In “Flume,” the language works best as sound—I listened to the album a dozen times before I looked up the words.

Yes, yes and yes. But I think what really got me was Frere-Jones’ description of seeing Bon Iver, in concert in Town Hall, as he

“….invited the crowd—as he does at every show—to sing along to the song that I find it hardest to get through unscathed, “The Wolves (Act I and II).” The audience was asked to sing five words—“what might have been lost”—which signal the song’s shift from a series of chords that ring without any clear time signature to a steady 3/4 stomp that uses those five words as a main motif. The recorded version doesn’t approach the ruckus that Bon Iver made that evening; as we all sang along, the band pounded harder and harder, blending in little eddies of feedback and clatter. Those words are what get me—joined with melody, they seem like a summary of the entire album, especially with that highly conditional “might.” Trying to keep track of everything lost? Or celebrating what wasn’t? When the band was done, and the crowd had filed out, I was still in my seat.”

I mean, okay, audience sing-along, kinda cheesy, BUT WAIT:

You guys, this was filmed in FRANCE. Even the French are willing to participate! The French are the opposite of cheesy! (Gerald Depardieu accepted). Or, oh my god, look at them singing “For Emma” a cappella in this hallway, I seriously can’t love him and his hoodie any more. LOOK AT ME, JUST PLAYING GUITAR ON THESE STEPS WITH THIS GIANT BEARD, I AM THE CUTEST.

Which is all to say that Sasha Frere-Jones, I too would still be in my seat, conjuring up ways to get backstage. Dear Bon Iver, I will be your Emma, and I will not be forever ago, and I will promise not to break your heart into a billion little indie pieces, just to mend your holy sweaters and make you stew. You suffer from “Skinny Love”? I’ll fatten it up. I make great cookies.

Several months after For Emma, Forever Ago, Vernon released a four-track EP of leftovers. These are all fairly awesome in their enduring Bon Iver way, but the last song on the EP — “In the Woods” — is a marvel to behold. You know how a lot of indie music sounds the same? And you’re like SHIT, is this Death Cab or The Decemberists or My Morning Jacket, I don’t even KNOW ANYMORE? Well this song sounds like nothing else ever, save maybe the soundtrack from some obscure Japanese sci-fi film. Here you go. Enjoy the sweet (and super literal) woods imagery of the fan video. But also enjoy how you after listening it you feel like you might have been hypnotized.

Apparently Kanye heard this track and, being Kanye, decided OH HEY INDIE DUDE, why don’t you fly to Hawaii and record on my new album? Me and Rick Ross and Nicki Minaj will be there smoking weed in the booth, come hang out.

One thing led to another, and suddenly there Bon Iver was, all white and pasty up on the stage with Kanye, John Legend, and the rest of the crew at the Bowery Ballroom, doing his auto-tune howly-thing, and one of my favorite songs from the Kanye album, “Lost in the World,” uses the chorus from “Up in the Woods” as its hook.

The Bon Iver album leaked last month, and he’s been appearing all over the place in the lead up to its release (this past Tuesday). He covered Bonnie Raitt, Colbert told him that the album made him cry a lot (and that his wife did hot yoga to it), Vanity Fair introduced him to a new demographic, and the New York Times ran a four-page profile of him in the Sunday magazine under the title “KANYE’S BOY IN EAU CLAIRE.” And, duh, the new album is great, in part because it’s not “For Girl Number 2, Less Forever Ago.” It does something different, and that something includes a concluding song sounds like he’s having ’80s soft rock’s keyboard love child. (By the way, he does an amazing cover of “I Don’t Want to Use Your Love Tonight,” by The Outfield, also known as the best arena anthem of 1987).

Photo via Vanityfair.com

But what’s the deal? Why is this guy everyone’s Backwoods Boyfriend? Why do I have to share? I mean, the guy is an INDIE CHICK MAGNET.

And I have a very straight forward theory as to why. It has two parts.

The first part involves the cabin.

As evidenced by my active fantasies articulated above, a guy alone in a cabin, wearing a lot of flannel, hanging out with his feelings and the wood stove — this is somehow really, really, really amazingly sexy. Sure, there’s the rescue fantasy — Dear Bon Iver, invite me to your cabin, we can share wool socks and I’ll make you less of a sadsack with my charms and melodious laughter — but it’s also about sensitivity. A guy who spends time alone — and produces something soulful and touching from that time alone — not only does it mean that the guy has veritable emotions (and is willing to warble about them), but that he’s devoted something other than his video games and Fantasy team. (I have nothing against either of those things, so long as they are complimented by some serious feelings-making and/or flannel). I am also from Idaho by means of Minnesota, which means that any guy with a cabin is a guy I would like on the top of my boyfriend list. Don’t lie: even if you’re from Texas and don’t know what a cabin or a “forest” is, you still like the idea. Like a lot.

The second part involves Bonnie Raitt.

Yes. Bonnie Raitt. If your mom owned a copy of any Bonnie Raitt album or CD and you listened to it at any point between ages 5 and 25, then you understand why this is important. I haven’t thought about this much until Bon Iver started covering Raitt on national television and telling the Times that she’s one of his major influences (and that he’d love nothing more than to produce an album for her). But his affection for Bonnie Raitt betrays the same unspeakable attractiveness as the disclosure that he minored in Women’s Studies in college. I mean, this guy LOVES WOMEN. Not loves women the way that say, Kanye loves women. Like the way that a guy who actually thinks of women as people loves women.

I mean, when he sings this medley of “I Can’t Make You Love Me” and “Nick of Time,” I really think something inside me shatters. I basically cry every time. (Click that link; listen to it now). I don’t know if this entirely makes sense — if other people, male or female, have the same reaction to Bonnie Raitt and what her music, especially from the late ’80s and early ’90s, seems to stand for in the heart. It evades language, to some extent, but it has something to do with hearing a grown woman talk about love and sadness and desire, and doing so fearlessly. For Bon Iver to sing Bonnie Raitt — and to sing those songs in particular — is tantamount to unlocking my heart, however cheeseball that sounds. Only a real man can say he loves Bonnie Raitt; only a real man can major in women’s studies; only a real man can sing with a super high voice about broken hearts.

Only a real backwoods Bonnie Raitt-singing boyfriend can make thinning blonde hair and scraggly beard so. damn. hot.

So there we go. Am I right or am I right?

Why Do We Read Celebrity Profiles?

1308068546_chris-evans-gq-290

Why do magazines put celebrities on their covers? Why does the interview with that celebrity become the center-piece of the magazine? With what expectations do we buy that magazine? And what makes the interview “good”? I’ve been thinking about these questions for awhile, but before we get to them, I want to offer a little context on the celebrity profile.

From Vanity Fair to Architectural Digest, from Esquire to Bon Appetit, the maxim holds: a celebrity on the cover sells more than a non-celebrity on the cover. Of course, this wasn’t always the case. The original Vanity Fair was a much more highfallutin affair, but folded for various reasons during the Depression. When Conde Naste “rebooted” the magazine in the early 1980s, it was part of a generalized “People effect” across print and broadcasting, and took a notably different form.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. Let’s go back to 1974, when People, a product of the mighty Time Inc., became an immediate success. Its *first issue* had sold more than a million copies — this is and was UNHEARD of. People‘s readership and ad rate only continued to grow over the course of ’70s and early ’80s, inspiring a raft of imitators combining the interest in “personalities of all kinds” — celebrities, sports figures, best-selling authors, human interest stories, etc. etc.

Entertainment Tonight, USA Today, the first iteration of US Magazine, and the reboot of Vanity Fair were all part of this trend, variously referred to as ”personality journalism,” “entertainment news,” and “infotainment.” VF has always been on the glossier side of the spectrum (and also, for what it’s worth, actually has some really good investigative journalism — but that’s the other part of the magazine). The combination of gloss, longer-form articles, intended audience of upper-middle/upper-class readers was also shared by GQ and Esquire, both of which have served as “gentlemen’s magazines” for nearly a century but had theretofore focused more on fashion and “how to be a man” than celebrity profiles.

Around 1992, Martha Nelson, the founding editor of InStyle (another Time Inc. product), used her magazine to popularize the notion that celebrities could sell fashion (and fashion magazines) more effectively than models. This idea not only helped make InStyle into a leading magazine, but rubbed off on the likes of Vogue, which used the ’90s and ’00s to transition from supermodels (Naomi Campbell, Cindy Crawford, Kate Moss, Christy Turlington, Claudia Schiffer, etc. etc.) to celebrities and actors. (Which is not to say that models don’t still make the cover of Vogue: it’s just that now, those models also have to have some sort of “extratextual” life, such as Gisele. In other words, the model is usually also a celebrity).

The success of InStyle, the decline in print sales, and the generalized spread of celebrity/reality culture encouraged publications previously unassociated with either to start putting celebrities on the cover. (Quick aside: when a magazine is struggling, it needs to up its newsstand sales, because those, not subscriptions, are what make money. In fact, most subscription deals make the magazine little to no money). A person who wouldn’t think of subscribing to Bon Appetit but, oh, well, likes cooking, and likes Gwyneth Paltrow, would certainly be more likely to buy it on the newsstand than another cooking magazine with a roast on the front. Same with an Architectural Digest promising a look at Jennifer Aniston’s home, or Brad Pitt modeling electronics on the cover of Wired.

So why didn’t magazines use this strategy all along? For one, it seemed cheap and un-journalistic. Does an architectural enthusiast really care about the construction of a celebrity’s house? If it’s designed by a really interesting architect, sure, but other than that, isn’t it just window dressing? And kind of a sell out? Sure. Yet the spread of the web — and the concurrent decline in magazine/newspaper readership — made those concerns secondary.

* * * * *

That’s how celebrities became the primary means of selling magazines. But what makes us buy a particular magazine? What sort of celebrity do we want to read about?

To state the obvious, you usually buy a magazine to read about someone who in some way interests you. Now, this can be broadly construed — you buy a magazine with someone infamous (such as one of those People magazines with the horrible story of some entire family killed by a mother or father), someone who’s your girlcrush, someone who’s your eternal star boyfriend, or someone who was just in a movie that you really loved.

You purchase the actual magazine in order to possess the two overarching things that a celebrity profile can offer:

1.) PICTURES.

This is your 13-year-old self speaking, and he/she really wants to be some photos of Joey from New Kids on the Block looking super cute so you can tear them out and put them next to your mirror. This is your weird macabre self who shamefully wants to see photos of the crime scene. This is your college-age lack-of-self-confidence self saying you want to look and see how good this celebrity looks and judge yourself against him/her. This is your super lusty self who wants to look at this person LOOKING SMOKING HOT without people in the grocery store line watching the drool accumulating at the corner of your mouth.

Because the celebrity profile very rarely includes paparazzi or otherwise unsanctioned photos, you do not buy the magazine in hopes of finding out that the celebrity looks “Just like Us.” Your desire for these pictures stems from a belief in the celebrity as some sort of superlative: best looking, best body, most glamorous, etc. The drive to look at pictures of him looking perfect (even if you know it’s with the help of a team of make-up artists, a great photographer, Photoshop, etc.) also means that, at least for the time being, you want to revel in, rather than debunk, the idea that stars are demi-gods.

Like this. Exactly like this.

2.) DISCLOSURE.

The release of information that was previously hidden. Information you covet. Information you covet because you find yourself drawn to a star — or, more precisely, to the combination of the star’s physical image (the way he/she looks) and figurative image (what he/she seems to stand for or mean) — and want to know more. The more you know, the more meaningful this star can become. The more seemingly intimate details you know, the more reasonable it seems that you are drawn to this person and feel like you two could be best friends/hook-up buddies/adopt a dog together. And when the profile offers some sort of revelation, it also holds the potential to profoundly strengthen (or weaken, depending on the tenor of the revelation) your connection to the star….and your desire to purchase other his other products (magazines, of course, but also the star’s real source of income, i.e. the films, television shows, music videos in which they appear).

These details — positive and negative — are all gossip. The more unknown, illuminating, revelatory, and conversation-worthy details, the more gossipy (and interesting) the profile. When you hear that a profile is “good” or “juicy,” what people are actually saying is that it’s offering disclosure.

The problem with disclosure, of course, is that it’s difficult to control. Disclosure offers access to the seemingly “real” star, but sometimes that “real” star can be ugly and unbecoming. January Jones, for example, comes across horribly in profiles. So do any number of other not-that-intelligent or charismatic stars. These profiles aren’t necessarily “bad” — you still read them, mostly because they tell you that a star is a certain way, a certain way not necessarily suggested by the rest of his/her physical image and picture personality. That’s good gossip, it’s just not the sort of gossip that a star would hope for. It’s good for the reader (and for the magazine itself), but bad for the star’s image. (You might argue that John Mayer’s Playboy interview from last year treads this line — that was a FANTASTICALLY juicy interview, but it caused so much bad publicity that Mayer seems to have retreated almost wholly from the public sphere in the aftermath).

Now, a good publicist recognizes this potential and coaches the star to be as boring, bland, and vanilla as possible, offering very little by means of compelling statements. Because you’d much rather have a profile that simply reinforces your existing image than one that sends your star stock plummeting.

But at the same time, even these bland stars need to titillate in some way, otherwise it’s the interview will seem like it’s written for Teen Beat, which can sometimes behoove the stars (Zac Efron circa 2007) but usually is neither in the interest of the star or the publication. Therefore, the star, the publicist, the interviewer, and the editors work (not necessarily collaboratively) to come up with some small tidbits that will a.) read well as soundbites and thus b.) make the interview seem more interesting than it actually is.

Sometimes, the “hook” can be manipulative: “So-and-so tells us what men keep her up at night.” (Her dogs). This is a tried and true trick that dates to the fan magazines’ “scandal” period in the 1960s (which they, in turn, stole from the tabloids and scandal rags). Alternately, the hook can be some sort of actual disclosure, like when Jennifer Aniston admitted in an otherwise blah interview that, well, okay, Brad Pitt might “have a sensitivity chip missing.” That’s GOLD. And that’s all that profile needs — the rest could just be following Aniston as tries on little black dresses and jeans with white t-shirts, whatever. One small disclosure and suddenly the profile becomes a window into Aniston’s mind, her life with Brad Pitt, and the way she was coping with his current involvement with Angelina Jolie.

Of course, a star might do something totally crazy or awkward or inappropriate or offensive in an interview, and the magazine might want to use it because, well, obviously, that’s a great bit of disclosure. But if the magazine prints something unbecoming — even if it is juicy and puts that star’s name on everyone’s mind — it could still piss off the star and his publicist so much that they’ll never do an interview with that magazine again. Most somewhat glossy magazines cannot afford to alienate stars (or their publicists, who might refuse to let other clients interview there as well). As a result, the vast majority of profiles tread the line between disclosure and non-disclosure, seemingly steamy and actually steamy, actually fun and adventurous and the signifiers (lots of beer, meeting at a bar, going snorkeling) of something that’s fun and adventurous (but actually, in all likelihood, not).

As a result, the vast majority of celebrity profiles are SO SO F-ING BORING. Like WHY-DID-I-THINK-I-SHOULD-BUY-THIS-FOR-THIS-INTERVIEW boring. They’re great on the pictures front — especially the ones in Vogue and Vanity Fair — but piss-poor when it comes to disclosure. Last Fall, I spent an entire blog post breaking down the banality of the Vanity Fair profile of Penelope Cruz. Since then, I’ve read dozens of additional profiles, each time punching myself in the forehead when I realize how bad it is.

* * * * *

Is it possible to find a good celebrity profile? Of course. Angelina Jolie’s interview with VF always offer some sort of disclosure (“Shiloh wants to be a boy!”) Long-time readers of the blog know of my admiration for the Brangelina publicity machine, and her deft handling of the profile further reinforces that judgment. The lady knows how to disclosure juuuuust enough make a really good profile….even as she holds enough back to make her life with Pitt and Fam seem somewhat mysterious and tremendously compelling. There’s a reason Vanity Fair puts her on the cover every year: her exquisite face on the cover sells, but readers have also come to expect a certain type of interview, a certain melange of beguiling imagery and equally beguiling disclosure.

 

The profile that offered this picture also offered the tidbit that Jolie sometimes absconded with men for no-strings-attached hotel sex, since a single mom still needs pleasure.

Other places for good celebrity profiles?

The writing of Chuck Klosterman. “Bending Spoons with Britney Spears”, originally published in Esquire, might be the apotheosis of the genre. I feel similarly towards his profile of Val Kilmer. But a Klosterman profile is as much about Klosterman as it is about the subject; when you see his name on the byline, you know you’re getting a very specific sort of profile that doesn’t focus so much on what the celebrity says as much as how the writer himself interprets it. He’s writing analysis — a narrative about this person and how he came to be important, but also what that says about us, the proximity of the apocalypse, etc.

But I don’t read a Klosterman profile because I’m interested in the celebrity. I seek out a Klosterman profile because I want to hear what he has to say about a celebrity.

Which is why I also read the recent GQ profile of Chris Evans, the star of the upcoming Captain America and, up to this point, a virtual unknown. But the studio and his handlers are gunning for him to become a bonafide star, and a GQ profile/cover is part of that equation. Still, the man does nothing for me: he’s bland looking, he doesn’t dance like the Tatum, he’s not even dating anyone interesting. If this magazine arrived in my mailbox (which it does every month, thanks $10 yearly subscription rate), I would be like blah blah boring new superhero dude blah. But this particular profile was written by Edith Zimmerman, who also happens to be the editor of The Hairpin.

Now, many of you have happened upon my site via my writings at The Hairpin, so obviously you know that I think this site is basically the best thing to happen to smart, educated, maybe a wee bit esoteric women. I also think that Edith is basically the funniest person in the universe. If you need proof, go no farther than How to Make a Doll Into a Wine Glass in 23 Quick Steps. You can imagine my thrill when I saw that she had written a celebrity profile, that it was somehow about her getting wasted with this not-quite-a-star, and that it was lead feature in a major national magazine.

And you guys, this profile is amazing. (If you want to see some great fan-girling over Edith and the profile, please check out the Hairpin comments). I’m not going to excerpt because you really just need to read it. It’s relatively short, it’s got spark, some lovely turns of phrase, a wonderful line about “HELP ME CALIFORNIA,” and, well, some spectacular drunkenness. Plus a great ending.

Now, Sarah over at Lainey Gossip has a lot to say on the subject. She did not feel as….charitable.

Her take:

I noticed it a few months ago in a cover profile of Robert Pattinson. The journalist kept mentioning how beautiful he was in between sound bites from her subject. I’ve seen Pattinson and he is a very good looking guy. Even allowing for a moment to be taken aback—if those sorts of things take you aback—there’s really no editorial need to keep harping on it. Toss it off once: It’s hard to believe that yes, Pattinson really is that good looking, and move on. Dwelling just becomes, well, embarrassing.

So imagine my horror, my overwhelming second-hand embarrassment, when I read this new cover feature on Captain America star Chris Evans. Generally I like Evans, though lately he’s on some kind of perverse quest to revolt me, so at first I was content to pick on his ridiculous sound bite about waterfalls. But then I read the whole piece and by the end I was so horrified that I had a rage-induced blackout. This article is so unprofessional, so EMBARRASSING, that as a female writer, I was ashamed on behalf of women everywhere. If you haven’t read it yet, the article consists of the “journalist”, Edith Zimmerman, recounting a drunken night spent with Evans which included her getting so loaded that Evans had to fish her out of his gutter, and lots of reflection on whether or not Evans was sincerely flirting with her, or just fake-flirting. I’m calling this behavior “the Tween Treatment”.

Granted, Zimmerman isn’t solely responsible for this mess. I looked her up—she’s a comic writer. So when GQ hired her for this piece, she delivered pretty much what they asked for. I put the burden on Zimmerman, but her editor is culpable, too, for ever thinking her profile was fit for print. But I also think back to that Pattinson article from a few months ago. Is this going to be a thing now? Embarrassing puff pieces written by women going full-tween on a handsome moviestar? Because if it is, let’s kill that right now.

What does this approach accomplish? A celebrity profile is supposed to do two things: 1) give the reader the illusion of intimacy with the subject, and 2) promote whatever movie/show/project the celebrity is hawking. Zimmerman’s piece on Evans failed, miserably, at both of those things. There’s very little of Evans in the piece. There’s that silly comment about waterfalls and sunsets helping him to “get out of his own head”, and then there’s Zimmerman’s speculation as to whether or not he’s sincerely flirting with her. (My take? Evans is just a flirty dude and he’s mostly harmless—flirting with no intent, if you will.) But this is Evans’ big moment, the last best chance for a guy who’s been On The Cusp forever to take it to the next level, and his major-magazine cover feature has been reduced to drunken giggling.

You know how I know this is a bad profile piece? There’s too much “I” in it. This is supposed to be an article about Chris Evans, not “Edith’s wild night out”. Zimmerman isn’t a bad writer per se, and if she had been commissioned to cover a celebrity event and she turned in something like this article, it’d be fine. There’s a place for Gonzo but a profile isn’t it. Evans was there to sell himself and Captain America and instead I ended up thinking that Zimmerman might have a drinkingproblem. For comparison’s sake, consider Jessica Pressler’s profile on Channing Tatum. She goes out to a remote desert town with Tatum and drinks to the point where they sleep in bushes, yet the profile lacks the tweeny tone of Zimmerman’s because Pressler doesn’t fawn on Tatum; she makes him sound like a big dumb kid who likes beer and “real people”, and he remains the central focus of the article. There’s a lot less “I” happening.

I just can’t believe the editors at GQ thought this was acceptable, that it’s okay to go full-tween on Evans, or any cover subject. Maybe I’m being oversensitive. Maybe I’m reading too much into it. But GQ’s main readership is male and this isn’t the first time they’ve sent a woman out to interview a male movie star and the result has been less than stellar. So am I to understand men think it’s funny when a woman embarrasses herself like this? Where, exactly, is the joke here? I find it hard to believe that the Tween Treatment is an acceptable journalism style. The alternative then is that men find these setups funny. And that disturbs me.

So here’s the thing. First off, Sarah and I clearly disagree as to the main purpose of the profile. For her, promoting a film should be part of the equation. But people don’t buy a magazine because they’re interested in a project — unless that project is somehow more important than the star him/herself, as in the case of, oh, say, Harry Potter. And, granted, some buyers of this GQ are probably fans of the comic who want to know more about the way it was filmed, etc.

But here is what I have to say to that: THAT SHIT IS BORING. I can get that shit from a million junkets. I can get that on Entertainment Tonight, I can get it through the Flip-Cam interview that every industr reporter is posting on his/her blog, I can watch him in a banal and no-cussing interview on Jay Leno. If you want the details — if you’re a real fan of something — you don’t go to the celebrity profile, you go to the behind-the-scenes un-sanctioned reports from the set. Anything that Evans could tell you about the making of this film — and the final project — is bullshit, because half of the thing was done in post-production in the first place.

The only reason to buy this profile is, as noted above, for pictures, for potential disclosures, or for the author.

So.

1.) Pictures — check.


2.) Potential disclosures — inconsequential, since he’s not really even a star yet, although I do like all the stuff about his mom.

3.) Author — Obviously check.

So when Sarah takes issue with the lack of Evans in the piece, I’d contend that THAT IS THE POINT. Sure, this interview is all about Edith getting wasted and doing funny things. Sure, it’s more about appreciating the deft construction of the article (and the humor therein) than Evans himself. Indeed, in some ways, this is as much a profile of Edith, comedy writer, as much as it’s a profile of Evans, recipient of comedy treatment. And yes, GQ knew exactly what it was getting into when they hired her. This is her style. This is what they sought: a different type of celebrity profile.

Is she acting like more of a fan than a journalist? Okay, but that introduces a second, equally pleasing element, namely, identification. I like this profile so much more than the slick, self-serious ones in which the reporter disappears behind the purple prose of the star’s beauty because I, too, would probably accidentally get drunk and leave my leather jacket behind while hanging out with a demi-star.

Maybe it’s not the best in the history of profile-dom. Maybe it doesn’t provide any insights or goos gossip. I mean, if anything, it shows that he’s actually a pretty kind, if somewhat vacant, guy, with a seemingly normal relationship with fame.

But the profile — the style, the structure, the blase way it treats actually saying anything about his upcoming film, the way it obliquely invokes our own contemporary relationship with celebrity - also says something interesting about what GQ believes of its readers.

That they like drunk girls?

Girls making a fool of themselves?

I don’t think so, at least not exactly. Sure, Edith got drunk. Or maybe she got tipsy, and this was embellished for effect. But I don’t think she comes across as having a drinking problem so much as she comes across as being fucking hilarious. The profile acknowledges that GQ readers aren’t Maxim readers. That they’ve been reading Klosterman for years, that they been buying high-end fashion accoutrements and ask “The Answer Man” questions about ascots. That they read serious think pieces on the military, the economy, and politics. Or that they’re women like me, a subscriber for nearly 10 years, made refugees from women’s magazines because they were sick of being addressed as nimwits.

And that when there’s a celebrity on the cover of a magazine with this sort of audience, there’s an expectation that the story about this dude will offer something that isn’t mind-numbingly dull or a simple variation on a tired theme every month. In other words, this profile shows that GQ doesn’t think its readers are dumb or satisfied with the insipid, and that a profile the does more will be embraced.

Not every profile should be this one. Not every profile should be written by Edith. But I do wish every profile would do something different — whether by offering a juicy bit of disclosure, by crafting a broad-scale analysis, by making me laugh ’til I spit out my coffee, or by providing a point of identification — and, well, okay, maybe just pair it with a pretty picture of the celebrity. Is that too much to ask of the celebrity-industrial complex?