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Why Do We Read Celebrity Profiles?

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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?

Your Eternal Star Boyfriend

The other day, I posted something to the Celebrity Gossip, Academic Style Facebook account (which you should follow, if you don’t already) concerning Mark Ruffalo and his forthcoming projects. I prefaced the link with something along the lines of “Sometimes I refer to Ryan Gosling as my boyfriend, but he’s really my second boyfriend. Mark Ruffalo is my first boyfriend.” But then I had to add a little caveat: “And Paul Newman is my eternal boyfriend.”

“Eternal boyfriend” sounds like something out of Seventeen magazine, but I think the phrase — and the concepts — gets at something essential about our relationships to stars, and why we think about them the way that we do, especially stars from the past.

The “eternal boyfriend” relationship is somewhat similar to the “girlcrush,” a phenomenon I considered in a post from last year. Why are we attracted, whether sexually, emotionally, or intellectually, to certain stars, male and female? But the eternal boyfriend is different than the girlcrush or even the first and second boyfriend. The eternal boyfriend is frozen in amber — he is almost always dead, or at least done with Hollywood — and he will be the object of your affection when you’re 20 and when you’re 80. The first and second boyfriends may be Mr. Right, but they also might not endure. They haven’t borne the test of time. Who knows if they’ll pull a Joaquin Phoenix and become abject sometime in the next year. They cannot be trusted, at least not yet. They may seem like Mr. Right, but they might turn out to be Mr. Right Now.

There’s also a third class — what Lainey Gossip calls “The Freebie Five.” These are men with whom you could have sex with a free pass from your significant other. You want to make out with them, but you don’t want them to necessarily speak — these men inspire a visceral response, but you know that it wouldn’t work out, or know that you’ll kinda hate yourself in the morning. They could stay the night, but you wouldn’t want to make small talk over brunch. Chuck Bass is totally in this crew. Channing Tatum might also be in this crew — I’d like to see him dance for me, but then I’d be so embarrassed.

I feel the same way about Eternal Boyfriends as I do the color blue: it will always be my favorite color. I feel the same way about the First and Second boyfriends as I do this dress with the ruffles and bric-a-brac from Anthropologie: in 20 years, I might think it’s hideous, but right now, I think it’s the best. The Freebie Boyfriend, then, is the blue tunic from Forever 21 that was fashionable for the two weeks after I bought it and I threw it in the trash.

For me, at least, there are many stars that are good looking, whose beauty I can appreciate — young Gary Cooper, for example, or Rock Hudson. Those men are classically handsome (and have made many a woman swoon), but they don’t do it for me. I can also appreciate the beauty of any dozen female stars, including Audrey Hepburn — that doesn’t mean that I love her (I know, controversial!) or want to put her photo on my wall (that’s reserved for Barbara Stanwyck, Katharine Hepburn, and Clara Bow).

I do think this works for men and women alike, even for hetero and homosexual desire: The Eternal Boyfriend/Girlfriend is the person that you wouldn’t mind actually being with — that you could bring home to your parents, that your friends would like, that wouldn’t bore you, that you wouldn’t have to get drunk just to endure conversation. This person (at least in your imagination) is everything that a perfect boy or girl friend should be — and the very best star boyfriends are adaptable to millions of fans’ different versions of what that might be. (For me, Paul Newman is really into reading Alice Munro’s short stories. For you, he might just like to go play Ultimate Frisbee barefoot in the park).

Me and Paul's favorite collection

Maybe we can think of star boyfriends and girlfriends as those who merit a place on your wall: to get on the wall, a star, male or female, can’t be merely eye candy, but needs to speak to you and promise to fulfill your particular desires. They need to represent your values — or what you desire — so thoroughly that you’re willing to

a.) Look at them everyday, essentially sharing your room with them

and

b.) Allow all others who enter your personal space to see your connection to them.

In truth, a star gets to be your boyfriend or girlfriend through a combination of visceral attraction, an image that seems to represent something that’s important to you (Marlon Brando: emotional physicality) and a je ne sais quoi that just gets you. (You might also really identify with a character with whom the star falls in love in a particular film — I identify with Katharine Hepburn in Holiday; therefore, I identify with wanting Cary Grant to love me).

I wish I had a better explanation for why we’re attracted to certain stars and barely moved by others, but I also lack an explanation for why people fall in love with the people they do. Desire is complicated, knotty, and oftentimes impenetrable to anyone but the desirer him/herself.

BUT BACK TO MY BOYFRIENDS:

If Paul Newman is the king of my eternal boyfriends, then Gregory Peck (circa Roman Holiday) the prince, Cary Grant is the jester, and Marlon Brando (circa On the Waterfront) the duke. [I’m mixing rankings all over the place -- 1st, 2nd, king, eternal, whatevs.]

For me, Paul Newman seems to represent the platonic ideal of a man — those cheek bones, those eyes! — mixed with intellectualism, devotion, compassion. The first time I really saw him, the first time I watched Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, I found him beautiful and jovial; as I saw more, saw him in the blue prisoner’s outfit from Cool Hand Luke, saw him self-destruct in black and white in Hud and The Hustler, and learned more about this extra-textual life, I found him exquisite.

You guys, he loved Joanne Woodward LIKE CRAZY! He directed a beautiful film that basically played up all of her attributes and earned her an Academy Award nomination! HE STARTED NEWMAN’S OWN AND GAVE SO MUCH MONEY TO CHARITY! He also aged with grace, which is apparently something I’m pretty into. (See Grant and Peck, but forget Brando; he aged with anti-grace).

There are all these pictures of him at home with Joanne Woodward, doing things like cooking eggs in his boxers with loafers. This is my type of guy like whoa. I’m certain he’ll make me those eggs and then we can go read The New Yorker in hammocks in the backyard.

I’m also apparently into stars from the ‘50s (although I like Grant most in his ‘30s screwballs, not his ‘50s color Hitchcocks). Grant can’t make it to the king of Eternal Boyfriends status because I just don’t know if he’d ever be able to go hiking with me. Can you go hiking in a three-piece suit and an ascot?

Where are your hiking clothes, Cary? Do we need to swing by REI?

There’s also something performative about his love-making — something perfect for screwballs and Code-era pictures when real making out or bed sharing was prohibited — that makes me think that we’d probably have lively and witty conversations, but when the screen fades to black he’d put on his full-length pajamas and we’d retire in twin beds.

We'd always be caught on the edge of almost-kissing

Gregory Peck is a wonderful flirt in Roman Holiday. He wears pants with a waist that’s about at his nipples; his suit seems to be adorable brown tweed; he’s a newspaper man and he and I could both work on deadline. There’s a bit of rascal in him, something indelible I love. But then he grows up to be such a DAD and lawyer in To Kill a Mockingbird (I REALIZE HE’S A GOOD DAD) but you guys, I’m just not in the market for dad boyfriends right now.

Pants! SO HIGH!

And Marlon Brando, you are pure tumultuous desire. You are the guy that I wrote poems in free verse for in the 11th grade. You have hooded eyes that just beg for me to take care of you and your checked jacket in On the Waterfront.

I could switch places with Eva Marie Saint; she was a member of my sorority and we both have blonde hair, no big deal, right?

We’d have a long talk about your fighting career, Brando would do a lot of nodding and almost-crying-brooding, then we’d have a crushing embrace and have an incredible make-out session. No words, just emotions. Our three week relationship would be so hot. But then I’d telegraph forward and realize that he ended up fat, balding, and alone on his island, and the pity would just be too much. Always a Duke of Eternal Boyfriendom, never a King. He’d be a Mr. Right now if he wasn’t such a recurring and longstanding object of my affection.

Those are my personal (and admittedly crazy) narratives; you all have your own. Some of them have already been aired in the Celebrity Proust Questionnaires over the last few months, some are hanging out rather sheepishly in the recesses of your mind. If you can’t figure out why a star is your boyfriend/girlfriend, I’d be happy to help tease out some nuances of his or her star image, seeing which ones resonate with you.

But here’s the beauty of the star image: because it’s constructed, because it’s contradictory, because it’s polysemic — holding many meanings — it can be multiple things to millions of people. My boyfriend may be your nemesis; your girlfriend may be my frenemy. We take what we want from star images, selecting what we want to believe and dismissing what we don’t. Lainey Gossip always says that gossip is a buffet: we all pick and choose what we want to consume.

Eternal Star Boyfriends are the same: Paul Newman divorced his first wife, after all, but I don’t think about that when I’m busy concentrating on which Alice Munro story will be his favorite, and whether we’ll send our someday kids to Kenyon (his liberal arts alma mater) or Whitman (mine). That’s the beauty of stardom — each star’s meaning is an alchemy of what we read into it and what it actually is — and why we have, and will continue to, cultivate psychically complex, wholly unrequited, yet somehow emotionally gratifying relationships with the photos on our walls.

Why You Love The Goz

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How have I not written about The Goz (Ryan Gosling) until now? He’s on my Freebie Five ; he’s absolutely one of my favorite actors; since Lainey Gossip shares my affection, I read news about/ogle him on a weekly, if not daily basis. When my Whitman friends and I get together, we watch The Notebook (fast-forwarding through the old people parts, of course). He’s a total babe. But why do I — and so many, many others — feel such an attraction?

I first saw Gosling in a very small, very unseen film called The Believer in the U.S. (and Danny Balint overseas). When I lived in Nantes, France for six months during my junior year, I’d go to the 2 Euro theater on a near-daily basis — each week they showed anywhere between 15 and 30 films, starting at 10 am, including older American/French releases (Amelie played there basically for the duration of my stay) and small art house stuff, and auteur retrospectives. I saw Muholland Drive WITHOUT SUBTITLES and you can only imagine the amplification of my confusion. And I also saw Danny Balint, which had won big at Sundance but never got a distribution push stateside. As a Jewish anti-Semite, Gosling is nothing less than brilliant. Seriously: it’s an even more breathtaking (if perhaps less finely nuanced) performance than Half Nelson.

I immediately knew this guy was something — and was frustrated when his next handful of films (Murder by Numbers, The Slaughter Rule, The United States of Leland) weren’t exactly what I was expecting. And I’m sure this string of films was not what longtime fans of Gosling’s teen work in The Mickey Mouse Club and Young Hercules were expecting either.

And then, and then — The Notebook. Gosling’s role as Noah Calhoun serves as the ground note of his star image and the catalyst for the cult of Gos fandom. Here, the similarities between The Notebook and Twilight are quite stunning — both are based on poorly written novels that touch on something deeply romantic and affecting in spite of hackneyed prose. Both films feature performances that animate otherwise stereotypical characters. And most importantly, the “real life” people who play these roles end up together — thus authenticating the romance and powerful understanding of love as forwarded in the original text. Put differently: the fact that the actors who played these roles *also* fell in love means that this type of love story can, and does, happen, even off of the movie screen.

The direction of The Notebook is somewhat of an abomination. There are several super saccharine moments involving birds and sunsets. I cry like a baby when James Garner breaks down, and I still can’t believe they got Gena Rowlands to play this role (oh, yeah, it’s because her SON, Nick Cassevettes, directs the picture). But Gosling and McAdams have chemistry that crackles. They both emanate tremendous star quality — which is part of why the film has enjoyed such a tremendous second life in video/DVD. This is our generation’s Pretty Woman or Dirty Dancing — the film you keep around (as my friend Alaina does) for hungover afternoons and girls’ nights in.

But I’m a bit ahead of myself. If you’re a Gos fan, you know that he and his co-star, Rachel McAdams, dated (and were rumored to be engaged) for around a year. They didn’t get together while filming; rather, when they were nominated for the MTV Movie Award’s Best Kiss — and won — they had to recreate the famous Notebook run-and-jump kiss.

Sparks flew in the aftermath; they got together. (Again, Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson also won this award and recreated their kiss/non-kiss on stage; it was shortly thereafter that photos first surfaced of them holding hands in public. Gosling and McAdams were private (by Hollywood standards), and only a smattering of photos of them together are available. Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes they were not. But they were still enough of a golden couple to warrant a moniker for fans of their relationship — McGoslings — and a mention in SNL’s Digital Short “Lazy Sunday.”

They broke up quietly. But both McAdams and Gosling were busy building their resumes during this time. I’ve already theorized McAdams’ star image at length, but as for Gosling, it seems he took a small detour into the mainstream — first with The Notebook, but also with Fracture (2007) — a thriller starring Anthony Hopkins. I kinda love this film and think it’s underrated — but am I blinded by The Gos’ golden light?

It made nearly $100 international, but Gosling hasn’t been in anything nearly as mainstream since. In fact, he’s worked very little, especially in comparison to other “it” Hollywood actors. He was a revelation in Half Nelson (also 2007) — a film which earned him an Oscar nomination for Best Actor.

I also loved him in Lars in the Real Girl. Praise for this film was a bit more muted, but it features truly beautiful, compassionate performances not only from Gosling, but co-stars Paul Schneider and Emily Mortimer. And if an actor can make you love him even with a moustache and sweater like this — that’s something.

These days, he’s promoting his new project, Blue Valentine, with co-stars and fellow indie darling Michelle Williams. He’s been all over the place with this movie — looking preposterously beautiful in Ray-Bans and a white shirt on the Rivera at Cannes; by turns mugging, teasing, and picking up his child co-star, pictured below.

He recently wrapped ensemble dramedy Crazy, Stupid, Love, starring Steve Carrell, Julianne Moore, and Emma Stone (as his love interest), which looks to be somewhat more mainstream — it’s produced by Relativity, distributed by Warner Bros., and will certainly get a more than art-house release. He’s currently filming the heist-thriller Drive with Carey Mulligan, Christina Hendricks, and Bryan Cranston. In short: he’s taking a break from indie dramas.

There’s his resume. But what does he “mean”? And what type of attractive masculinity does he embody? Or, to rephrase, WHY DO WE LIKE HIM?

I solicited answers from many of you via Facebook and Twitter, and it seems to break down into four categories:

1.) His picture personalities are endearing.

Usually Noah (“He can build a house with his own two hands. The Notebook is real, right?”) but also Lars, or, for those who watched him as a teen, as Young Hercules. Apart from the firecrackers/very angry men he played in his early film career, his most recent picture personalities have been of a piece. Even though Lars may seem a far cry from Noah, they are both tremendously caring men — the former manifests his damaged heart in a much more neurotic fashion than the later, but they both encourage the female viewer to care for them. Same for Half Nelson — I want to wrap him up and make him a dinner with vegetables and wash his sheets and put him to bed. Even in Fracture, you want to protect his obvious goodness (and moral-ness) from the negative force that is Anthony Hopkins.

While I’ve been inflecting much of this discussion with my own female, heterosexual attraction to him, many, many men — both gay and straight — like Gosling, and just as many men responded to my query as women. For these respondents, the attraction — perhaps more accurately named “admiration” — is connected to skill in a certain role. Which brings me to….

2.) He’s talented.

“He has range,” he did amazing job in Half Nelson, his work in Lars in the Real Girl was “brave and effortless.” No doubt about it: he’s got talent. And talent makes it easier to esteem him — and also easier to rationalize your own affection. It’s like the difference between admitting your affection for roast chicken and fried chicken: one is refined and worthy, the other mildly shameful, or at least a guilty pleasure. One is Ryan Gosling, the other is Channing Tatum.

Talent also adds a particular nuance to his masculinity. He may not have a body that betrays several dedicated hours in the gym (which is not to say that he’s fat; far from it) but he is dedicated. He’s picked his projects very carefully and worked far less than he could have. The message: he devotes himself to his craft. And that brand of devotion — to a craft, and, by extension, to a woman — is tremendously alluring.

3.) He’s sensitive.

It sounds like a bad way of describing the guy who liked you in 9th grade (or maybe just the ‘ideal guy’ that you described while taking quizzes in the back of Seventeen magazine). But it’s really at the heart of his apparent demeanor: he seems like a caring, sensitive guy. Like he would talk and touch softly; like he wants to hold you or cherish you. Like he’s not an asshole. Of course, part of this perception stems from his picture personality.

But it’s also the way he is with kids, and this is crucial. You’ve seen the pictures above, but his affection and gentleness with kids extends to his musical “side project.” Gosling can sing — just look at him bringing the house down Boyz II Men style with JC Chasez and Justin Timberlake during his Mickey Mouse Club days. But he’s funneled that skill into a curious but wonderful project, Dead Man’s Bones, which regularly collaborates with kids. Here he is playing with a bunch of Halloween-costumed kids in the graveyard; here’s another one with a kids choir (again dressed Halloween-style). His picture personality affirms it — just look at what a good teacher he is in Half Nelson when he’s not totally strung out on heroin! Endearingness levels = off the charts.

4.) He’s attractive.

Attractiveness is subjective. Gosling is not super-hunk attractive: he’s not super jacked, he doesn’t have the facial structure that makes George Clooney/Cary Grant paragons of male attractiveness. But he has something, and he carries it in an unnameable way — call it confidence, call it swagger, call it charisma — that makes him almost faint-worthy. Lainey Gossip regularly warns readers that if they looked at posted pictures, they won’t be able to finish their thought, let alone their work day. It’s true. He’s got it. Visceral affect. (And I use affect on purpose — his appearance acts upon the viewer — a different connotation than effect).

I do think, however, that without the star image — without the aura of sensitivity, romance, and talent — this affect would diminish. Hotness is a compound quality: equal parts how someone looks and how you would imagine him/her interacting with you. The knee-quivering part of The Gos isn’t about how you look at him, but about how you imagine him looking at you. And that — that’s a quality that endures.

So there we have it: Ryan Gosling is basically your ideal boyfriend. He’s talented, passionate, sensitive, and attractive. He’s good with kids, looks at you with desire, looks good in suits, loves dogs.

He’ll write you a song and it won’t be lame or rhyme or sound like Justin Bieber. He’ll build you your dreamhouse and look at you that one way. He’s good with tools but just as good with art. He’s the liberal arts Da Vinci of our generation, and he’s so totally your ideal boyfriend.

Sure, you say, but isn’t every guy I’m attracted to in the movies my ideal boyfriend? No, of course not. I like Channing Tatum (he’s my fried chicken!) but I wouldn’t want to date him; I’d probably get embarrassed when he started doing crazy dance moves everytime we went to a wedding. I like George Clooney and Brad Pitt, but in no way are either of them “ordinary” enough for me to imagine them even looking at me in the first place, let alone hanging out with me and going to coffee shops and actually being my boyfriend. Therein lies the crucial distinction of The Gos: he’s reconciled the ordinary and the extraordinary, both in his films and in his “real” life, in a way that makes him someone you could actually see yourself dating. Granted, it’d be like winning the dating lottery, but it’s something you can visualize.

Granted, this doesn’t explain why guys like The Gos. Or maybe it does: if Gosling is a girl’s ideal boyfriend, then To Be The Gos = to be the ideal boyfriend. And the fact that he’s not gross-out romantic (and super talented) makes him someone that men want to resemble rather than ridicule.

And as for specificity — e.g. what makes Gosling attractive in this moment, and a star of this generation — I’d argue that he’s proof that the artificiality of the star-making machine (specifically, Disney and Mickey Mouse club) can also cultivate talent that signifies as authentic and invested. Not every Mousketeer grows up to be a man or woman with something to add to our understanding of art and talent — I mean, look at JC Chasez — but both Gosling and, on the opposite end of the spectrum, Timberlake, prove that the spectacle and artificial trappings that attend most stars today can be shed. Talent *does* exist; it’s not all auto-tune and lip-syncing.

I’m curious about where Gosling’s image will lead — how will these two mainstream roles challenge, affirm, or texture his current status as our collective boyfriend? Ultimately, though, no matter how the films do, as long as The Notebook stays on continuous replay, and he keeps getting caught by the paparazzi doing things like doing that half-grin and petting dogs and playing music with kids, this current image will endure.

Contemporary Fan ‘Magazines’ & Digital Interactivity

Note: This post starts where the yesterday’s on Classic Fan Magazines and Analog Interactivity left off.

Part of what I liked about Orgeron’s article on interactivity was the very application of the term to behaviors so distant from what we consider ‘interactivity’ today. In other words, fan interactivity — and even agency — are now ascribed to those who log hours on Discussion Boards, who rally together to save beloved television shows, whose interest is (sometimes) authenticated through actual changes in television narrative, who write fan and slash fic and distribute it within international digital communities. Interactivity has also taken on a connotation of immediacy — you can voice your displeasure with a scene by logging on to the show’s website while you are watching; you can reply directly to a celebrity’s tweet within seconds using your own Twitter account. Digital engagement and interactivity is NOW.

Today’s analog fan magazines - the actual paper magazine that you pick up at the store or receive in your mailbox — contain a large amount of the same interactivity that characterized the classic fan mags. Letters to the editors, polls, second-person address, advertisements that hail the consumer and ask her to judge herself and others. They pale in comparison to that which I discussed in my previous posts, but such features exist nonetheless. With that said, such analog interactivity is so 1992. Today’s gossip industry (and version of fan “magazines,” also known as gossip blogs) has taken interactivity to new level.

For gossip blogs such as Perez Hilton, the form of the blog itself invites commentary. As I think about it, I’ve discussed this at length elsewhere as concerns Perez Hilton: fan comments provide a public platform for readers to voice their opinions quickly and often; while Perez does not engage commenters, the existence of the forum — mostly uncensored — has provided a site for dedicated readers to engage in prolonged discussion of both Perez and the minutae of the celebrities on whom he posts. Perez often concludes a gossip bit/story with the question “What do YOU think?”, explicitly encouraging feedback and implicitly validating their opinions. Below, for example, the typically opinionated Perez defends Jersey Shore ‘star’ Snooki, ending with ‘Thoughts?’

Over the last year, Perez has implemented social media tools — the ability to Facebook ‘Like’, Retweet via Twitter — increasingly present on all information sources (including this one). I don’t want to suggest that reposting a story is a means of interactivity, but when the story is reposted with commentary, the user is obviously interacting with the item…and inviting others to do so as well, either on Perez on via Facebook comments, Twitter replies and retweets, etc.

The analog publciations - People, US Weekly — have cultivated their websites into havens of interactivity, putting them in convergent conversation with their print forms.

The Fashion Police solicit response - and offer immediate feedback.

Reader-response to a picture of Angelina Jolie:

Readers ‘deputized’ as gossip-getters -

The interactivity at Lainey Gossip is a bit more subtle — and rarely referenced by Lainey herself. In fact, the largest form of response comes in the form of Lainey soliciting emails and comments from her readers — not to be posted on the actual blog, but so that she can gage reader sentiment. In fact, she refuses to open up comments sections on posts — it invites a space for hate, and if you’ve seen a Perez comments section, you’ll see that she’s right. She does periodically publish hate mail, and when I first posted on my own experience with Twi-hard hate, way back last fall, she linked to my post as a means of showing that Twi-hate is by no means exclusive to her. She opens every day with ‘Smutty Shout-Outs,’ where readers email their congrats, love, hopes, etc. for others (for example, someone can say that their friend is having a rough time and needs pictures of The Gos, Hot Harry on a Horse, etc.) She also periodically replies on Twitter and through email — or at least she has to me (has she to you?) I suspect that the gesture towards interactactivity, depicted below, is just that — a gesture. It’s certainly very rarely integrated into the gossip posts themselves; she talks about her freebie-five all the time, but certainly doesn’t end each discussion with “go post your own for all to see in the space to your right!!”

Ultimately, the biggest gestures towards interactivity are far more personal than the bigger, more conglomerate sites. See, for example, the recently published pictures from the Smut Soiree — where readers mingle with Lainey. (Speaking of which, attending the Smut Soiree is totally going to be my Ph.D. graduation present from my best friends. Just sayin’.)

People, US Weekly, and even Perez and Lainey are, in many ways, aping the success of TMZ, which encourages interactivity at every turn. The TMZ style is characterized by garishness (both in aesthetics and general rhetoric) and oddness (submit pictures of you grilling!). For myriad reasons, however, TMZ receives more traffic than all of the aforementioned gossip sites combined. Whether the opportunity to interact is part of that allure — well, you can tell me if you’ve submitted pictures of yourself grilling, or phoned in a tip, or voted in a ‘who’s hotter’ poll…..(in all seriousness, please tell me if you have).

Soliciting reader opinion on the Mel Gibson case — can he be forgiven?

(And offers you a chance to ‘live chat’ about it…)

Interactivity ‘puzzles’ — an old National Enquirer trick.

Bestowing readers with power over the site itself :

‘Who’d You Rather,’ a regular TMZ feature (with poll results below)

So how is this different than the analog interactivity described in my last post? I want to argue that what has fundamentally changed is the idea of us, as readers, having any sort of sway over Hollywood or celebrity culture. Part of this disconnect can be linked to general celebrity indifference — long gone are the days when a star would ‘write’ an article in direct response to fan sentiment. And even though celebrities cultivate an aura of authenticity around their official online interactions — on Twitter, on their websites, etc. — there’s still very little sense that our interaction on a gossip site will change the way that Hollywood, the gossip site, the gossip maven, or celebrities in general will behave, dress, etc. And while I think that Twitter has reintroduced a modicum of belief in the power to speak directly to and receive communication directly from the celebrity, it remains a relatively nascent phenomenon.

I also think that there’s a broader understanding of celebrity culture as a machine — an industry unto itself — and thus far more immune to the complaints and suggestions of fans, however univocal their protests may be. In other words, those who are interested in celebrity gossip are more cognizant of the celebrity as a product — of the machinations that go into image creation, of the fact that celebrity gossip itself is entertainment — and less likely to believe in celebrities as actual humans open to suggestions. [I'm not suggesting that everyone was inveigled by the star system during Classic Hollywood, but the illusion was much more easily tended, and thus all the more easier to believe]. When someone comments on one of Perez’s posts, it’s not because she’s under the illusion that the celebrities featured in the post will actually read it — rather, it’s a means of voicing her opinion about the celebrity (and what he/she stands for) and engaging in dialogue (sometimes ethical, other times certainly not) with others. Similarly, acting as ‘fashion police’ on the US Weekly site is less about you policing the actual star and more about policing women’s choice of fashion in general, and what you believe is and is not appropriate (or beautiful, or fashionable) to wear in public.

Does this ring true? Let me know your own experiences with interactivity — and how you think it’s different than the analog interactivity cultivated in the past.

Jen Tries So Very, Very Hard to Get Dirty

Biggest post-Oscar celebrity news: the long-anticipated Jen/Gerry W Cover. Here’s the sneak preview that went viral earlier today, prompting blog posts from both Lainey Gossip (here) and Jezebel (there). And while Lainey did a nice job of pointing out how posed and awkward Gerald Butler looks, she failed to touch on the real juice of the story, passed along by Jezebel — the entire thing was shot by Steven Klein, the man responsible for the (in)famous W Magazine shoot for Brad Pitt and Angelina, pictured (in part) in all its ridiculous glory below.

Recall, please, that this particular spread was published when Aniston and Pitt were still together, way back in 2005. Jolie and Pitt were purportedly posing in simple publicity for the forthcoming Mr. and Mrs. Smith. (It’s widely believed that this particular photo shoot was part of what prompted Jennifer Aniston, in her post-break-up interview with Vanity Fair, to declare that Pitt lacked “a sensitivity chip.” What’s more, as Jezebel points out, Klein is a good friend of Pitt. And so the plot thickens.

So here’s what we know:

1.) Jennifer Aniston is attempting to add much-needed life to her image following the abject failure of Love Happens.

2.) The Bounty Hunter, starring, of course, Aniston and Butler, opens NEXT WEEK. Aniston has been cultivating — but not actually confessing to — the suggestion of a romance for months, through formal appearances (Golden Globes gross-out posing, see below) and ‘gotcha!’ paparazzi photos that effectively suggest that she and Butler have been privately vacationing (read: her publicist and his publicist agreed he should be photographed with her in Mexico).

2.) In that film to succeed, Aniston understands that she needs a viable romance, preferably, but necessarily, with her co-star (See, for example, the hoopla over the ‘supposed engagement’ leading up to the release of The Break-Up). No matter how much John Mayer emphasizes his respect for her, she still doesn’t have a cute relationship to flaunt for the gossip mags and thus keep herself visible. It’s simple old Hollywood logic, and she (and her publicists) knows it well: the more she insinuates the possibility of a relationship with Butler, the more curious people will be to see their chemistry, and more the film will gross.

3.) Aniston is also attempting to diversify her image ever so slightly. To my mind, this is the most transparent attempt to ‘Angelina’ herself that we’ve seen. First off, the film they’re promoting is basically a vanilla version of Mr. and Mrs. Smith (just check out the trailer — it’s like Brangelina Lite… far less sexual gravitas and far more stilted attempts at bad humor).

Secondly, there’s the shoot itself. Oh, look, Jen’s such a bad girl! She’s stealing money! Getting arrested! Role playing, how dirty! (Side note: all images below are screen shots from the W website, as images from the actual spread have yet to be put online — thus the blue lines, which allow you to see how and where to buy the clothes she’s wearing).

Even look at the specific articles of clothing depicted below, all of which she’s wearing in the cover shot. We’re used to thinking of Jennifer Aniston naked and wrapped in the American flag, as she appeared last year on the cover of GQ. But Aniston in quasi-burlesque lingerie? What’s going on here?

The most fascinating attempt to associate Aniston with dirt is, well, quite literal. The ‘Behind the Scenes’ tell-all, Chris McMillan, Aniston’s long-time stylist, ‘best friend,’ and the man behind ‘The Rachel,’ highlights the dirty details of the shoot, both figurative and literal:

This is not exactly Jennifer as we know her.
We got there and the storyboards were kind of Kim Basinger in
9 1/2 Weeks. Which is even better, because then it started getting good.

How did you arrive at this particular look for Jennifer’s hair?
Well, Steven [Klein] was talking to Jennifer for about an hour and a half while she was doing fittings and her hair dried into this naturally curly head of hair. So we just refined it from there. But it’s not her typical blown-out hairstyle. It’s a little rougher, we liked seeing the flyaways.

What about day two of the shoot?
At the end of the first day Steven came up to me and goes, “Could you please ask her if she could not wash her hair tonight and just show up tomorrow?” I mean, she was rolling in the dirt, it was windy and she had hairspray in her hair.

She said yes to that? Dirty hair?
Yeah, we left her hair dirty. It just created a nice chunky texture. The key to Jennifer’s hair is no matter what you do with it — straight, frizzy, dirty — it looks like it actually grows out of her head. She’s someone for whom her hair doesn’t wearher, she wears it.

This is a rhetorical gold mine. Main points: Jen conflated with sex star; Jen with a ‘new look’; Jen ‘spends all day rolling in the dirt’; Jen ‘game’ for dirty hair. Adds up to: Jen, crazy, dirty, up for anything girl! In other words, not the staid, always-the-same-blown-out-hair, sartorially and stylistically conservative girl, dumped by Brad for exotic sexpot.

I’m also struck by the visual similarities to another Brangelina photoshoot, also in the Arizona desert, only for Vanity Fair, that was published after the pair came out publicly as a couple -

Now, you might sense an abundance of vitriol directed towards Aniston, and you would be correct. Long time readers (read: those who have read for the 9 months that I’ve maintained this blog) will know that I harbor general disdain for her. Part of disaffection is certainly subjective — there’s just something about her, and about the stock character that she plays, that grates against me. (Note, however, that I really love her in both The Good Girl and Friends with Money — in part because those characters are so different from the recurring-Rachelness of her mainstream fare, but also her role in Friends with Money seems so much more honest about what it feels like to be a woman in her late 30s surrounded by other women with marriages, money, and oscillating levels of happiness).

It’s not that I dislike Aniston for playing the publicity game. Obviously, judging from my general admiration and fascination with The Brange, I don’t dislike those who manipulate their images. Rather, it’s that Aniston is so transparent about that manipulation — but not on purpose. She’s not ridiculously bad at it, like, say, Lindsay Lohan, or ridiculously obvious about it, like Heidi and Spencer. She’s trying play at the level of Pitt and Jolie, and she fails. The efforts of her — and her team — are derivative (again, see the photoshoot….five years too late). A for effort, but a solid B overall.

And here’s where I make a big inflammatory claim and piss people off: I think they’re B level because she’s actually a B level star posing as A-level. Once a television star, always a television star. Not only has her beginning on Friends limited the extent to which she can successfully stretch her star persona (Rachel-like character = success; un-Rachel-like; no-go), but also the limits to which she can successfully manipulate her image. She’s beautiful, yes; she has an incredible body, of course. But is she special? Can she use specialness — that uniqueness that distinguishes the most enduring of movie stars- to elevate her above and help us forget the way she plays the game? I don’t think so. In the end, we see her manipulations so vividly because her star shines so dimly. She’s not a bad star, or an unsuccessful one. But she’s not one for the ages, no matter how dirty she gets her hair.

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