In the age of the internet, a celebrity can fall from fame just as fast as they rose towards it. But this strange phenomenon mainly happens to famous women, and itβs causing them to send fans one simple message: I am human.
It seems like every week thereβs a new star on our radar. Iβm not talking about NASAβs findings. Iβm talking about celebrities.
You know the drill. Out of nowhere, the internet begins banding together in adoration for a particular actress, musician, or artist β think Tyla, Sabrina Carpenter, and Ice Spice.
As a result of everyone with an internet connection gushing over how fun and unique their art or overall image is, theyβre trending online on a regular basis. Suddenly, you see them everywhere.
The algorithm spews you their music while in discovery mode, shows you every time PopCrave has tweeted about them, and before you know it, youβve unwittingly learned everything there is to know about this person, right down to their favourite pizza topping.
As it does with all things new and shiny, mass media capitalises on the publicβs obsession with the Person of the Moment β engage idolisation mode β by slapping these individuals onto magazine covers and calling them βthe goddess of popβ or the βpeopleβs princess of rap.β
Then, also seemingly out of nowhere, the internet turns against them. These stars are suddenly the subject of intense criticism, labelled cringe, annoying, or boring β a brutal consequence of overexposure they didnβt ask for in the first place.
But have you noticed that this mainly happens to women?
Ottessa moshfegh is on the verge of getting womanβd I can feel it (womanβd is what I call it when everyone stops liking a woman at the same time)
β rayne fisher-quann (@raynefq) June 22, 2022