Parasocial projection screens

How celebrities carry the projections of their fans

Ariel Meadow Stallings

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Photo by Ben Kaden used by Creative Commons license

There’s a lot of media chatter these days about celebrities and their contentious relationships with their fans. This article perhaps sums it up best, digging into issues with artists like Taylor Swift, Doja Cat, and Charli XCX dealing with entitlement from some fans. From the article:

…fans are getting “younger and younger,” Marks adds, on top of the way pandemic isolation distorted our online relationships, and you’re starting to see new levels of fan entitlement.

Increasingly, fans seem to feel like their idols owe them. This can be a pretty uncomfortable experience for artists, as Doja Cat said in a Harper’s Bazaar interview:

My theory is that if someone has never met me in real life, then, subconsciously, I’m not real to them. So when people become engaged with someone they don’t even know on the internet, they kind of take ownership over that person. They think that person belongs to them in some sense.

I was reminded of an interview I read years ago with actress Lili Taylor, where she talked about working with Julia Roberts:

“She had this thing that famous people have, this capacity to carry other people’s projection. For some people it gets too much and they die, but some…

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