Which is too bad, because
if celebrity culture can indeed change societal norms, then we need role models like Mo'Nique on magazine covers like People to normalize open relationships and Hugh Grant to normalize the idea that «40 - year - long monogamous, faithful» marriages may not be the ideal.
Not exact matches
In a world of split - second attention spans,
if you can stay nimble enough to leverage your
celebrity partnerships in a way that rides the wave of current events, pop
culture or social media «chatter,» you can make both branding and fundraising magic.
Trump is the absolute, sort of, final arch of
celebrity culture that we saw beginning in 1984 when he rose to now, when the reality show ethos has just reached its apotheosis,
if you like, and he is that person.
So
if you're rethinking your own company's level of LGBT policies and activism in the wake of the Nike - Pacquiao news, keep in mind that your
culture's openness to LGBT employees is more than just a rating in an index, or a public stance against a
celebrity's remarks.
Yesterday, when I spotted Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdene on the cover of People Magazine with the headline «THE HUNGER GAMES» in bold white letters, I couldn't help but wonder
if Suzanne Collins set all of this up to remind us of how closely our
culture can resemble that of The Capitol — what with our excess, our reality shows, our glorification of violence, and our compulsive need to shove every good story through our
celebrity - obsessed media machine.
And
if Emergentism truly had become a
celebrity culture, then that replication makes sense.
I'm often asked what ought to be done about «
celebrity culture» within American Christianity, and having benefitted a bit from that very
culture myself, I honestly don't know
if I'm the best person to respond.
Even
if you couldn't care less about the shenanigans of
celebrities and politicians, it's hard to totally escape it in our celeb - obsessed
culture; this is often what passes for news nowadays.
«
If you look at the footballers, you look at our
celebrity culture, we seem to be saying, «This is the way you want to be».
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If you're a fan of deceptively easy pop
culture quiz shows and
celebrities running around the streets of New York, then has TruTV got a trailer for you.
Like teenagers who make glam - shot selfies as
if they were pop singers or movie stars, Suellen Parker superimposes her own eyes and mouth onto modeled clay figurines of pop -
culture celebrities in a strangely arresting series of archival inkjet prints.
If you love being cool, keeping up with the latest
celebrity culture, and understand that advertising is art (because advertising is Art), the Dallas Museum of Art's (DMA) current exhibit, Posters of Paris: Toulouse - Lautrec & His Contemporaries, is a show for you.
If you think the importance of
culture goes no further than what you hear on the radio or see on television, then you're sorely underestimating the long - term impact of art, movies, music,
celebrities, and cultural phenomenons.
«I told everyone before I left
if there were lots of questions about pop
culture I would be awesome at it because I probably read too many
celebrity gossip blogs,» she says.
At this point,
if you haven't accepted the
celebrity influence of the Kardashian / Jenner machine, you probably haven't been paying attention to pop
culture at large.