Twitter killed the Video star: How social media changed celebrity news, communication, and what it means to be famous

Once upon a time, celebrities were untouchable entities that the general population could only hear on the radio or see onscreen. Now, not only can fans keep up with their favorite celebrities through their phone screens, but they can interact with them that way as well.

Social media has infected everyone’s lives and has revolutionized the way human beings communicate. This does not exclude celebrities. With platforms like Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook, celebrities can personally write their own posts, publish their own pictures, and generate dialogue with their fans (or haters) throughout the globe.

The "Oscar Selfie" - most retweeted tweet

The “Oscar Selfie” – most retweeted tweet

Celebrities use social media to stay relevant and maintain their fame, and some people use it to find it, with Justin Bieber as a shining example of one of the most famous people discovered from YouTube. Our image of the celebrity has transformed from “they’re above us” to “they’re just like us”–and with everyone’s access to a smartphone and wi-fi connection, they very well could be any of us.

How it used to be

Before accounts with customizable settings and verification checkmarks, celebrity titles were concrete–writer, actress, politician, and any information released from them was done so through a wary publicist or staged and prepped interview. Tabloids made profits off of fabricated, dramatized stories when they couldn’t get legitimate ones. The public relied on news reports for any updates of celebrities, and news outlets relied on whatever filtered information publicists would give them. Celebrities were only seen dressed up and at events, their personal lives a mystery unless caught in scandal.

How it is now

Of course, tabloids and other celebrity news outlets still capitalize on shock and scandal, even celebrity deaths, and online sources like Perez Hilton only amplify the prevalence of these stories. Public relations still play massive roles in celebrity image and promotion, and some celebrities rely on social media specialists to run their handles. But within these past few years a new primary source for news has emerged: the celebrity social media account.

Now, celebrities allow the public into their lives, posting what they’re doing, where they’re doing it, and who they’re doing it with, much like how any of us use social media. They make announcements, release new music or material, even debunk rumors on their accounts much like any publicist would. They unprecedentedly expose their personality online in ways never before seen from such high profile figures.

Now, stars post selfies with or without makeup, complain about their days, comment on current events, and make jokes. They establish connections with their fans, replying to them, favoriting, retweeting, or following them back, and post about their relationships, family, and love for their fanbase–which are usually equipped with cutesy, inclusive nicknames like Katy Perry’s KatyCats or One Direction’s Directioners. With a click of a mouse, celebrities can reach out to millions of people and have the potential to garner huge international followings.

How being a celebrity has changed

Lives of the rich and the famous are no longer elusive or mysterious; they are out in the open for all to consume. Being famous today means consenting to losing your privacy. And celebrities hardly ever carry one title anymore- Disney stars become singers, actors become directors, artists delve into entrepreneurship, activism, writing, you name it. And to garner as many followers online as possible, celebrities must also be foodies, fashionistas, comedians, world travelers, have a ridiculous amount of just as successful friends, and post it all over the internet for all to see and obsess over.

But besides debuting their impressive lives, celebrities show us something else: they’re people just like us. They go to the gym, they look ugly without makeup, they have bad days and good ones. Being a celebrity today means being a human being.

How becoming a celebrity has changed

Social media has also allowed human beings to be celebrities. Like the aforementioned Justin Bieber, many users have found fame (some only temporary) through their online posts. YouTube vlogging is now a lucrative career, and many have found their six seconds of fame through the video app, Vine. Fashion bloggers, makeup artists, fitness trainers, even funny looking animals have all found loyal followings on social media. Have you heard of the Kardashians, who have managed to become mind-bogglingly famous for having no talent at all? They must be doing something right, as four of them currently stand in the top-10 most followed people on Instagram.

The days of celebrities being on a pedestal are over and have been replaced by us all being on a platform together. Social media have blurred the lines between public and private, famous and unknown, glamourous and basic. Hollywood has given up the notion that celebrities are unattainable and inhuman, and the internet has created outlets for the public to amass their own fame and following. Twitter killed the video star, and it is only a matter of time before technology kills the “star” for good.

Katy Perry and Surprise Guest: Buckets of Money

Did you know the NFL Super Bowl is this Sunday? Did you know Katy Perry is performing for the Pepsi Halftime Show?

By now, you probably have not only knowledge of both, but have been bombarded by commercials, promotions, interviews, and are so caught up on the scandals and speculations that you never want to hear the phrases “deflated balls” or “surprise guest” ever again. Regardless if you’re a New England Patriots or Seattle Seahawks fan, or if you don’t even like football, you’re going to be celebrating America’s holiest of holidays, Super Bowl Sunday. If not, you’re un-American.

Thankfully for those of you less football-inclined, the NFL has peppered their program with the highest of quality commercials and throws the most elaborate, high-profile performance of the year during the game’s halftime. This year’s performer to knock the socks off 100 million audience members? Katy Perry.

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“Who’s that?” none of you ask. Currently the most followed person on Twitter, pop star Perry will be joining the ranks of Michael Jackson, Diana Ross, Justin Timberlake, and Madonna, to name a few of the halftime show’s most prominent performers.

Will Perry join the list of performers who’ve stirred up controversy? Probably not, as she explains that she has run through costumes to prevent wardrobe malfunctions, has rehearsed her performance over 30 times, and remains in close contact with the NFL for their stamp of approval. So although there likely won’t be any nip slips in her 12.5 minutes, there will be things far more important: dollar signs.

Although Perry refused to pay the NFL to play the halftime show, the multibillion dollar organization can predict to gross impressive numbers from its expected record-breaking audience number. For the first time, the Super Bowl will be streamed on computers, tablets, and smartphones in addition to TV, allowing as many people as possible to indulge in consumerism.

As the Pepsi Halftime Show performer, Perry has been involved in far more promotion than any other previous musician, talking in interviews and press conferences, posting on her Twitter, acting in ads with various themed outfits, and giving away one of her featured guests.

Katy Perry is no stranger to non-music business ventures, with her own perfume line, flavor of PopChips, eyeliner line with Eyelure, jewelry collection at Claire’s, a partnership with Covergirl, and her movie, Katy Perry: Part of Me. A candid, bubbly, chatty woman, Perry has no problem expressing her involvements and the Halftime Show is the Mecca of all of them. “I feel like I’ve out dreamt my dream,” she’s said.

Perry is using the opportunity to make some cash of her own, too. She will be selling branded merchandise on YouTube, Twitter, and connected devices during her live performance, creating the first “shopping enabled” Super Bowl show.

New media technology and a savvy, omnipresent superstar are exactly what the NFL need to remain high in the black and out of scrutiny, especially after the past year of scandals the organization has faced.

Personally, Perry is rooting for the Seahawks to win, but overall she wants to prove she can bring a damn good halftime show. “I want to bring the humor, I want to bring the color, I want to bring the sass and I want to bring the incredible joy.”