I had a discussion recently with my mother over the fact that the role
models for children these days are unrealistic at best. The "heroes"
of today's youth haven't accomplished much more than a music and/or acting
career based on selling out to a genre (I'll explain this further in a moment
and yes, almost every artist does this) and a stellar social media presence.
Now, this doesn't make them horrible people and that is not the intention of
this article. Celebrities, like the rest of us are human, have human motives,
and also do wonderful things.
As far as selling out to a genre, what I
mean is that every artist conforms to the ideal of the fans their music or
acting represents. An easy example is Taylor Swift, her transition from country
singing sweetheart to New York killer queen was an intentional swap of genres
executed perfectly. She no longer had her long blonde curls and soft pastel
dresses that swirled about her like a dream. Instead she traded them for an
edgy look, hipster themes and a new base line. There is nothing wrong with
conforming to a new genre, especially when it's your job, as long as you
actually want to.
Actors do this too. Everyone knows Tom
Hiddleston is a classy gent. One, because that's who he is. And two, because
he's also created that theme in the way he talks, dresses, and the roles he's
chosen to play. In the entertainment world you have to build an image and fit
it. That's just how it is. It doesn't have to be something you're not, but it
does have to be something people readily recognize. That's how you get certain parts,
that's how you produce yourself. Simple marketing.
That explanation out of the way, back to
why I have no heroes. More importantly why today's kids are about to have a
terrible go of it.
My younger sister's hero is Ariana Grande. What I mean by that is,
the person she wants to be, who she thinks is the greatest personality
achievable, and whom she'd most like to be like is Ariana Grande. She loves all
her music, her taste in style. All of it, she wants to be Ms. Grande.
Other kids I know have similar connections to internet celebrities
like Colleen Ballinger, Felix Kjellberg, and Tyler Oakley. These young people
are their aspirations, their role models. And so, to imitate them they start
their own channels and create videos that mimic or fit into the style of their
heroes. There's nothing wrong with admiring entertainers, especially some of
these youtubers who have done amazing things with charities and that sort of
thing.
Here's where the problem lies: the kids admire their heroes for
their fame and lifestyle. Not for who the people are. You can't admire someone for who they are if you don't actually
know them. I have argued this with many people who say that youtubers (and
actors/musicians for that matter) are actually more real than they've ever
been. They put their whole lives on camera and want you to be part of it.
Well...no.
Just as Facebook gives you the opportunity to project whatever
image you want, so does youtube. Any media outlet is tampered with marketing a
specific image. Everyone does it. If you think for a moment that a youtuber
would persist with something out there that is a bold, anti-popular belief opinion, you
are wrong.
Nash Grier, a popular viner, got so much grief after posting an
anti-gay vine that he immediately apologized and took it down. He said he was
"in a weird place" when he made it, which could be true. Or he could
have thought it would be funny and then realized no one was going to go with
it. Or, and I think this may be more plausible, is that he stated a personal
opinion, against the status quo, and had to change his public image to continue
making money as an entertainer.
You can't be real on the internet. Argue it any way and you'd
still be wrong. Even in real life we have an image to project, online it's just
easier to maintain. Play your cards right and you can fool anyone into thinking
you're a sheep when you're a wolf (Poe's law fits somewhere here).
Here's the scene: millions of kids across America, whose role
models are actors who consistently pretend to make money, go on to be just like
them. The thing is, not everyone's going to make it as a youtube or vine celebrity.
So, where does that leave us?
Marie Antoinette was Queen of France
roughly between 1774 to 1792. She's an iconic figure in history and most people
know at least the name. We're all familiar with the saying "Let them eat
cake," that she (supposedly, no historians believe she actually said that)
said. Whether she said the phrase or not, it wouldn't have been something
farfetched to come from her mouth. Marie wasn't an idiot by any means, however
she had no know how when it came to running a country. Neither did her husband,
Louis XVI. They were raised to be beautiful. To be admired by their
people for their attraction, not their diplomatic prowess.
Louis tried to usher his country into a new era with Enlightenment
ideas, this didn't go over well with his court as it abolished serfdom. He also
cut down on economic regulations of the government which unfortunately led to a
shortage of grain in France. While he had wonderful ideas that could have
worked if he'd better tested their influence on his country and built
firmer connections with the factions in his circle of influence, Louis' decisions
were led by sheer will and not a thorough investigation of the facts.
Marie was worse off, her mother trained her to look like a queen,
not be one. Marie could not read or write well in any language, her talents
were only in singing, playing the harp, and dancing. She had no forethought to
extend her hand to courtiers who were against the alliance with Austria (her
homeland). Marie wanted to live like a queen, not exercise the responsibility
of one. She renovated buildings, some saying she plastered them with gold and
jewels, and spent an extensive amount of money on luxuries and gambling all
while the people of France suffered from an economic decline. All she wanted
was what was best for her and her homeland.
Marie Antoinette was publically beheaded on October 16, 1793 at
the Place de la Revolution in Paris, France. Her body was thrown into an
unmarked grave. She was known as a selfish, self indulgent, beautiful woman.
That's it.
Why bring up Marie Antoinette? We don't have kings and queens in the
United States, meaning that any child today could become the future leader of
our country. Any child has the potential to be a leader. But here's the
problem, they're all a Marie Antoinette in the making. Their ideal of a role
model is an entertainer who markets themselves with products they're paid to
use. Our future leader will be a sellout actor, just like Marie. If we've
learned anything from the past, we're looking forward to economic and
governmental ruin of dastardly proportion. I'm not sure that's something
America will come back from, at least not anything like it used to be.
These kids, eventually will have no one to blame but themselves.
The fact that they care more about what's the newest, most popular video game
is on them, on us. My last post was all about the fact that my generation is
one of the most terrible generations yet because our primary concern is
enjoying ourselves, not the benefit of the future. We're setting ourselves up
for ruin because the role models we use to order our life toward are about
partying and the fun things in life. The magnitude of issues we have to deal
with from our predecessors alone will bury us.
We need to get serious.
Someone once asked me to create my "last supper," who
would be the twelve around my table? I thought this was odd for many reasons,
but the most relatable being that it seemed they wanted me to lay out a group
of people I most aspired to be like. But I don't have heroes like that.
During a discussion of sociology or philosophy (I forget), my
professors had my class read an excerpt from Allan Bloom's, The Closing of the American Mind, where Bloom lamented over the fact that students no longer had
role models (I spent hours combing through it top try and find where, I'll add
the exact location once I've found it). His concern was that young people no
longer believed in anything and were all Relativists. He worried that no one
had a firm grasp on what they believed or firm morals of any sort. And that's
why he believed students need role models.
My professor particularly agreed with this statement and brought
it up, asking everyone in the class to name their role models. I said I had
none, he took it as a the perfect example for Bloom. That wasn't my meaning
though and I explained that I didn't believe in role models because I don't
believe that any one human being is of a high enough quality for me to want to emulate
them.
My "Last Supper" is full of people like Oscar Wilde,
Christina of Sweden, and Aristotle. But the whole concept of a last supper is
that I'm in control and these are my peers who I am sharing a meal with. My
pursuits are directed toward the perfection of attributes such as goodness,
integrity, and boldness not to be as alike to Queen Elizabeth I as possible.
Sure, my goals are inevitably unattainable, but is it not more valiant to
attempt to be Godlike than to settle for the lowness of humanity?
That being said, we, as a generation, do not need role models. We
need a goal. There's a lot at stake in our future and if we don't have the
drive and willingness to sacrifice ourselves to create the world we want to
live in then we are no better than Marie Antoinette. We remain self indulgent
cowards, who care more about feeling good than doing what's right. Nobody has
to remember our names, but those after us will surely remember what we leave
them to deal with. Who are we, entertainment junkies or heralds of a new age?
