No talent required to be famous
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Jim Cook
Media General News Service
Published: April 21, 2008
Got no talent, but still want to be a celebrity?
I’ve got good news for you. Now more than ever, technology and our culture have made it easy for morons like you and me to capture the public’s attention.
Time was, becoming famous required a great talent or monumental achievement. Back in the day, if you were on the cover of a magazine or on television, chances were that you boldly cured polio, bravely fought off a horde of Nazis or were talking straight to the public about how awesome cigarettes were for their health (hey, lying is a talent too).
In the age of YouTube and MySpace, becoming a celebrity no longer requires achievement or merit of any sort. With a complete lack of commonsense, artisitc value or human decency, and a good Internet connection, you too can be famous.
Celebrity is a lot like children, syphillis and other STDs; it’s easily spread by intimate contact with the right person. Our most high profile recent example of this phenomenon is Ashley Dupre, who was catapulted into the public eye after it was revealed that she was the personal friction contractor for former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer (named by Time Magazine as one of America’s Top Five Governors Who Look Like One of the Cavemen from the GEICO ads). Dupre joins a long list of nobodies who became somebody by being naked at the right place at the right time with the right person. Notable past travelers on this path to fame: Kevin Federline, Yoko Ono, Elizabeth Dole, and Elizabeth Taylor’s husbands six through 15.
Another way to insert yourself into the public eye is to poke at some of our society’s scabbed over wounds in a very dumb and very public way. For example, consider the notoriety obtained by an Ohio state trooper who recently took a picture of himself in a white hood and mask and electronically sent it to his fellow troopers. For the investment of about $7 and five minutes, the trooper gained the attention of the public, who is always eager to find an incident they can have a knee-jerk reaction of outrage regarding.
So if you’re looking for a quick route to fame, and you don’t mind getting fired or attacked on the street, do something glaringly insensitive like leaving a BLT on top of the Koran, showing up schnockered for a Mothers Against Drunk Driving event or holding a Civil War re-enactment on the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, take pictures of your transgression and stupidly post them somewhere the public can see them.
Also, as mentioned before, YouTube and MySpace are excellent ways to promote yourself. Want a quick ticket to fame? Video yourself doing something abysmally stupid like beating someone up in front of the police station or trying to steal from the free sample lady at the grocery store and post it to the Internet.
Rejecting Scientology is also a great way to gain public attention. TV actor Jason Beghe recently made headlines when he described the religion, of which he was a member for 12 years, as a fraud. Beghe’s rejection of Scientology has led many Americans to ask the deep spiritual questions, “Who is this TV actor Jason Beghe guy? Was he on 90210 or Melrose Place?” bringing him more public attention than he’s received in probably 15 years.
If you’re looking for a few seconds in the public eye, take a few pictures of yourself tossing a copy of Dianetics into a volcano and send it to your friends. If people ask the obvious, “But hey Bob, I thought you were a Unitarian, not a Scientologist,” calmly panic and hit them on the head with a mackerel. People will then believe you are a recovering Scientologist, because who else but a former Scientologist would carry a mackerel around.
Lawyers for the Church of Scientology can send their mackerels to .
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Reader Reactions
Posted by ( Mary McConnell ) on April 23, 2008 at 10:50 am
JasonBeghe23, I would not give that scientology run, anti-free speech blog the credit for anything but spreading hate and propaganda.
The Church’s mafiosa styled department called the Office of Special Affairs aka OSA is responsible for forcing Google (owner of YouTube ) to enforce it’s policy on who can have an account based upon past accounts, which was never enforced or an issue until CoS decided to push it. To Google, CoS is big advertising dollars. here is the scoop on what happened:
Latest on My YouTube Account
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.religion.scientology/msg/5c8c5bb14f557419
That blog, by the way, is pure evidence of how scientology tries to stop criticism of it’s activities. Kudos to Anonymous for all the things they do that are good.
Posted by ( JasonBeghe23 ) on April 22, 2008 at 8:16 pm
It was flagged off because the writers of http://www.anonymoushategroup.blogspot.com don’t like youtube.com being used for religious persecution.
You have been misled by “critics” who tell you their side, their version of the other side, and then ask you to make up your mind.
Anon’s are so silly.
Posted by ( Mary McConnell ) on April 22, 2008 at 10:49 am
Hey Mr. Cook, if you’d taken the time and actually done some research first before you wrote this, (including watching the full interview out yesterday) you would have found that Jason Beghe did not do this interview for the fame or fortune. He did it, as interviewer Mark Bunker says “ because it was the right thing to do.”
Jason Beghe may not be famous according to your standards but he’s well known and respected in the industry as well as within scientology circles. If you’d done a google search, you’d find that he’s is in the top 10% of actors who actually work in the industry on a regular basis. Please, do your homework next time. At this point, you’re right in there holding a mackerel yourself.
Posted by ( JasonBeghe23 ) on April 22, 2008 at 4:57 am
Lol!
Anonymous is recruiting celebrities like Sclilons used to!
How pathetic.
http://www.anonymoushategroup.blogspot.com
Posted by ( Anonymous SP ) on April 21, 2008 at 5:21 pm
Scientology is a dangerous brainwashing cult that destroys families and ruins lives. Jason Beghe is the first celebrity to publicly break from the cult in its half century of existence. To imply that he is trying to pull some kind of attention-seeking stunt is irresponsible at best.
In other news, an obscure Lynchburg, VA entertainment columnist wants everyone to get off his lawn.
Posted by ( anonanon ) on April 21, 2008 at 3:14 pm
Jason Beghe is not using YouTube or the internet to gain fame. He is very courageous in exposing the fallacies of the cult of Scientology, who have a well documented reputation of harrassing critics....why do you think his video got magically pulled from YouTube?