What the devil is going on here?!

When you wish upon a star…

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…makes no difference where you are…because wishing on stars is a wonderful pastime and something I hope I will always do but you can’t rely on stars to get you where you want to go.

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about my goals and quest of achieving celebrity but also how I’ve not really addressed publicly why I have them. These ideas have been weighing on my mind and I need to write them down. I don’t care about being famous for the sake of fame. That’s not what I’m ultimately pursuing. I’m not going to pretend I’m some sort fantastically humble person who wouldn’t be filled with satisfaction from thousands of people knowing my name. And I can’t deny that recognition is something I want. But I’ve considered the other side of that scenario and it’s rather ugly. Celebrity means fighting for your privacy and, in all likelihood, not getting the personal life that you want. Normalcy becomes the unobtainable. It means compromising yourself for your art; not in a moral way, though that’s possible, but in that you become a slave to opportunity.

However a personal life and normalcy is something I’ve become willing to sacrifice. Something I’ve already begun to sacrifice. The question one asks is, “dreams or this?” Dreams or a relationship? Dreams or staying comfortable? The answer in my mind has become “dreams”.

Celebrity means something else, though: success. This is why I seek it. Fame means I can survive off my art. Fame means at least the illusion of security in an industry that has very little to hold on to. I by no means need an Oscar or a Grammy - though my nature is to try for the best even if I don’t have to so I’d probably end up pursuing critical acclaim. If I can sing or act or dance or write for living I will have already achieved a life I will never regret for a single fraction of a moment.

You may often see me say “when I’m famous” and talk as if it is certainty. This is not overconfidence but blind faith and desperate affirmation. I talk this way because I am trying to convince the future that this is what it will become when it grows up. I am well acquainted with reality and overconfidence isn’t one of things I posses. I have confidence in myself and I am keenly aware of my own abilities but I have no confidence in the future. The future is sly and takes no pleasure in what’s easy.

I find my supporters have far greater confidence in me. I am told, with surprising regularity, that I am going to be a star. I almost feel like those flattering sentiments mock me. Like everyone knows some truth that is hidden only from me. It can be bizarrely frustrating because I crave their surety. The future obscuring simplicity once again.
Their confidence surrounds me with expectations I never considered I’d face. Other people are a part of my journey. Other people expect things of me now. It is both a blessing and a curse: it encourages me and gives me more reasons to try harder, but it also makes the prospect of failure more terrifying than that already terrifying prospect is. It is a contradiction because it makes trying all the harder. Those who don’t fly can’t fall but those who don’t fly won’t fly at all.

I am terrified of a normal life.

When I think of what I’d do with fame - and specifically the monetary benefits - I always come to the conclusion that I am obligated to help people. I’d love to help friends, especially friends who support me now, so, several Tumblr friends as well as real-life friends. I have a potent desire to help realise the dreams of those close to me. I suppose I have a mental list of people who I would want to invest money and time in - a lot of money and time - in the event that I could. Even just things like paying for an apartment for someone to live in their dream city until they establish themselves. What’s the use of hoarding a fortune - if you’re lucky enough to earn it - when you can help those you love and live a little more modestly. It’s quite a gross amount of money for someone to earn, really. It is, in my opinion, responsible for the corruption of entertainment as an art form, or at least the quality of what is produced, and an influx of dispassionate “performers” clogging opportunities by looking to strike it rich through something they perceive as easy and glamorous.

But beyond friendship I want to help people. Money is one thing but exposure is something altogether more powerful and essential to change at a societal level. Through social media the power of words has been augmented to the point where it’s almost as if celebrities have their own social armies. At the end of the day, the exposure of fame is a commodity which is often disregarded by those who have it, or abused, but rarely used wisely. It is a commodity that, for someone like myself, has incredible value. I would take exposure over gold any day of the week.

If being famous is your main motivation then you don’t care enough about what it is that you do.

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Tweet

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Reblogged 1 year ago from perfectbucketlist

My life.

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People in America:

Oh my goodness I just got to go see some famous people that you love LIVE and I TOUCHED them and SPOKE to them and then we had SNACKS together and wove DAISY chains!

Me:

I. HATE. You.

If you weren’t aware…

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haydenrodgers:

Fame is literally one of the most invaluable commodities in the manufacturing of success. Even in the smallest amounts it turns an unnoticed experiment into a successful venture. Think of it, in a very low-scale situation, in terms of getting notes on a Tumblr post. You might have just written something really worthwhile but, unless you know the right people or have enough followers, you won’t get the exposure you’re looking for. The exception is the rare creations that are engaging to enough people to snowball into something big. Fame is a resource I’d like to get my hands on.

An old post of mine I just came across. Still 100% true.

Reblogged 1 year ago from haydenrodgers

It’s official. There are no jobs left in the entire world. #CanIbefamousnow?

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I don’t understand what people’s problem is with the term ‘Tumblr famous’.

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I mean, it’s a compliment… What’s so offensive about it? Someone who is very well known amongst a community is, by definition, ‘famous’. That’s actually completely accurate. The term ‘Tumblr famous’ is an accurate description.

One of my biggest inspirations to be successful is to make tumblr proud.

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dumbledorable:

I mean, yeah, I want my family to be proud and I want to be proud of myself,

But I can’t wait to have my first interview and talk about the amazing people on tumblr who made me the person I am today.

I love all of you.

This so much! I’m 90% sure that 80% of all nice things said about me are from people on Tumblr and I want to succeed partially because you believe in me. I often think to myself “when I’m famous I want to take the following people with me.” I have a list.

Reblogged 1 year ago from acciodean

I’ve decided that when I’m famous I’d like my fans to be called Rodgernauts.

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Like astronauts!

I was trying to imagine what name people would come up with and that was the best thing I could think of. I like it though - anything to do with astronauts is cool.

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Short but sweet CHRIS COLFER audio clip from Sept. 2009

Whenever I hear things like this I hope to God I can say the same thing some day.

Reblogged 2 years ago from approachingnormal

Random Facts About Me

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009. Since getting Tumblr and Twitter I can literally only spend about 5 minutes at a time on Facebook before I have to get off out of shear boredom.

Not to mention that people are nicer and more interesting on Twitter and Tumblr and aren’t afraid to care about things and actually genuinely support one another. I say it time and time again (and it is obviously important to me): with the exception of my close friends, the vast majority of Facebook ‘friends’ I have are pretty douchey and when I’m famous I’m unfriending them all.

A Wicked Coincidence

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So, I just got home and I logged on to Tumblr. As I scroll through my dash I spy a wicked graphic. I expand it, read the nice quote and then realise that is isn’t Kristen Chenoweth and Idina Menzel but a pair of knock-off impostors from a later run of the show. I can’t STAND seeing anyone but Kristen and Idina in wicked photos. I mean, yes, I watched it live in Melbourne with different people and loved them BUT I have a very strong affinity for the original cast.

Then I go check my Twitter and what do I see but a tweet by Idina Menzel to a random saying, “sometimes we read these things. Ouch.”

So I stalked the conversation to see what the cause of such a comment is and find some fool wrote this: “@KChenoweth is the perfect Galinda. Can’t say the same for @idinamezel.”

Naturally I was incensed. Firstly, people need to wake up smell some anti-stupid fumes. Just because they’re famous, doesn’t mean they aren’t real humans. Would you @reply something like that to any other person? Blatantly notifying them of your harsh criticism? Secondly, we already know how I feel about the original duo - even more so for Idina. Of course I then proceeded to tweet her consolingly.

“@idinamenzel People don’t understand celebrities are generally normal people with feelings. Oh, and you’re forever the best Elphaba.”

“@idinamenzel But seriously. I was JUST looking at an Elphaba photo which wasn’t you and said, ‘eugh, I don’t want to see anyone but Idina.’”

If you weren’t aware…

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Fame is literally one of the most invaluable commodities in the manufacturing of success. Even in the smallest amounts it turns an unnoticed experiment into a successful venture. Think of it, in a very low-scale situation, in terms of getting notes on a Tumblr post. You might have just written something really worthwhile but, unless you know the right people or have enough followers, you won’t get the exposure you’re looking for. The exception is the rare creations that are engaging to enough people to snowball into something big. Fame is a resource I’d like to get my hands on.

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"It’s sad now that people can be famous for doing absolutely nothing and have an audience that embraces it."

Harry Shum Jr (PREACH!)

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Interesting photos one sees during a Darren Criss spam riot…

He so famous!

Reblogged 2 years ago from helevingnes
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