Showing posts with label Princess Diana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Princess Diana. Show all posts

Saturday, December 31, 2016

Famous People Who Died at 36



As I celebrate another year on this planet, I constantly find myself in some sort of mental competition with those I have outlived. Not by year, but by age. Now, as a 37-year-old, I look back at those who passed away at age 36...and who I have beaten in the game of life (no disrespect intended).

1. Marilyn Monroe - In August of 1962, this icon passed away from a drug overdose. Maybe because of the fact that we never got to see her age, this might be the reason people still see her a sexual icon. The image of her standing on the grate with her white dress being blown upward is perhaps one of the most famous in Hollywood history. Her death also sparked the interest of conspiracy lovers everywhere.

2. Bob Marley - The most famous reggae artist of all-time, Bob Marley died at age 36 in 1991. A victim of a form of skin cancer, Marley also still lives on to this day through his music and the pictures that adorn every other dorm room in America.

3. Doc Holliday - The legendary gunfighter could never be taken down, even when he participated in the Battle at OK Corral. A drinker, a gambler, a dentist, and an overall risk-taker, it was tuberculosis that ended up taking Holliday down in 1887.

4. Princess Diana - The most famous of the modern era British royalty, Princess Diana is perhaps the most famous victim of the paparazzi gone bad. After one of the most famous divorces in history, Diana went on to work for the benefit of many different charities. She could have done more good if she hadn't died in a car accident in 1997, which has also sparked many conspiracy theories.

5. Maximilien Robespierre - Beheaded at age 36 in 1794, Robespierre's role in France in the 18th century eventually led to the French Republic. He was against slavery, for controls in the price of food so the poor could afford to eat, and for a democratic republic. Against the death penalty, he still had a major role in what would end up leading to the beheading of Louis XVI.

 6. General George Armstrong Custer - Forever known for his blunder at the Battle of the Little Bighorn in 1876, Custer rose quickly through the ranks despite graduating last his class at West Point. He fought at Gettysburg and fought off a Confederate flank, and he was there General Lee's surrender to General Grant.

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Paparazzi Should be a Synonym for Stalker

 

In an age where everyone has a camera on them at all times due to smartphones, photographs of celebrities in their most private moments, flood the internet. Now many of these photographs are on personal social media sites like Facebook and were the result of personal encounters with a celebrity in a public place such as a restaurant, but on many for-profit websites, these photos come from photographers that would in any other scenario, be considered a stalker.

Known to the public as paparazzi, the word is an eponym, dating back to the 1960 film "La Dolce Vita". A character in the movie is named Paparazzo, is a news photographer and director Federico Fellini said in an interview with Time magazine, "Paparazzo...suggests to me a buzzing insect, hovering, darting, stinging." By the late 1960's, the term became a commonly used word for intrusive photographers.

It didn't take long for members of the paparazzi to become a thorn in the sides of celebrities.

The usually well mannered, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, ordered Secret Service agents to destroy the camera of photographer, Ron Galella. The incident in 1972, led to Galella suing Onassis for damage to his property. She counter-sued, claiming harassment of her and her family. In "Galella v. Onassis", Onassis was able to retain a restraining order against Galella.

Most famously, the intrusiveness of the paparazzi led the death of Princess Diana and film producer Dodi Fayed. Paparazzi became so aggressive in following the two, that after a high-speed car chase, their Mercedes-Benz crashed in the Pont de l'Alma road tunnel. Even with Princess Diana struggling for her last breaths, instead of providing her assistance at the scene, paparazzi raced for the best positions to take pictures of the very accident they caused. Police took several of the photographers into custody, but none of them were ever charged.

In some states and countries, paparazzi are restricted by laws and curfews. In California, a bill was passed in 2013, protecting children of celebrities from the harassment of paparazzi. Ironically, it did not include children who were celebrities themselves.

In other cases, organizations such as TMZ and the Globe, won the right to be considered a form of news media protected by the First Amendment. 

Making matters worse, various celebrities have learned how to manipulate the paparazzi to boost their own fame or even make more money. Public relations agencies working for some celebrities, actually will call up paparazzi and inform them of when and where their employers will be. In other situations, some celebrities have even sold the paparazzi photos of themselves or leads to stories such as weddings or pregnancy announcements. 

One example is when Kim Kardashian married NBA player Kris Humphries. Though the couple was only married for 72 days, Kardashian pulled in $15 million from the E! for the rights to film the wedding. Not long afterward, after she divorced Humphries, Kardashian married Kanye West and E! once again shelled out the big bucks ($21 million) for the rights to broadcast their wedding. Kardashian earned $36 million for just saying, "I do."

Just two days ago, singer Katy Perry, had a run-in with the paparazzi while trying to take a moment to relax from her Prismatic World Tour. While walking on the beach of Sydney, paparazzi became aggressive with her to the point, that the normally good-natured singer lashed out on them after they demanded that she strip down to her bikini and let them get some shots of her, in exchange for leaving her alone. She took to Twitter, tweeting pictures of some of the photographers and informing her fans that any pictures they see of her on the beach of Sydney, were taken against her will. A couple of the photographers actually had the audacity to lash out against the pictures Perry had taken, were taken against their will. 

It is one thing for a celebrity to have pictures taken of them at events such as a movie premier or at a public event of some sort, but at the same time celebrities should be given their privacy. It's one thing for a legitimate fan to possibly snag a selfie with a celebrity, but these moments usually don't result in profit opportunities for the fan. The majority of the time, these fans don't make the celebrity fear for their personal safety.

The paparazzi photographers on the other hand, are basically professional stalkers.