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The Heirs to the Glimmering World

By Courtney Enlow | Posted Under Celebrities Are Better than You | Comments (60)



demi.jpg

A few days back, yet another child star entered rehab. Yet another kid who’s spent her life in the limelight has had to receive treatment for hurting herself and brutalizing her young body. Yet another child whose innocence and hope has been traded for a few million dollars and a lot of fame.

So, at what point does child stardom become tantamount to child abuse?

For all intents and purposes, making the decision to turn your child into a child actor is roulette. Maybe you’ll win, but more likely, than not, you’ll lose, and even the winners probably have a lot of loss behind them. Demi Lovato is just the latest; she won’t be the last.

The ones who ended up okay almost all have something in common: they left. People like Thora Birch, Gabby Hoffman and Josh Saviano are all but out of the spotlight. People like Danica McKellar, Jodie Foster, Brooke Shields and Natalie Portman all took the time for a university education. People like Peter Billingsly and Ron Howard all left the front of the camera for the back. People like Jason Bateman and Drew Barrymore are great now, but only after years of struggle.

Neil Patrick Harris is one of the few to work consistently and actually seem to be decent human being with no known history of drug abuse or crime. He’s basically a freak. But the thing he shares with those mentioned above and the other formerly famous kids is the lack of excessive paparazzi. Even today, none of those who are still in the game are constantly in our faces. Do we ever hear about what Natalie Portman is up to outside of the film world? No, because she’s a famous actress, not merely a celebrity, and that is the peril of those who go bad.

Film work dries up, or maybe being famous just seems more appealing than actually working, so these kids who grew up too fast end up with too much time on their hands. Boredom and never hearing “no” never ends well.

Who would have thought that, relatively speaking, Jamie Lynn Spears’s teen pregnancy may have been the best thing that could have happened to her? They can’t pimp her anymore. She finally has a chance to be normal. Her sister didn’t have that chance. I’m one of the few people who believe that drugs and alcohol weren’t Britney’s problem; that poor girl has way bigger demons in her, and that seems to be a common thread in these kids.

Questionable upbringings and parents with undeniable motives, plus some form of psychiatric disease or illness, and these children—who will now always be children, at least mentally, because they completely stopped developing—are lost forever. Britney Spears is an obviously sick girl, but now she has all these people who rely on her for income, so they they take the sick girl, clean her up, throw her out on stage and rake in their millions. There is a special place in hell for those who have done this to her and those like her. Her story is tragic and instead of seeing it, we make jokes about her bad clothes and ratty hair.

For every NPH, there’s twenty Danny Bonaduces and Lindsay Lohans. The stars are to blame, the parents are to blame, Disney is to blame, the studios are to blame, and, like it or not, so are we. And sadly, I don’t know what to do about it. But until someone figures it out, we’ll be watching sweet kids crash and burn by 18 for years to come.









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Comments

So you want us to...leave Britney alone?

Sorry. Somebody had to say it.

Posted by: meh at November 4, 2010 2:40 PM

Ah, Courtney, I love you on your high horse.

Posted by: rob at November 4, 2010 2:41 PM

My gut reaction to this was, "Well, the society we live in now has a much bigger infatuation with celebrities than in years past -- and what with the majesty of the internet, it's no problem at all to become overexposed -- and boy those papparazzi are all over the place and yadda yadda yadda, blah blah blah..."

But that's bullshit. These kids are basically being sold by their parents. They're being sold for financial security under the guise of creating a "better life" for their children.

And now I can't stop thinking about Citizen Kane.

Posted by: superasente at November 4, 2010 2:41 PM

You know if no-one plonked their kids down in front of the Disney channel as a form of parenting or bought their kids all the associated marketing crap, there would be no sausage factory to run these kids through.

Posted by: PaddyDog at November 4, 2010 2:44 PM

Niel Patrick Harris is amazing for what he's overcome. Graduating at med school at such a young age should have devastated his psyche.

Seriously though, what do you mean NPH didn't disappear? I didn't hear anything about him from the end of Doogie until Harold and Kumar.

Posted by: Paultera at November 4, 2010 2:47 PM

Paultera, you are obviously overlooking Starship Troopers. Still his penultimate role if you ask me.
(I kid, I kid.)

Posted by: JenVegas at November 4, 2010 2:50 PM

I've still never seen Starship Troopers.

*cowers*

Please don't hit me!

Posted by: Paultera at November 4, 2010 2:54 PM

NPH went back to the woodshed and spent a few years in the theater for his trick. That will bring your ego down about as quick as it will elevate your acting range.

Posted by: Ian at November 4, 2010 2:58 PM

There is a need for decent child actors in TV and film. It seems to me that the kids that turn superfreak are the ones that are churned out by the Disney machine. Have you ever watched any of the shows on the Disney channel?! You'd have to be ridiculously shallow with the attention span of a ferret on a double espresso to be able to tolerate 5 mins of it. Crap. Crappity Crap. Crap.

I've taken my daughters to several Demi/Miley/Jonas Bros concerts and the kids are quite talented. I've never let my kids watch any Disney TV.

Hollywood parents suck. Just look at Miley's mom. She's probably blowing Brett Michael's right now.

Posted by: Skeetikus at November 4, 2010 3:01 PM

Dizzy: Rico, I'm dying.
Rico: You'll be fine, Dizzy.
Dizzy: But it's okay, because I got to have you.
[coughs up blood]
[dies]

Posted by: superasente at November 4, 2010 3:01 PM

Modern society's celebrities are the old Greek heroes.

And just as the ancient Greeks loved to hear of Heracles' wrath or Aphrodite's infidelity, we're all about Mel Gibson and Kim Kardashian.

Humans don't change.

Posted by: Fredo at November 4, 2010 3:04 PM

Still his penultimate role if you ask me.

NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO! YOU'VE HIT UPON ONE OF MY PET PEEVES! AND NOW I HAVE TO POST AND LOOK LIKE A PRIG.

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/penultimate

HAD TO. HAD. TO.

Posted by: coveredinbees at November 4, 2010 3:04 PM

Children are not born with a desire towards fame and celebrity. They are shoved that way by parents, who see young, cute Meal Ticket as the way towards fame and fortune for themselves.

Posted by: Fredo at November 4, 2010 3:08 PM

it really is sad but they can get better just look at Dickie Roberts

Posted by: BigTodd at November 4, 2010 3:09 PM

Heracles' wrath

Did you mean Hera's? Or? What did Heracles have to be wrathy about? "This Nemean lion pelt simply does NOT go with my sandals."

I kid. . .I kid. . .Hera made him crazy and he murdered his kids and then had to do a bunch of CHORES. I'd be wrathy too.

Posted by: coveredinbees at November 4, 2010 3:13 PM

Heracles' wrath

Did you mean Hera's? Or? What did Heracles have to be wrathy about? "This Nemean lion pelt simply does NOT go with my sandals."

Heracles was notorious for his anger. He killed his music tutor with a lyre. He murdered a potential father-in-law and his sons because they refused to give him his daughter's hand in marriage after he beat them in an archery contest.

Posted by: Fredo at November 4, 2010 3:26 PM

I admire the "normal" young actors. NPH, Elijah Wood, all of the Harry Potter alumni.

What they seem to have in common is parents who aren't trying to ride their children's coattails to fame and fortune.

Posted by: BWeaves at November 4, 2010 3:34 PM

coveredinbees apparently is done with our bullshit, folks. And I agree. Don't come in here trying to impress people with big words you don't understand and convoluted mythological metaphors or you will get WRECKED!!!

Now get out of here or I shall taunt you a second time!

Posted by: Kballs at November 4, 2010 3:35 PM

coveredinbees - To borrow (steal) a line from GOW3:

"You get to become god of war, and I get sent to look for an APPLE!" - Hercules, to Kratos

Posted by: L4NkYb at November 4, 2010 3:36 PM

Have you ever watched any of the shows on the Disney channel?! You'd have to be ridiculously shallow with the attention span of a ferret on a double espresso to be able to tolerate 5 mins of it. Crap. Crappity Crap. Crap.

Very true except for Phineas and Ferb. I love that silly cartoon for some reason. Maybe because I loved Rocko's Modern Life. I don't think any children are harmed in the filming of Phineas and Ferb though, I'm pretty sure there is blurb before each episode declaring that fact.

Posted by: cfar1 at November 4, 2010 3:37 PM

I agree it's not just a child who happens to act in a film or TV show, but the industry that they inevitably create around them these days. Demi might have been cute in a film or a TV show, acting. But not enough, she has to sing, put out a CD, tour, act in several other crossover titles with other Disney stars and such.

I see it all the time on Disney and Nick. Not enough that Miranda Cosgrove was a reasonably cute and funny kid star. She has albums, music videos, products. She's a friggin industry. They all are expected to do that. That's a lot for a tween kid.

Posted by: steve at November 4, 2010 3:39 PM

Heracles was notorious for his anger. He killed his music tutor with a lyre. He murdered a potential father-in-law and his sons because they refused to give him his daughter's hand in marriage after he beat them in an archery contest.

And he called Athena "sugartits" and told her to blow him. It was cool tough, being Greek and all.

And then Kratos decapitated him like *WHOOOOMP*

....
....
....
..what?

Posted by: Vermillion at November 4, 2010 3:42 PM

As insane as she is, Tyra Banks seems to've done pretty well for herself, largely because she had a strong and loving mom behind her the entire way keeping her focused and away, as much as possible, from the dark side of model life. Her mom was involved in her work in a big way and seems to've kept her from making a lot of the mistakes that young women in the industry succumb to. She IS crazy, but bitch has her own talk show and TV show and name recognition and a very respectable former modeling career and 80 million other projects, and aside from that fiasco with her eating/weight gain a while ago, she's mostly out of the gladiatorial arena of celebrity culture.

Posted by: Nat Kittyface at November 4, 2010 3:44 PM

"Have you ever watched any of the shows on the Disney channel?! You'd have to be ridiculously shallow with the attention span of a ferret on a double espresso to be able to tolerate 5 mins of it."

Or in other words: the average American tween

Posted by: PaddyDog at November 4, 2010 3:45 PM

I'm just running some rivers through these here Augeas stables.

But, to be honest, I was super kidding re: Fredo's comment. I just like slinging mythology. I think it's an apt comparison. I was just thinking the other day what shite people Zeus and Hera were. How many nymphs and nubile Greek maidens suffered/were transmogrified due to their lust/wrath, and how much I LOVE reading about them anyway.

Posted by: coveredinbees at November 4, 2010 3:47 PM

*Augean. Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiigh.

Posted by: coveredinbees at November 4, 2010 3:48 PM

Britney Spears was just your average kid, not the sharpest tool in the shed but because she had above average looks and a very small talent for singing, her parents shoved her into the front door of the Disney Fantasy Factory. Disney turned her into a marketable commodity and then, when the newness had worn off, shoved her out the exit. Her childhood was stolen by greedy parents, greedy agents and a greedy public, none of whom wanted her to grow up. She gladly obliged, knowing no better and now that fame and a great deal of fortune has passed her by, we snicker at the wreckage of her life as it plays out on the tabloid pages.
Yeah, I feel sorry for her and for all of the kids who, not knowing any better (and not having the smarts to do anything about it) are ground up and spit out by the entertainment machine.
The common denominator for all child stars who make a successful transition to adult fame or personal success? Intelligence. Sadly, too many are not terribly bright and never question any decisions made by parents and agents until it is far too late.

Posted by: Spender at November 4, 2010 3:49 PM

Back in the day I played this computer game Return Of Heracles, and it rocked. You had all these different tasks, and you were able to switch off between different heroes to accomplish them. In combat, when you delivered a particularly devastating blow, the game would inform you that you "walloped" (or some other entertaining synonym - they mixed it up) your opponent, and the tune played to accompany hits would be extended to include a ridiculous number of trills.

I was using Achilles, and some necromancer (maybe Circe did it) turned Patroclus into a dog. Patroclus stayed loyal, though, and he kept fighting as a dog throughout the rest of the game, although his combat abilities were severely diminished.

I miss it.

What an odd tangent. Sorry about that.

Nice column as always, Courtney.

Posted by: DarthCorleone at November 4, 2010 3:49 PM

Parents are to blame for all of their children's problems, aren't they? Teens and young adults run from brothel to club to drug dealer & it's their parental examples that have driven them to each place, right? They have no compulsion to stop or change or avoid damaging behavior because Mommy isn't holding their hand?

I'm being sarcastic & showing off my old fart hat a bit here, but it seems like {air quotes}in the past, teens & young adults were expected to be responsible for their actions to a certain point. Yeah - having shitty parents sucks, as most of us can relate, but we can't shrug off childrens behavior soley on their parents or society. Free will is present in most humans & should be accounted for.

Posted by: IneptFake at November 4, 2010 3:52 PM

Are there really more child stars turned fuck-ups than child stars turned basically stable? Someone needs to run actual statistics on this rather than spouting a few examples. Because it seems to me that there are just as many Danica McKellar's and Natalie Portman's as there are Lindsay Lohan's. We just forget about the stars who drop out of the limelight and we ignore the ones who aren't train wrecks.

For the ones that do go nuts, why do we blame fame for it? I'm not saying fame doesn't mess you up but so does middle class suburban high school. So does everything. Everyone has a ton of examples of people in their lives who are complete train wrecks and they don't have fame as an excuse. Even regular people have shitty parents, life traumas and mental illness to mess them up. Those things aren't just reserved for famous folk.

Posted by: Nique at November 4, 2010 4:00 PM

She's a friggin industry. They all are expected to do that. That's a lot for a tween kid.

EXACTLY. That is the trigger right there. It isn't simply the acting/singing/dancing/sewing/spelunking itself, it is that these kids have to do them ALL. And they have to be blockbuster successes at every one of them as well.

And one thing people haven't pointed out yet: there is a lot more pressure on girls being multi-talented machines than boys.

While the few boys that achieve that level of fame do have the same amount of trouble, it is still diminished by how many girls are propped up and used in such a manner. Even in the several names mentioned in the article and comments of child stars, how many are female?

Posted by: Vermillion at November 4, 2010 4:03 PM

How many nymphs and nubile Greek maidens suffered/were transmogrified due to their lust/wrath, and how much I LOVE reading about them anyway

Replace nubile Greek maidens with Olivia Munn and you get last week's big Justin Timberlake debacle.

Posted by: Fredo at November 4, 2010 4:10 PM

Yeah, ineptfake, at a certain point they have to be responsible - this was the difference between Drew Barrymore, who sobered up and cut her toxic mother out of her life, and Lindsey Lohan. But no child gets herself to Hollywood on her own, sets up meetings, and signs contracts - in fact, when you're under 18 you can't legally be bound by a contract; it's the parents who agree and push every step of the way.

My stepdaughter is breathtakingly beautiful, and when she was 6 and 7 years old, we were stopped several times (between 5 and 10 times, I'd say) by agents who wanted her to come in for an audition, or to model. I always acted flattered, and thanked them, but gave them no contact information and never called them back. One day my daughter asked me, "what if I *want* to model?" and I replied that she could always pursue that when she's older. "Besides," I said, "do you really want to have a job right now?" (The answer was a resounding NO - because she hadn't thought of it as a JOB before that.)

Who thinks it's a good idea to give ten, eleven, fourteen year old kids not only a JOB, but a 24-hour-a-day job, in which they will be subjected to constant scrutiny of the way they look, the way they dress, and every choice they make? I just don't understand people.

Posted by: Edith at November 4, 2010 4:12 PM

She's 18 now. Once you turn 16 you can pretty much call your own shots. Don't give me this crap about her being a kid and she was forced into all this.

Boo freaking hoo. "Waaaa. .....I have to many millions in the bank.......waaaaaaaa.........I have to go on tour.......waaaaaaaaaa. I got dumped by a Jonas Bro....waaaaaaa.

I'll gladly switch places with her. I can be a depressed person with money and she can be a broke ass dude with nothing on the horizon.

Posted by: junierizzle at November 4, 2010 4:16 PM

*Augean. Siiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiigh.

Kinda funny how the emotion you expressed via those two separate phrases would have come across just as easily if you had typed it as a single action:

*Augean sigh*

Posted by: Rykker at November 4, 2010 4:18 PM

i agree with IneptFake about young stars taking some personal responsibility for themselves, but only to a certain extent. i think that having strong parents have a lot to do with how these kids turn out. if you look at emma watson, her parents made her take personal finance classes and put her on a strict allowance. compare that with lindsay lohan, whose mother used her teenage daughter to get into clubs. i think there's a big difference there. a lot of kids that young just aren't strong enough to pull themselves out of that kind of atmostphere on their own. with everyone constantly telling them how special they are, and no one really telling them or teaching them how to take personal responsibility, i imagine it can be hard to break out of that.

on the other hand, lindsay is now in her mid 20s and at some point i think you just have to know better, regardless of your upbringing. i think right now she just doesn't want to.

Posted by: michkabibbles at November 4, 2010 4:21 PM

Priceles!!
""You get to become god of war, and I get sent to look for an APPLE!" - Hercules, to Kratos"

I love the trophy you get for killing him too...Sibling Rivalry!

I want to go home and play GoWIII now.

Posted by: Skeetikus at November 4, 2010 4:24 PM

I'm not sure if Britney's parents PUSHED her into that career, but allowed her to go as far as she (and business managers) wanted. From all I read (past tense), I think her dad, for example, would have been fine had she just grown up normal and never got into showbiz.

Posted by: Pat C at November 4, 2010 4:41 PM

Also, it seems that Justin Timberlake seems to be doing OK with his life.

Posted by: Pat C at November 4, 2010 4:43 PM

Edith, that is an example of fine parenting right there. High five! I believe instead of responding politely to these pimps *ahem* agents I would have kneed them square in the nards.

Posted by: janetfaust at November 4, 2010 4:46 PM

As others have said, I find the occurrences of fallen child stars as rare as those who move on to become adult stars(the JGLs, Goslings, and dare I say Timberlake). Most seem to be pulled from, or leave, the business to move back into the 'average'.

What I do find slightly off it's not a burn out and fade away, but rather a complete and utter implosion for some. I like to think what Nique says is true but... It seems like it's something specific to the Western fame machine.

Take for instance South Korean of Japanese idol factories. What's rare is that it's about 50-50 with gender. They are excruciatingly hard on females, but males are just as bad. These kids are just BRUTALIZED. They have the same type of rigid lifestyle, but on top of all that they are often pulled from their homes and family, forced to live in "dorms", become "trainees" for years, make absolute beans for pay when they finally debut, and then are somehow shunned into silence about it all. They also have to go the distance of the total entertainer "dance, sing, be cute, be approachable, tv shows, variety shows, appearances, movies, etc." Anything and everything they touch belongs to their management companies as well. Normally the worst thing these kids end up doing is driving into parked cars, stealing metal coils, drinking under-aged, or *gasp* decide to claim that marijuana isn't that bad. If anyone lives an extremely lonely and fucked up existence it's these kids.

And yes you can get drugs in East Asia. The mob machines run a pretty tight ship. If you know where you're going...then it's completely possible, especially with money. There are just as many shitty parents. And just as many psychological problems.

Posted by: Ren at November 4, 2010 4:50 PM

Nique said:
"Are there really more child stars turned fuck-ups than child stars turned basically stable? Someone needs to run actual statistics on this rather than spouting a few examples"

...and I also have to wonder about comparing these "starlets" to middle-class & above regular old screwups. Lots and lots of kids are doing drugs, stealing cars, getting pregnant, cutting themselves, dealing poorly sexuality or perceived sexuality, being diagnosed with eating disorders.....

Posted by: IneptFake at November 4, 2010 4:52 PM

Body abuse and cutting of onself are serious life issues; issues that most kids are faced with in their middle school and high school years. Demi Lavato and other childhood stars (ESPECIALLY DISNEY CHANNEL STARS) are meant to be idols and role models for young girls. Girls as young as 6 years old watch Demi's shows on Disney. Do you guys think that parents should allow their children to watch those TV shows if the girls that they idolize are becoming the latest patient at the local rehab center?

Posted by: Hannah at November 4, 2010 5:00 PM

This is an example of just how brutal the tv industry has become. Celebrities used to be praised for their individual talent and skills, and now the tv industry feels the need to manipulate these stars and create versions of them in which they think will be more successful. Hollywood is a different place than it used to be. The emergence of reality stars is a huge reason for this don't you think? The difference about reality stars in comparison to actual deserving Hollywood stars, is the fact that they are willing to be manipulated. Take Heidi Montag for instance...She was a normal and likeable girl living in LA four years ago, but it is because of the media that has lead her to engage in plastic surgeries and in addition has led her to lose all of her friends. The media is corrupting our culture and forcing media to take a turn for the worse!!!

Posted by: Katie at November 4, 2010 5:03 PM

PaddyDog:

To be fair, the Tiger Beat crowd that chewed up and spit out Michael Jackson and Donny Osmond (among others) certainly pre-dates the more heavily commercialized "tween" phenomenon...

Posted by: Jerry at November 4, 2010 5:16 PM

But Jerry, all that means is that we didn't have the name "tween" for them then. But they were still shallow little snotrags.

Posted by: PaddyDog at November 4, 2010 5:24 PM

I understand those who say these "teen" stars should at some point become responsible for their own lives. But at the same time, if you've grown up surrounded by people who are using your talent and your fame for their own gains, (the elder Lohans, for example) how is a kid supposed to figure out what "being responsible" even means? I always wish that Drew Barrymore or Jodie Foster would take Lindsay aside and explain to her exactly how to get away from vampiric parents and become a productive, successful member of society. Some of these tweens don't know how to behave like normal adults because no one ever showed them how. Compare stories of Corey Feldman's raising to that of NPH and then explain to me how Feldman ever even had a chance. I'm sure this goes on out in "real life land" too, it's just that it's not splashed across the front page of people when some random suburban teenager stumbles out of a bar and drives into a tree.

Posted by: Siege at November 4, 2010 5:30 PM

"...so are we".

No, no, and (fuck) NO.

Aside from absurdly generalizing, this is the wrong crowd to direct the "it's everyone's fault" rationalization toward.

Posted by: Recondite at November 4, 2010 5:33 PM

I love whoever said they enjoyed Phineas & Ferb, because I was babysitting and it came on the television right after High School Musical ended. It was like rain ended, the clouds, parted, and the sun shone through brightly.

Seriously, that platypus narrative is great -- where he's a secret agent.

Also, Disney Channel brainwashes kids. Seriously, whenever I babysit, all we do is watch it. The kids seriously don't have to use their imagination at all.

Seriously? Seriously. Seriously, seriously.

Posted by: shanmarie at November 4, 2010 6:00 PM

Screw the odds. I'm still pissed at my parents from stopping me for going for professional theater work when I was a child. They were afraid they would be seen as overbearing stage parents when in reality they were stopping their child from pursuing the one thing that made him happy for 15 years: performing. I was going for theater, not film/TV, so the "older people will hurt you argument" only applies if you think homosexuality is some kind of learned behavior. I don't know when (or if) I can forgive them from stopping me from going beyond my town for stage-work until I graduated high school.

But forcing me to audition for every instrumental/vocal ensemble in the state was acceptable. Yeah. That's not a dangerous path. Bitches will cut you to be first chair. I should know: I busted my fair share of reeds and loosened more than a few screws during auditions to move on up in the world.

Hollywood? Oh, that's evil. Run away before they eat your soul.

Posted by: Robert at November 4, 2010 6:31 PM

And sometimes they eat ice cream nonstop for years and gain 3,000 pounds like ...

Well, actually, Lisa Whelchel looks pretty good.

Posted by: , at November 4, 2010 7:08 PM

Is it wrong of me to think that all of the Toddlers and Tiaras children are nothing more than future episodes of Intervention?

All of our guidance counselors lied to us. We have been told that if we work hard, try our best, and think positively, we will end up happy and living well.

Then we see people like Kendra, of Girl Next Door "fame" become more and more wealthy. That stupid, and I mean really truly STUPID, bitch is probably worth more than I will make in my lifetime, and I have a Masters degree. I went to school, she got naked with a dessicated old man.

Parents push their children relentlessly to compete in whatever can be imagined...remember Pogs? Always competing to possibly be that one in a million shot of being rich and famous, and with not a thought of how warped that is.

Everything becomes a competition with some parents...how quickly their special snowflake learned to walk, talk or become housebroken. I don't even want to know some parents "motivate" their little starlings. Whatever happened to just wanting your children to be loved and happy? Now all the teen and tween shows focus on is product placement. Get the buck in or get the fuck out.

I never thought I would be the PBS parent, but the more I see of TV geared for children the scarier it all is!

Posted by: The Woo at November 4, 2010 7:10 PM

Just as there will never be a shortage of women willing to take their clothes off for money, no matter how enlightened we are, there will never be a shortage of parents willing to shove their children in front of a camera for ... something.

But YOU LEAVE KENDRA ALONE, WOO! Season premiere Sunday and I haven't had a good sleep in monthzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

Posted by: , at November 4, 2010 7:22 PM

I'm calling a case of 'mild bullshit' on the idea that NO kid has the desire or the ability to scope for themselves a career in the public eye, performing. You've never done time in casting rooms if you truly believe that, because among the bored, the disengaged, the clueless, and the ones ducking the frantic-in-times-of-calm parents...there are the ones with the cold hard glitter and determination in their eyes, and they are a force beholden unto none.

I think there is a phase where 'success' becomes an evil animus that takes hold of everyone involved - you cannot say that if you thought you were just possibly holding the winning grand prize lotto ticket in your hand that you would not feel your heart rate rise...you would, and the taste of anticipation of fame and monetary gain, like the french say about affairs, is the 'best part' (or so we are led to believe).

If you ever said you'd 'give anything' to achieve a goal, you can see how the tables can turn on regular folk when the chance becomes attainable.

But, that does not forgive or excuse anything that happens. You know when you're doing wrong by your kid/by yourself. And anyways - some of the more unstable psyches are the ones that excel at the job. Go figure, if there's a downside.

Poor kid, and I hope she gets out of it stronger.

Posted by: replica at November 4, 2010 7:30 PM

One guesses that parents who would name their kid after Demi Moore had a career in TV/film in mind from the moment of conception.

Posted by: , at November 4, 2010 7:41 PM

They had a casting call for the Broadway musical Annie when I was little, and when I begged my mom to let me audition she glanced at me over the steaming spaghetti pot and said "Annie doesn't wear glasses".
I was devastated.
I got my revenge as a teenager by buying contacts and starting a punkrock band.
And that's right, SJP stole my life.

Posted by: cinekat at November 5, 2010 5:10 AM

I think demi is an amazing star.she is my role model .she shold just take a brake from all of this .and joe jonas made a big mistake when he dumped her she is a really nice person but he is to busy kissing every single girl on disney so he would not know when he gets a awsome girl but i hope for demi to get better soon and get on with her carrer.we love u DEMI!!!!!!!!!!!you r asome

Posted by: womens shoes at November 5, 2010 9:20 AM

Is it wrong of me to think that all of the Toddlers and Tiaras children are nothing more than future episodes of Intervention?

Are you asking about morality or accuracy? I would assert that you are likely correct in your thought, however faithless it may be.

Posted by: Patty O'Green at November 5, 2010 10:07 AM

Denis Leary made some solid points on this subject in his book, "Why We Suck." Chapter 7 ("Famous Dead Kids") and Chapter 8 ("Nuns, Tits, Booze, and My Mom") are a really good read, for those who have not taken a gander.

Hey, I'm a fan.

Posted by: Jana Jerusalem at November 5, 2010 8:29 PM

this is fucked up

Posted by: khdhaoiyhukjg at January 28, 2011 10:40 AM