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THE CURSE OF CELEBRITY ANTONIO, PARIS PAY PRICE FOR OUR OBSESSION WITH FAME.


Byline: TONY CASTRO

Staff Writer

When a photo surfaced early this year showing Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa Antonio Ramon Villaraigosa (born Antonio (Tony) Ramon Villar, Jr. on January 23, 1953) is the mayor of Los Angeles, California. He is the first Latino mayor of Los Angeles since Cristobal Aguilar in 1872.  and a flirtatious flir·ta·tious  
adj.
1. Given to flirting.

2. Full of playful allure: a flirtatious glance.



flir·ta
 Paris Hilton Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism.  schmoozing at a post-Grammy party, their pairing was written off as Los Angeles' two biggest publicity hounds capitalizing on yet another photo op.

LAObserved.com, a media Web site that focuses on the city's movers and shakers, even ran a contest seeking the wittiest caption, then published a Letterman-like Top 10 list of what the mayor and the celebutante might be saying.

Few, however, gave any serious thought to the significance of the moment -- the obsession Villaraigosa and Hilton have about being in the public eye and society's corresponding fascination with the politician who has sold himself as the poster child for the American Dream American dream also American Dream
n.
An American ideal of a happy and successful life to which all may aspire:
 and the heiress who has lived it every day of her life.

Increasingly, in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  and across the country, celebrity has become the name of the game -- transcending entertainment to encompass politics and public policy, as well.

"Celebrity worship has become big business," says psychologist James Houran, an author and nationally recognized expert on celebrities and celebrity worship. "But from a social standpoint, it's not healthy.

"Are you looking at Paris Hilton just because she is attractive or because you want the intimate details of her life and want to be part of her inner circle?

"And socio-political leaders are just as popular as celebrities because of the political power they have. Celebrities have power, but not in the same way. Their decisions and actions influence us in very direct ways."

Last week, when the Hilton case erupted onto the national consciousness, it marked the crossover of two more local political figures into the realm of celebrity from which neither of the two -- Sheriff Lee Baca Leroy David Baca (b. May 27 1942, East Los Angeles, California) is the Sheriff of Los Angeles County, California.

After graduating from Benjamin Franklin High School (Los Angeles) in 1960, Baca worked his way through East Los Angeles College before starting with the L.A.
 and City Attorney Rocky Delgadillo Rockard John "Rocky" Delgadillo (born July 15 1960) is the current City Attorney of Los Angeles, California. Career
  • Teacher/ Coach, Los Angeles Unified School District, Franklin
  • Attorney, O'Melveny & Myers LLP
 -- shied away.

On national television, Baca -- a regular fixture at local celebrity events who has proposed involving the Sheriff's Department in no fewer than five reality TV shows -- defended his controversial decision to release the hotel heiress prematurely to her Hollywood Hills estate.

"The only special treatment is that because of her celebrity status, she got more time," said Baca, who maintains that Hilton got a stiffer-than-average sentence for violating probation for a reckless-driving conviction.

At the other end of the spectrum was Delgadillo, a rising star in Latino politics while Richard Riordan was mayor in the 1990s who has since been overshadowed by Villaraigosa's magnetism and showmanship.

Having lost his bid for state attorney general last year and due to be termed out of his current office in 2009, Delgadillo had been courting publicity when he happened upon Hilton's early release.

"This was a perfect opportunity for someone in Rocky Delgadillo's position to pounce on, to capitalize for his own celebrity," says Beverly Hills psychiatrist Carole Lieberman, a specialist on celebrity and fame.

Celebrity's value

Today, celebrity has also become a self-generating commodity that Lieberman says might account for the meteoric me·te·or·ic  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or formed by a meteoroid.

2. Of or relating to the earth's atmosphere.

3.
 rise of U.S. Sen. Barack Obama, the Illinois Democrat with only two years in Washington, to be considered a serious contender for his party's presidential nomination.

"People like Paris Hilton are famous for being famous, and there is a value being put on just how famous you can be," she said. "It doesn't have to be for any accomplishment except for getting the cameras to follow you around.

"In the case of Barack Obama, it's almost been like he's been feeding on himself. He's been able to gather air time because he's charismatic and he's black and he's attractive and young, and that's just fed into more air time and more media obsession."

Experts say the obsession with celebrity has permeated every aspect of the country's culture, with a special impact on teens and adolescents.

Limousine services enjoy an economic boost in the spring, when the luxury cars are rented for teenagers trying to make celebrity-style red-carpet entrances to their proms and graduations.

YouTube.com, MySpace.com and similar Web sites have become magnets for teens attempting to take on Hollywood-like personas, and politicians are following suit.

Craving sizzle siz·zle  
intr.v. siz·zled, siz·zling, siz·zles
1. To make the hissing sound characteristic of frying fat.

2. To seethe with anger or indignation.

3.
 

In the 2004 presidential election, the Internet was used by candidates simply as a way to raise money. This time around, candidates realize the capacity to reach existing and potential supporters, and have made the Internet an integral part of their operation.

In L.A., no politician has embraced celebrity more than Villaraigosa, whose meteoric rise has been built on his television-age magnetism, unrelenting ambition and a Bill Clinton-like scripting of overcoming an early life of abandonment and abuse.

"He gives us the sizzle we didn't know we craved after a dozen years of bland white guys named Dick (Riordan) and Jim (Hahn)," journalist Kevin Roderick wrote adoringly of the mayor in last December's Los Angeles Magazine.

"Villaraigosa's brand of inclusive politics fits right into this metropolis of a thousand cultures, one of them being the cult of celebrity The cult of celebrity is the widespread interest in arbitrarily famous individuals, or 'celebrities', that became a prominent social phenomenon in late 20th century Western popular culture. .

"Villaraigosa possesses the star power to adorn the cover of Newsweek, play himself on 'George Lopez,' and share a joke with Tony Blair. For once we have a leader who is recognized on the Westside, the Eastside and the East Coast."

Villaraigosa's celebrity and appeal played such an integral part of the 2005 mayoral campaign that on election night, a humbled and defeated incumbent James Hahn lamented, "You know, maybe I have a charisma deficit disorder ... ."

Charisma's draw

The role of charisma in the Villaraigosa-Hahn campaign, experts say, was eerily similar to that in the Arnold Schwarzenegger-Gray Davis gubernatorial recall campaign in 2003, when the action star's magnetism helped him unseat an undynamic governor who had just been re-elected a year earlier.

"Together, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and L.A. Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa may represent what voters see as a model for political leadership in California -- the charismatic consensus-builder whose powers of persuasion enable him to transcend the institutional weakness of office and rise above partisan gridlock Gridlock

A government, business or institution's inability to function at a normal level due either to complex or conflicting procedures within the administrative framework or to impending change in the business.
," Tom Hogen-Esch, assistant professor of political science at California State University, Northridge CSUN offers a variety of programs leading to bachelor's degrees in 61 fields and master's degrees in 42 fields. The university has over 150,000 alumni. It's also home to a summer musical theater/theater program known as TADW (TeenAge Drama Workshop) that leads teenagers through an , wrote for HispanicVista.com.

"By replacing traditional candidates for governor of California The Governor of California is the highest executive authority in the state government, whose responsibilities include making yearly "State of the State" addresses to the California State Legislature, submitting the budget, and ensuring that state laws are enforced.  and mayor of Los Angeles with candidates of exceptional charisma, consensus-building, stamina and, perhaps, vision, voters may have significantly raised the bar for future political leadership in the state."

Much of the first two years of Villaraigosa's tenure as mayor was marked by his exhausting schedule and omnipresence Omnipresence
See also Ubiquity.

Allah

supreme being and pervasive spirit of the universe. [Islam: Leach, 36]

Big Brother

all-seeing leader watches every move. [Br. Lit.: 1984]

eye

God sees all things in all places.
, especially at celebrity and Hollywood red-carpet events.

To deal with chronic vocal cord vocal cord

Either of two folds of mucous membrane that extend across the interior cavity of the larynx and are primarily responsible for voice production. Sound is produced by the vibration of the folds in response to the passage between them of air exhaled from the lungs.
 problems, he began visiting a throat doctor, whose patient list includes several famous singers.

But in making a homestretch home·stretch  
n.
1. The portion of a racetrack from the last turn to the finish line.

2. Informal The final stages of an undertaking.

Noun 1.
 plea for L.A. to host the 2016 Olympics Games, he may have overreached in boasting about the recent signing of soccer superstar David Beckham by the Galaxy.

"We've got the beaches, the glitz glitz   Informal
n.
Ostentatious showiness; flashiness: "a garish barrage of show-biz glitz" Peter G. Davis.

tr.v.
 and the glamour, and now we even have David Beckham," he told the U.S. Olympic Committee.

"Celebrities I think are fine, but I think the U.S. Olympic Committee and the International Olympic Committee “IOC” redirects here. For other uses, see IOC (disambiguation).

The International Olympic Committee (French: Comité International Olympique) is an organization based in Lausanne, Switzerland, created by Pierre de Coubertin and Demetrios Vikelas on June 23
 will be focused on the games that you can provide, the venues and the experience your games will deliver," countered Patrick Sandusky, a spokesman for rival Chicago, which ultimately got the USOC (Universal Service Order Code) An equipment coding system created by AT&T. The number was applied to telephone equipment and to wire termination patterns. See 568A.  nod.

It is an example that celebrity can have its pitfalls for politicians -- as Baca is learning from the backlash to his involvement in the botched botch  
tr.v. botched, botch·ing, botch·es
1. To ruin through clumsiness.

2. To make or perform clumsily; bungle.

3. To repair or mend clumsily.

n.
1.
 attempt to free Hilton, experts say.

In addition to the criticism for his role, Baca now faces the prospect of a recall and possibly a slew of lawsuits from inmates who feel they received discriminatory treatment while in jail.

Veteran political consultant Joe Cerrell, whose political involvement dates back to Adlai Stevenson's 1952 presidential bid, says that while charisma and personality took on a life of its own Memory Burn A Life Of Its Own was released by Noise Kontrol in 2002. Memory Burn is made up of several high profile musicians who came together to create this special work.  during the historic nationally televised debates of John F. Kennedy "John Kennedy" and "JFK" redirect here. For other uses, see John Kennedy (disambiguation) and JFK (disambiguation).
John Fitzgerald Kennedy (May 29, 1917–November 22, 1963), was the thirty-fifth President of the United States, serving from 1961 until his assassination in
 and Richard Nixon in 1960, it might have been the more recent changing focus of a revolutionized news media and television that has ultimately transformed politics.

"It may have started with Kennedy," Cerrell says, "but (President Ronald) Reagan had an impact on changing the way politicians were viewed and talked about. Now, in the last few days, what you hear more and more is people talking about Paris Hilton and Villaraigosa in almost the same breath."

tony.castro(at)dailynews.com

(818) 713-3761

CAPTION(S):

photo

Photo:

(color) Celebrity and politics overlap as Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and socialite Paris Hilton chat in the glare of the public spotlight in February at a Grammy party in Hollywood.

Amanda Edwards/Getty Images
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jun 17, 2007
Words:1416
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