Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Week 12: One Picture is Worth One Thousand Words

Global Celebrity:  Alternatively focus on a single celebrity from a culture or nationality other than your own (music, film, television sport, politics, etc) and provide a brief case study with regards to the concepts examined in the Specular Economy.

The Specular Economy (Marshall 2010) identifies a world in which people are heavily focused the public presentations of themselves, and the way in which their identities are interpreted within society. The ability to share photos, videos, and personal information about oneself through presentational media (social media platforms etc.) all within an instant has encouraged an outward impression of celebrity culture within common society. No longer are beauty-poses, pouted lips, make-up and baby smothering restricted to celebrity activity in hope for impressing the photo hungry paparazzi. Instead, the constant exposure of identity across public platforms - ‘free’ access to ditigal media publishing sites, the popularity of the selfie, smartphone technology etc. - has encouraged us ‘commoners’ to construct online public personas in the hope of drawing societies attention to only the filtered, refined, or even posed aspects of our identities, enhancing the way they themselves are presented to society.

Growing up as a Gen Y’er, I myself have been subject to the behaviour of presenting and re-producing myself in order to appeal to online audiences. As the content that I produce across Facebook, Twitter and Instagram is almost impossible to be completely retracted, I am constantly feeling the pressures of a specular economy, having to present myself in certain ways in order to impress the constant surveillance from the online world. 

According to the famous Chinese proverb, ‘one picture is worth ten thousand words(Zelanzy, G. 2006). Every picture that I place on these sites can not only be interpreted not only in its original form, but can be downloaded, screenshot-ed edited, cropped, enhanced, filtered, re-coloured, and de-contextualised by my ‘followers’ with the end result being a parallax of meanings, and misled interpretations. Is this behaviour beginning to sound familiar?

‘Promise I’ll be kind
 But I won’t stop
Until that boy is mine…

I’m your biggest fan
I’ll follow you until you love me
Papa-Paparazzi.’(Fusari, R. & Germanotta, S. 2013)

As rightly suggested by Lady Gaga in Paparazzi, there is no restricting the interpretations (‘that boy’) of online audiences, whether made around the original photo, or from an edited version that may appear somewhere else. 


Image From: http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8449/7951675012_8e6f5a0001_o.jpg

By allowing personal information to be leaked to the public online audiences of digital media sites, we are, in turn, encouraging behaviour representational of the paparazzi and celebrity culture in the ‘ordinary world.’ Not only is formal content being released and communicated, but with the ease of self-presentation via social sites, it is the diffusion of the boundaries separating what’s public, private and intimate, that have led to what can be considered as paparazzi-like behaviour. Hence the celebrity culture.

It is here, that the specular economy comes into play. In order to impress our paparazzi, our followers, our fans, our audiences, potential employers etc. there has become a great importance to manage and filter the information, pictures and profiles through which personal information can be leaked. As a result, ‘this has allowed the development of a surplus economy related to personalities and a different structure through which…[one can] construct their public image.’(Barbour K. and Marshall P.D. 2012). By restricting what is produced online, we are thus, managing the rumours and stories which can be formed under this celebrity culture.

Despite a history of posing for cameras, and life in the public eye, celebrity behaviour is also subject to speculation in this modern economy. Perhaps more well-adapted, some celebrities utilise the speculation produced by the sharing of identity over digital media in order to produce an identity in order to appeal to certain audiences, suit on on-screen role, or attract new brand endorsement opportunities. The ability to interact with other online personalities also adds a further pressure of establishing and maintaining relationships with fans. The key to a successful economy is the effective and constant passing of information and products between entities. This encourages communication, and can be the base upon which perspectives are formed. As a result, it gives the ability to us social media page holders, to further create a ‘public’ personality with the opportunity for rebuttal and release of more information in a conversational setting.

When researching for this blog, it was eye-opening to see just how many celebrities had personal social media pages. On the one hand, this suggested to me just how important these sites were at for the endorsement of the page holders and their activity. However, in a more negative light, it made my decision of which celebrity to focus on all the more difficult.

One celebrity who particularly stood out to me was American pop star Chris Brown. Despite a so-far successful career, this R&B icon has experienced constant run-ins with the media, being both scrutinised and praised for his behaviour, across printed, screened, and online media platforms. In response to this, there has been many a retaliation for Brown, creating and communicating his own, perhaps co-existing, persona in order to defend his built-up reputation. His perhaps more recent interaction with online society can also, according to Marshal (2010), be representative of the specular economy.


One of the ways in which Brown was able to become vocal was through the use of twitter, a platform upon which he recently shared his opinions by tweeting the following:



In doing this, Chris Brown is drawing public attention to a side that may not have otherwise been exposed to society. Instead of the usual ‘bad boy of R&B’(Aitkenhead, D. 2013) that he has grown famous under, Chris Brown has acted in order to influence how he as a person, is interpreted by society. By drawing attention to this sort of behaviour across these digital platforms, Chris Brown is able to ‘present’ himself as the more charitable personality that may have otherwise not have been recognised by the consuming public. 

This may have been in effort of recovery from the ‘bad boy’ image as created through the various rumours of assault that escalated through the online society, through leakages in the media (the paparazzi!!). In order to counteract these visions, Chris Brown has utilised the features of online media by connecting his fans with a more generous and giving persona, constructing a perhaps, an identity more accepted by society.

An example of his behaviour can be seen through Brown's use of Twitter, linking followers to an anti-gay violence campaign with which he is involved, and supporting a prior tweet as discussed above. 


Similarly audiences are presented with further 'proof' of Brown's reconstruction through his fan page, being directed to a video representation of more of his recent charitable activity. 



View video here: http://watch.accesshollywood.com/video/chris-brown-sends-a-positive-message-to-las-urban-community/2561970054001?utm_source=watch.accesshollywood.com&utm_medium=share-link

Chris Brown;s image of being the ‘Charity Man’ has also been plugged to society through Brown’s ‘coming out’ about his past in the to newspapers, and other media sources. This may have also been as part of Brown’s effort to lessen the negative connotations associated with his name.

By purposely releasing this information, Chris Brown was able to shift the focus of his followers, and re-present himself to society as a re-constructed personality. Not only were we, as an audience, intensely drawn to Brown’s battle of self, but could also celebrate in his success, recognised in Brown’s ‘improved’ public self. Who doesn’t love a happy ending?

Being a business student, I would consider these actions much resemble that of a contingency plan, or crisis management. The efforts of Brown to manage such information being circulated in society, has in turn, removed the paparazzi-driven rumours and gossip, and moulded them into constructive imagery that has resulted in a more positive public image.

It is this concept, of managing information, and promoting one's self through images, online activity, and social interaction that creates the ability to produce and communicate a public image within society.  It is with this that we can witness the importance of the specular economy: The ability to construct public image through the promotion of certain profile aspects, as well as the exchange and interaction of filtered personal information, in order to create a desired public profile of oneself. From impressing potential employers, to the total reconstruction of oneself, the specular economy gives online users the ability to enhance their public image to not only appeal to the online community, but also in face to face reality. No longer can rumours be spread as easily and freely, as through the specular economy, people have greater ability to manage the output of information, creating their own distinct personality in socity; most certainly giving the paparazzi (and followers) a run for their money! 



References:

Aitkenhead, D. 2013, "Chris Brown: It was the biggest wake-up call", The Guardian, [Online], , pp. 11/10/2013. Available from:http://www.theguardian.com/music/2013/oct/04/chris-brown-rihanna-interview-x. [11/10/2013].

Marshal, P.D 2010, ‘The Specular Economy’, Society, vol. 47, no. 6, pp. 498-502

Barbour K. and Marshall P.D. 2012, The Academic Online: Constructing persona through the world wide web, First Monday, vol 17, no. 9, [available: HYPERLINK "http://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/3969/3292"http://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/3969/3292]

Fusari, R. & Germanotta, S. 2013, , Lady GaGa Lyrics - Paparazzi Lyrics [Homepage of Sony/ATV Music Publishing], [Online]. Available:http://www.metrolyrics.com/paparazzi-lyrics-lady-gaga.html [2013, October 11].

Zelanzy, G. 2006, Say it with Charts, 1st edn, McGraw-Hill Books, United States.