Richard Dyer's can be split into three areas:
- The star as a commodity
- The star as a construction
- The star as an ideology
Stars are produced to create a profit off by selling merchandise related to them such as t-shirts, posters, albums etc...
Record labels have a habit to produce similar stars as they know certain trends in the music industry that sell well and generate a lot of money. This could also be the reason why we have so many similar boy bands e.g. One Direction and The Wanted.
The star can be constructed from the work they produce examples being music videos,magazines, advertising etc... you could say it's similar to having a public/celeb like image that 'stars' put on in order to sell their products meaning they don't really behave like that in their personal life, a perfect example for this would be Miley Cyrus, has gotten a lot of press for riding on a wrecking ball, naked, in one of her music videos from 2015, she obviously wouldn't do this in the comfort of her home meaning the person Miley Cyrus and the star are marketed as two different people.
Stars will also represent different social groups and views and will therefore create certain ideologies. As a result, fans of the star would often copy their style and share the same views. For example many fans of Beyonce would share her view of women and how they should be empowering and independent (to not controlled by men).
Dyer explains that there is a paradox of 'the star', which come in two key forms:
- The star must be ordinary and extraordinary; the star needs to be ordinary in order to relate to their audience and emphasise that they're humans too but to also possess some sort of extraordinary persona or talent, making the public idolise them.a celebrity example of this would be Adele, she possesses an ordinary persona of an ordinary women from London with her cockney accent however she has an amazing voice which people automatically idolise, giving her the image of a 'paradox of the star.'
Lastly... - The star must be both present and absent: this explains that the star must be present in our lives through materialistic values e.g. merchandise and social media, but also absent in the fact that they are not actually there or are out of reach, despite this fans of (for example) Justin Bieber, would tend to buy merchandise of him, support him through social media and buying his albums even though he isn't actual present or in front of them,
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