Gossip. Tabloids. They can be found in our local grocery store check-out lines, newspaper stands, talk shows, and ââ oh, letâs not forget ââ social media. The press plays a vital role when it comes to keeping stars relevant in the public eye. However, in addition to the red carpets, sparkling lights and pretty dresses, many of these celebrities fall down the rabbit hole into the nasty world of Hollywood rumours. Many of these tabloid cover stars are women.
Whitney Houston, Marilyn Monroe, Paris Hilton, Miley Cyrus, pop princess Britney Spears, and â speaking of royalty â both Princess Diana and Duchess Meghan Markle⊠shall I go on? They all fell victim to the most notorious destruction of a female star. As women in the limelight struggle with the dark side of fortune and fame, their private lives become the topic of a scandalous exposĂ© in tabloid magazines. The pressââthe main antagonist in their storiesââplays a major role in developing a fabricated version of these celebrities in the public eye.
Case in point, âInside Whitney Houstonâs Drug Denâ was the headline of an exclusive story about Whitney Houstonâs drug addiction in the National Enquirer. On the cover were dark photographs of a trashed washroom, followed by a side photo of a bare-faced Whitney in a baseball cap hiding from paparazzi. These articles incorporate grainy, unfocused and purposely unflattering photographs that depict celebritiesâ personal lives as âa dark scandal or in a ârhetoric exposĂ©â in terms of manipulating their image,â in the words of Su Holmes in her article Deconstructing Contemporary Celebrity in Heat Magazine.Â
This type of âexposĂ©â in the press portrays other famous women the same. In the New York Timesâ documentary Framing Britney Spears, there is footage of how the paparazzi harassed her and how tabloids mocked her as Britney was photographed in a barbershop where she proceeded to shave her head. This form of media in the early 2000s mocked Britney instead of seeing her as a woman struggling with mental health. Now that she is free from her conservatorship with the help of the #FreeBritney movement, she finally earned back her voice to explain what really went down during those times in her life. Â
In early 2021, Meghan Markle spoke with Oprah in a CBS interview about how the media depicted her character during her time in the royal palace. Recently, a report came out revealing that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex were targeted by a highly-coordinated hate campaign on Twitter. These troll accounts were not bots but real accounts of 83 users, with a potential reach of 17 million people. They were responsible for 70 per cent of the nasty and hateful content published about the pair, The Cut reported. After that, Meghan said at the New York Timesâ Dealbook Online summit that, “Hopefully, one day [tabloids] come with a warning label like cigarettes do, like, âThis is toxic for your mental health.â”
Tabloid and gossip writers depict celebrity culture as a source of entertainment, evoking feelings of adoration, admiration and attraction, as well as jealousy, envy and hatred in the common reader, via the use of sarcasm and funny tones. The wordings used in these types of media are frequently quite detailed in order to spark the reader’s attention.Â
But the purpose of the paparazzi and tabloids seems to be a gray area. Where is the line drawn when it comes to a person’s character? Based on how digital media is shaping people’s narratives, tabloid journalism needs to find a space to be more empathic and truthful to their readers in the future, rather than manufacturing artificial drama for a quick buck.