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tggzzz wrote: ↑Tue Feb 04, 2025 5:25 pm
I've only seen overenthusiastic admiration of a celebrity, cf the depth perception problem surrounding Musk and Jobs and certain politicians.
I can see why the likes of Musk and Jobs are admired. They both achieved a considerable amount. Jobs was certainly a very flawed person.
I've never understood why the tabloid newspapers, and even the dearer ones, seem to believe that the small doings of people like the Kardashians are of vital interest. I suppose it must sell papers, but I can't see why anyone would waste their time reading such tosh.
I think the interest in such people is entirely down to the poorly thought out consideration that if you emulate them then perhaps you can stand in their shoes and be successful like they are. Unfortunately the bit where the person is an abhorrent arsehole, which applies to Musk and Jobs better than any, tends to be the only bit that sticks. Reality is that such people tend to have a social advantage that no one else has and can't be easily emulated for they are circumstantial, such as having rich parents with an emerald mine or honking large amounts of LSD at exactly the right moment in history.
As for the Kardashians, there's nothing easier than wasting your miserable life away staring at other people's miserable lives rather than fixing your own.
Edit: worth making sure that due credit is given to Musk and Jobs' subordinates who really do all the work. They did good. They would have done just as good under another figurehead.
If your acolytes don't feel dirty enough have them run through the orgy room a couple of times before feeling them.
Hey I aim to have better standards than the Mormons and Catholics!
I grew up in Epsom, at the time of Joyce McKinney's famous "Mormon sex in chains" case. The journalists adjourned to the local pub, appropriately named The Spread Eagle.
tggzzz wrote: ↑Tue Feb 04, 2025 10:26 pm
I grew up in Epsom, at the time of Joyce McKinney's famous "Mormon sex in chains" case. The journalists adjourned to the local pub, appropriately named The Spread Eagle.
"I loved him so much that I would ski naked down Mount Everest in the nude with a carnation up my nose if he asked me to."
The papers had a field day with it. There were all sorts of prurient details such as a chastity suit Mormon missionaries were supposed to wear to keep them on the straight and narrow. I vaguely recall they obtained passports using a Day of The Jackal dodge, by obtaining them in the names of people who'd died in childhood.
I've made it impossible for me to recover my account again now.
I might have "blotted my copybook" too, by too enthusiastically "thanking" of your posts!
I don't really care if I also become an "enemy of the State", as I've experienced that with a previous employer!