A couple of interesting things came across my computer in the past week – funny how things "cluster" sometimes – that I wouldn't mind reader opinions on. The subject is those seeking fame and fortune. One case involves "influencers," the other involves a singing career.
I don't follow any influencers, but as a category they're received a bad rap (or maybe "annoying rap" is more accurate) over the last few years. Influencers are known to disrupt restaurants, gyms, grocery stores, and other public places for their antics. They often reek of entitlement, such as offering to "collaborate" with restaurants or businesses for freebies in exchange for "exposure."
People will often do the strangest things to get attention. Consider this article documenting how people (usually women) in Palm Beach, Florida will dress up in designer clothes and hang around street corners for hours in a desperate bid to get noticed by some local who started a "best dressed" social media account.
The article says: "Palm Beachers are desperate to make it on the glitzy beach city's unofficial best-dressed list to show off their glamorous clothes and designer accessories. The South Florida beach town is known for its posh residents, but now there is a new social status symbol residents can aspire to - being feature on 'Class of Palm Beach.' Class of Palm Beach, which has amassed millions of views on TikTok, parades the town's best dressed and asks them where they bought their chic outfits from.
"The wildly popular social media page is the brainchild of one Millennial resident, who often found herself stopping wealthy people on the street and asking which designer shops they had bought their clothes and accessories from. Some Palm Beachers have become so determined to make an appearance on the account – which has 672,000 followers – that they wait on the busiest avenue for hours in the hopes of being noticed by the page's in-demand admin."
(Honestly, folks, don't you have anything better to do with your time?)
That said, presumably there's something to "influencing" if people can earn a living from it. Shrug. Not my cup of tea, but whatever.
This leads to a random article I came across in which a mother was seeking advice concerning her teenage daughter who wanted to become an influencer. She wrote:
"How
do you talk to your kids about how social media isn’t a measure of
their worth? I am a single mother to two daughters, “Carina” (19), and
“Kylie” (23). When the girls were younger, I limited their access to
social media. However, Kylie has always had a passion for social media,
and the summer after she graduated from high school, she began a
lifestyle/vlogging YouTube channel that quickly amassed hundreds of
followers. Now, she is a fairly popular influencer making good money
across several platforms. This inspired Carina, who believed that anyone
could make a livable wage off social media if they put in enough work.
She too began a YouTube channel after she turned 18, and I’m now worried
that she may have become too obsessed with gaining followers and likes.
"Every
day, Carina laments that her channels aren’t gaining traction like her
sister’s. Whenever she comes out of her room in the morning, she’s
always on her phone or comparing her account to other vloggers in a
similar age bracket. She posts content almost every day, then gets upset
when it gets hardly any views or likes. I’m genuinely alarmed at the
downturn that her mental well-being has taken, and I’ve tried to talk to
her about how her worth isn’t tied to what people 1,000 miles away
think of her internet persona. It falls on deaf ears. Kylie has had the
same conversation with Carina, which just made Carina angry because she
thought that Kylie was just trying to “eliminate the competition.”
"Because
Carina is an adult, I can’t just take away her social media. I
understand that I could stop her from having access to it (my friend has
suggested that I change the WiFi password, threaten to evict her, etc.)
but I’m worried that forcing her hand might push her away and limit my
ability to help her. On the other hand, I know I’m not being very useful
right now! I’m scared for my daughter and I could really use some
advice."
The answer the advice columnist gave this mother was to gently
steer her daughter into other interests, including a job, in an effort
to break the daughter's obsession.
And that's the first thing I wouldn't mind reader input on. What advice would you give a mom whose adult teen daughter is obsessed with this career choice?
Not quite in the "influencer" category but still in the "seeking fame and fortune" mindset, consider this wail of worry from another mother of a teen daughter:
"My daughter Lailah is going to be a junior next year, and
ever since she was little she LOVED watching shows like American Idol, The
Voice, etc., and dreams of being a famous singer. While I think it's all well
and good to sing as a hobby, she is simply not good at music.
"Lailah has a rather high-pitched voice, kind of like a
cartoon or young toddler, and when she sings it sounds like nails on a
chalkboard. I'm certain she's tone deaf, because she insists her voice is not
high at all. I know that's awful as a mom to say, but it's true. We even hired
a vocal coach before COVID and the lady outright told me she felt guilty about
taking my money because [Lailah] "simply has no musical talent," in
her words.
"She loves to sing at family events and it always results in
chuckles at best or insults at worst from younger kids. She's always kept her
head up and never let these comments get to her, which I admire a lot, but I
wish she had more realistic adult plans by now.
"Lailah's grades have been struggling for years (mostly Ds)
and we argue about it all the time. Her excuse is always "I don't need to
learn this because I will be a famous singer!" This obsession has become a
legitimate problem because she shoots down anything unrelated to singing when
it comes to thinking about college or a job, which she also insists she will
never need because one day she will become a world-famous singer.
"Today I told her she should be looking for a summer job and
she again refused, and said now that she's old enough she wants to audition for
a singing competition (undecided on which). I know these shows; most of them
will have a poor-singer audition, only to mock them on TV.
"I'm not letting that happen to Lailah and told her I am no
longer tolerating this obsession, and that she needs to apply herself in other
areas soon if she hopes to get any sort of career, because she simply is not a
good singer. She started bawling and called me an abusive mother. I feel
like an a** now and am not sure if I should have handled this differently. Am I
the [jerk]?"
The mother went on to answer questions from others, who made
suggestions like having vocal coaches give the daughter their honest opinion to
her face. The mother replied, "They have said it to her face, but she does
not accept their input" and "I've done that. She still thought she
sounded like Carrie Underwood" and "She took lessons a lot as a kid
and has taken choir almost every year at school, and has been told honestly
about her skills. She insists everyone is wrong."
Upon the suggestion the daughter should be recorded and let her
listen to her own skills, the mother replied, "I've done that. She still
does not get it, and even argues with music coaches."
One person responded, "I used to be a vocational
employment specialist. ... You don't need to be the one to crush her dreams.
You don't want to be. The best way to get through this, and to avoid backlash
or appearing unsupportive, is to treat her aspirations as completely serious.
Let her audition. Encourage her to put up videos on social media. Let her ram
her head repeatedly into the wall until she gets tired of knocking herself out.
And when she is good and ready, she'll quit, and you can be there, just as
unwaveringly supportive as ever, when she moves onto the next, more realistic
phase of life."
Others pointed out, "I used to wonder how all those
horrible singers on American Idol got that far, thinking they were the next
Whitney Houston. Someone should have told them before they embarrassed
themselves in front of millions of people. You're protecting your child and
that's exactly what you're supposed to do."
Both these mothers are facing the situation in which their daughters are infatuated with fame and fortune and are pursuing it obsessively. What advice would you give to either encourage or discourage these teenage girls' ambition?